: Born as a Phoenician princess, Dido fled her homeland of Tyre after her brother, King Pygmalion, murdered her husband, Sychaeus, to seize his wealth.

: Her story is most famously captured in Virgil's Aeneid , where she falls into a tragic, gods-manipulated romance with the Trojan hero Aeneas. When Aeneas abandons her to fulfill his destiny in Italy, Dido builds a funeral pyre and stabs herself, issuing a curse that mythologically explains the long-standing Punic Wars between Rome and Carthage. The Real-Life Aristocrat: Dido Elizabeth Belle

In classical mythology, Dido (also known as Elissa) is the legendary founder and first queen of Carthage.

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

The name spans thousands of years of history, from the legendary founder of an ancient empire to a 21st-century pop icon. Each iteration of Dido—mythological, historical, or modern—carries a legacy of resilience, complex identity, and enduring cultural impact. The Legendary Founder: Dido of Carthage

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