Myths

Dido's Ruse

Story Summary

Dido, a princess of Phoenicia, flees her kingdom after the assassination of her husband. Arriving in North Africa (in Numidia, present-day Tunisia), she negotiates a strange condition with the local king: to receive as much land as can be covered by an ox hide.

Through clever cutting, she turns this constraint into an advantage: she traces a vast semicircle along the seashore, founds the city of Carthage... and gives history a lesson in geometry!

About the Story

This legendary tale tells of the founding of a city—but also of a ruse, a negotiation, and an astonishing geometric intuition!
The story is easy to tell: it follows a clear sequence of actions, with a clever female character, a challenge posed, and a surprising solution.

It's a great starting point for discussing geometry, as well as logic and strategy.

Students love the twist: the king thinks he has won... but Dido had planned everything!

👉 Discover the Story


Maths

Perimeters, Areas...
and a Very Clever Queen

🔢 Mathematical Concepts Involved

  • Calculating magnitudes: perimeter, area of common shapes (rectangle, square, circle)
  • Relationship between perimeter and area
  • Properties of circles and disks
  • Modeling
  • Using formulas
  • Problem-solving.

📋 Prerequisites

  • Know the units of length and area (and their subdivisions)
  • Know how to calculate the area and perimeter of a rectangle, square, and circle (see appendix).

🟢 Activity 1. Cut Like Dido!

👦🏻 Target Age: 8-10 years (Grades 3-5)

Duration: 20 min

📎 Materials: one A4 sheet per student or pair

🎯 Objective

Replicate Dido's action by cutting an A4 sheet into a continuous strip to form a circular area.

🗣️ Instructions for Students

Dido managed to obtain a large piece of land from an ox hide. But how? By cutting it into a long strip to trace a circle. Let's try to do the same!

Fold your sheet cleverly so you can cut it into one long strip. The thinner the strip, the longer it is!

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💬 Pedagogical Comments

You can vary several parameters:

• The size of the sheet (representing the ox hide)

• The width of the strip.

Observe what changes:

• What happens if you reduce the width of the strip?

• What happens if you change the size of the sheet?

• What varies, what remains constant?

This activity naturally introduces the concept of parameters.

Students discover that the length of the strip depends on its width and the initial surface—and that a given perimeter can enclose a variable area.

🟢 Activity 2. What Shape for Carthage? (with Rectangles)

👦🏻 Target Age: 9-10 years (Grades 4-5)

Duration: 30 min

🎯 Objective

Among several rectangles, find the shape that allows building the largest area using a 12 m rope. One side is bordered by the sea!

🗣️ Instructions for Students

Dido wanted to found a city using an ox hide cut into a strip. Now it's your turn to imagine the ideal shape to build Carthage with a 12 m rope. The sea forms one side of the land. Your turn!

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Test 1: rectangle with 1 meter width

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What is the length L of this rectangle?

What is the area of this rectangle?

Test 2: rectangle with 2 m width

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Length L = ?

Area = ?

Test 3: rectangle with 3 m width

Length L = ?

Area = ?

Test 4: rectangle with 4 m width.

Length L = ?

Area = ?

Test 5: rectangle with 5 m width.

Length L = ?

Area = ?

Test 6: with a rectangle of 6 m width, will the area be larger or smaller than the previous rectangles?

✅ Conclusion:

Which shape gives the largest area?

If you were Dido, what shape would you have chosen to found your city?

🟢 Activity 3. Dido's Semicircle

👦🏻 Target Age: 10-11 years (Grade 5 - 6)

Duration: 30 min

🎯 Objective

With a 12m rope, create a shape with the largest possible area, knowing that one side will be along the sea. Calculate the area if you build, like Dido, a semicircle along the sea.

illustration

🗣️ Instructions for Students

• With the help of the "Appendix" sheet, find the radius of this semicircle.

• Calculate the area of the semicircle.

Conclusion: With a rope of given length, what is the best design for Dido's city?

🔢 Appendix – Useful Formulas

Rectangle

  • Perimeter of a rectangle:
    $P = 2 × (L+w)$
    where L is the length and w is the width
  • Area of a rectangle:
    $A = L × w$

Circle

  • Perimeter of a circle:
    $P = 2 × π × r$
  • Area of a circle:
    $A = π × r^2$

Perimeters, Areas, and Geometric Ruse
(Teacher's Sheet)

With a 12 m rope, we want to create a shape with the largest possible area, knowing that one side will be along the sea:

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We will try with rectangles and squares (Activity 2), then with a semicircle (Activity 3).

🟣 Activity 2. Rectangles and Squares

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Test 1: width = 1 m

Calculate the length L of this rectangle. $L = 10 m$

Calculate the area of this rectangle $A = 10 m^2$

Test 2: width = 2 m

Calculate the length L of this rectangle. $L = 8 m$

Calculate the area of this rectangle. $A = 16 m^2$

Test 3: width = 3 m

Calculate the length L of this rectangle. $L = 6 m$

Calculate the area of this rectangle. $A = 18 m^2$

Test 4: width = 4 m

Calculate the length L of this rectangle. $L = 4 m$. What is its special shape? $Square$

Calculate the area of this rectangle. $A = 16 m^2$

Test 5: width = 5 m

Calculate the length L of this rectangle. $L = 2 m$

Calculate the area of this rectangle. $A = 10 m^2$

Test 6: width = 6 m

Both widths use up all the rope, nothing is left for the length. $A = 0 m^2$

Test

Width (m)

Length (m)

Area (m²)

Remark

1

1

10

10

2

2

8

16

Area increases

3

3

6

18

🔺 Maximum

4

4

4

16

Square

5

5

2

10

Area decreases

6

6

❌ Impossible (no rope left)

🟣 Activity 3. Semicircle

We want to find the area achieved if we build, like Dido, a semicircle along the sea.

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  1. Using the "Appendix" section, find the radius of this semicircle.

$r = \frac{12}{\pi} \approx 3.81 m$

  1. Calculate the area of the semicircle.

$A = \frac{1}{2} \pi r^2 = \frac{\pi \times 3.81^2}{2} = 22.91 m^2$

Conclusion

With a rope of given length, what seems to be the best design for Dido's city?

The best design for Dido's city seems to be the circle.