• Adamietz, Joachim, “Zu Ovids Dido-Brief,” Würzburger Jahrbücher für die Altertumswissenschaft. Neue Folge 10 (1984) 121-134
  • M. Desmond, “When Dido Reads Virgil: Gender and Intertextuality in Ovid’s Heroides 7,” Helios 20 (1993) 56-68
  • M. Desmond, Reading Dido. Gender, Textuality, and the Medieval Aeneid, Minneapolis and London (1994)
  • J. T. Dyson, “Dido the Epicurean,” Classical Antiquity 15.2 (1996) 203-221
  • Fantham, Elaine, “Virgil’s Dido and Seneca’s Tragic Heroines,” Greece & Rome 22 (1975) 1-10 / full text
  • S. Farron, “The Aeneas-Dido Episode as an Attack on Aeneas’ Mission and Rome,” Greece & Rome 27 (1980) 34-47 / full text
  • Feldherr, Andrew, “Putting Dido on the Map: Genre and Geography in Vergil’s Underworld,” Areuthusa 32.1 (1999) 85-122 / pdf
  • Fleißner, Ulrike, “Dido und Aeneas – “Liebe” und “Liebesverrat” im Nationalepos der Römer,” Motiv und Motivation XXVII, München: Bayerischer Schulbuchverlag. (Dialog. Schule & Wissenschaft. Klassische Sprachen und Literaturen: Ministerialrat Peter Neukam (1993) 26-46
  • Frangoulidis, S.A., “Charite’s literary models: Vergil’s Dido and Homer’s Odysseus,” Latomus 217 (1992) 435-450
  • Görler, W., “Dido und Seneca über Glück und Vollendung,” Museum Helveticum 53 (1996) 160-169
  • Pamela Gordon, “Phaeacian Dido: Lost Pleasures of an Epicurean Intertext,” Classical Antiquity 29 (1998) / web link
  • R. Drew Griffith , “Catullus’ Coma Berenices and Aeneas’ farewell to Dido,” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 125 (1995) 47-59 / full text
  • Gruzelier, Claire, “The Influence of Virgil’s Dido on Statius’ Portrayal of Hypsipyle,” Prudentia. A journal devoted to the intellectual history of the Hellenistic and Roman periods 26 no. 1, Auckland (1994) 153-165
  • Hall, J.B., “The Myth of Dido,” The Classical Review 86 (1972) 62-64 / full text
  • Hamilton, Colin I.M., “Dido, Tityos and Prometheus,” The Classical Quarterly 43 no. 1 (1993) 249-254 / full text
  • R. Hexter, “Sidonian Dido,” in Innovations of Antiquity edited by R. Hexter and D. Selden, New York and London (1992)
  • Jacobson, Howard, “Vergil’s Dido and Euripides’ Helen,” American Journal of Philology (1987) 108 / full text
  • Johnston, Patricia A., “Dido, Berenice, and Arsinoe: Aeneid 6.460,” American Journal of Philology (1987) 108 / full text
  • Keith, A. M. , Engendering Rome: Women in Latin Epic, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (2000)
  • Keith, Allison, “Tandem venit amor: A Roman Woman Speaks of Love,” in Roman Sexualities edited by Hallett, Judith P. and Skinner, Marilyn B., Princeton: Princeton University Press (1997) 295-310 / bmcr
  • Khan, H. Akbar, “Demonizing Dido: A Rebounding Sequence of Curses and Dreams in Aeneid 4,” Religion and Superstition in Latin Literature: Nottingham Classical Literature Studiesedited by Alan H. Sommerstein 3, Bari (1994) 1-28
  • Kubiak, David P., “Cornelia and Dido (Lucan 9,174-179),” Classical Quarterly 40 no. 2 (1990) 577-578 / full text
  • Lefèvre, Eckard, “Aeneas’ Antwort an Dido,” Wiener Studien. Zeitschrift für klassische Philologie und Patristik 8 (1974) 99-115
  • Leube, Eberhard, Fortuna in Karthago: Die Aeneas-Dido-Mythe Vergils in den romanischen Literaturen vom 14. bis zum 16. Jahrhundert, Berlin (1966)
