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Misenus
In
Greek
and
Roman mythology
,
Misenus
was a name attributed to two
individuals
.
Misenus
was a
friend
of
Odysseus
.
Misenus
was a character in Virgil's
epic poem
the
Aeneid
. He was a brother-in-arms of
Hector
and, after Hector's death, Aeneas'
trumpeter
. In Book VI, it is
revealed
that he had challenged
the gods
to a musical contest on the
conch shell
, and for his impudence was
drowned
by
Triton
.
Aeneas
was
told
by the
Cumaean Sibyl
at that time that Misenus's body had to be
buried
before he could
enter
the Underworld
. The passage detailing the
funeral rites
gives a valuable insight into
Roman burial
customs and the importance the
Romans
placed on
respect for the dead
. It is regarded as the passage of the Aeneid most imitative of the
Annales
of
Ennius
.
Cape Misenum
, near
Cumae
, is supposedly named for Misenus, as noted in
Virgil's Aeneid
. His being called
Aeolides
arose
from the legendary connection between the Aeolian and Campanian Cumae.