Æ´gis, shield or breastplate of Jupiter and Minerva, [5], [109], [116].
Æ-gis´thus, murderer of Agamemnon, slain by Orestes, [234].
Æ-ne´as, Trojan hero, son of Anchises and Aphrodite (Venus), and born on Mount Ida, reputed first settler of Rome, [61], [213], [221], [222], [223], [258]-[287], [379].
Æ-ne´id, poem by Virgil, relating the wanderings of Æneas from Troy to Italy, [307].
Æ´o-lus, son of Hellen and the nymph Orseis, represented in Homer as the happy ruler of the Æolian Islands, to whom Zeus had given dominion over the winds, [69], [75], [240], [261], [301].
Æs´cu-la´pi-us, god of the medical art, [127], [154], [174], [179], [180], [218], [298].
Æ´son, father of Jason, made young again by Medea, [130], [134]-[136].
Æ-thi-o´pi-ans, inhabitants of the country south of Egypt, [2], [118], [207], [208].