  • McLeish, Kenneth, “Dido, Aeneas, and the Concept of ‘Pietas’,” Greece & Rome 19 (1972) 127-135 / full text
  • Mensching, E., “Dido, die neue Welt und Kaiser Leopold I. in Lohnsteins “Sophonisbe” (1680),” Latein und Griechisch in Berlin und Brandenburg 37 (1993) 69-75
  • J. L. Moles, “Aristotle and Dido’s Hamartia,” Greece & Rome 31 (1984) 48-54 / full text
  • R. C. Monti, “The Dido Episode and the Aeneid: Roman Social and Poitical Values in the Epic,” Mnemosyne Supplement 66 (1981)
  • Dominic Montserrat, Changing bodies, changing meanings: studies on the human body in antiquity, London: Routledge (1998) [Contributors: Angus Bowie, Gillian Clark, Richard Hawley, Lynn Meskell, Dominic Montserrat, Penelope Murray, Jane Stevenson, Nicholas Vlahogiannis, Terry Wilfong] / bmcr
  • Moorton, R.F., “Love as death: the pivoting metaphor in Vergil’s story of Dido,” The Classical World 83 (1990) 153-166
  • G. Morgan, “Dido the Wounded Deer,” Vergilius 40 (1994) 67-68
  • Morgan, Llewelyn, “A very different Dido and Aeneas,” Omnibus 33 (1997) 21-24
  • Muecke, Frances, “Foreshadowing and dramatic Irony in the story of Dido,” American Journal of Philology 104 (1983) 134-155 / full text
  • Nelis, Damien P., “Love, War, and Dido,” Omnibus 30 (1995) 8-10
  • Olbrich, Wilfried, “Vergil und Berlioz – Dido und Äneas in der Oper “Die Trojaner”,” Anregung. Zeitschrift für Gymnasialpädagogik 27 (1981) 177-184
  • C. Perkell, “On Creusa, Dido, and the Quality of Victory in Virgil’s Aeneid,” in Reflections of Women in Antiquity edited by H. Foley (1981) 45-61
  • D. Pike, “Venus Nefanda: Dido and Pasiphae in Vergil’s Aeneid,” Akroterion 38.3/4 (1993) 98-103
  • J. Rauk, “Macrobius, Cornutus, and the Cutting of Dido’s Lock,” Classical Philologyh 90.4 (1995) 345
  • K. Reckford, “Recognizing Venus II: Dido, Aeneas, and Mr. Eliot,” Arion 3.2/3 (1995/1996) 43-80
  • Ross, R.I., “Dido and Aeneas: the function of the similes,” Classicum 18 (1992) 37-41
  • Schwindt, J.P., “Dido, Klopstock und Charlotte Buff. Vergilreminiszenz(en) in Goethes “Werther”?,” Antike und Abendland 42 (1996) 103-118
  • R. A. Smith, “A Lock and a Promise: Myth and Allusion in Aeneas’ Farewell to Dido in Aeneid 6,” Phoenix 47 (1993) 305-312
  • Stuiber, A., “Dido,” Reallexikon für Antike und Christentum. Sachwörterbuch zur Auseinandersetzung des Christentums mit der antiken Welt 3 (1957) 1013-1016
  • Sullivan, J.P., “Dido and the representation of women in Vergil’s Aeneid,” in The two worlds of the poet. New perspectives on Vergil edited by Robert M. Wilhelm and Howard Jones, Detroit: Wayne State UP (1992) 64-73
  • J. Swanepoel, “Infelix Dido: Vergil and the Notion of the Tragic,” Akroterion 40.1 (1995) 30-46
  • Voit, L., “Dido bei Ovid (Epist.7),” Gymnasium 101 (1994) 338-348
  • V�gler, Gudrun, “Gleichnisse und Bilder in der Dido-Episode von Vergils Aeneis,” Der altsprachliche Unterricht. Arbeitshefte zu seiner wissenschaftlichen Begründung und praktischen Gestalt 24 no. 5 (1981) 48-66
  • West, Grace Starry, “Caeneus and Dido,” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 110 (1980) 315-324 / full text
  • West, Grace-Starry, “Andromache and Dido,” American Journal of Philology 104 (1983) 257-267
  • M. Wilhelm, “Venus, Diana, Dido and Camilla in the Aeneid,” Vergilius 33 (1987) 43-48