: Born as a Phoenician princess, Dido fled her homeland of Tyre after her brother, King Pygmalion, murdered her husband, Sychaeus, to seize his wealth.
Moving from myth to history, (1761–1804) was a woman whose life challenged the racial and social norms of 18th-century England. The Doubleness of Dido - Stanford Humanities Center
In classical mythology, Dido (also known as Elissa) is the legendary founder and first queen of Carthage.
: Born as a Phoenician princess, Dido fled her homeland of Tyre after her brother, King Pygmalion, murdered her husband, Sychaeus, to seize his wealth.
Moving from myth to history, (1761–1804) was a woman whose life challenged the racial and social norms of 18th-century England. The Doubleness of Dido - Stanford Humanities Center
In classical mythology, Dido (also known as Elissa) is the legendary founder and first queen of Carthage.