Aenea, A citie called after Ianiculum. Also another neere to Thessalonica, builded by Aeneas.
Aenêas, æ, A noble man of Troye, fonne to Anchises and Venus: who after that Troye was destroyed, sayled into Italie, where Latinus was king, whose daughter Lauinia hee maried, and reigned in Italy after the death of Latinus.
Aenēas, ae, m. (also in the nom. Aenea, Varr. ap. Charis. p. 50 P.; cf. Quint. 1, 5, 61; gen. sometimes Aeneā, Apul. Orth. 23 Osann.; acc. Aenean often, after the Gr. *ainei/n, Ov. F. 5, 568; id. H. 7, 36; voc. Aenēā, Poët. ap Varr. L. L. 6, 60 Müll.; Ov. H. 7, 9), = *ai\nei/as, Æneas, son ofVenus and Anchises, the hero of Virgil's epic poem, and ancestor of the Romans, worshipped after his death as Juppiter Indiges; cf. Nieb. Röm. Gesch. 1, 207 sq.
Aenēis, ĭdis or ĭdos, f. [Aeneas], the Æneid, Virgil's celebrated epic, the hero of which is Æneas, the progenitor of the Romans: Aeneïdos auctor, Ov. Tr. 2, 533: nec tu divinam Aeneïda tenta, Stat. Th. 12 fin.: morbo oppressus (Vergilius) petivit a suis, ut Aeneïda quam nondum satis elimavisset, adolerent, Gell. 17, 10.