fbpx
Wikipedia

Dante Alighieri

Dante Alighieri (Italian: [ˈdante aliˈɡjɛːri]; c. 1265 – 14 September 1321), most likely baptized Durante di Alighiero degli Alighieri[note 1] and often referred to as Dante (English: /ˈdɑːnt, ˈdænt, ˈdænti/,[3][4] US: /ˈdɑːnti/[5]), was an Italian poet, writer, and philosopher.[6] His Divine Comedy, originally called Comedìa (modern Italian: Commedia) and later christened Divina by Giovanni Boccaccio,[7] is widely considered one of the most important poems of the Middle Ages and the greatest literary work in the Italian language.[8][9]

Dante Alighieri
Posthumous portrait in tempera
by Sandro Botticelli, 1495
Bornc. May 1265[1]
Florence, Republic of Florence
Died(1321-09-14)14 September 1321
(aged c. 56)
Ravenna, Papal States
Resting placeTomb of Dante
OccupationStatesman, poet, language theorist, political theorist
LanguageItalian
Tuscan
Latin
NationalityFlorentine
PeriodLate Middle Ages
Literary movementDolce Stil Novo
Notable worksDivine Comedy
SpouseGemma Donati
Children4, including Jacopo
ParentsAlighiero di Bellincione (father)
Bella (mother)

Dante is known for establishing the use of the vernacular in literature at a time when most poetry was written in Latin, which was accessible only to educated readers. His De vulgari eloquentia (On Eloquence in the Vernacular) was one of the first scholarly defenses of the vernacular. His use of the Florentine dialect for works such as The New Life (1295) and Divine Comedy helped establish the modern-day standardized Italian language. By writing his poem in the Italian vernacular rather than in Latin, Dante influenced the course of literary development, making Italian the literary language in western Europe for several centuries.[10] His work set a precedent that important Italian writers such as Petrarch and Boccaccio would later follow.

Dante was instrumental in establishing the literature of Italy, and is considered to be among the country's national poets and the Western world's greatest literary icons.[11] His depictions of Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven provided inspiration for the larger body of Western art and literature.[12][13] He influenced English writers such as Geoffrey Chaucer, John Milton, and Alfred Tennyson, among many others. In addition, the first use of the interlocking three-line rhyme scheme, or the terza rima, is attributed to him. He is described as the "father" of the Italian language,[14] and in Italy he is often referred to as il Sommo Poeta ("the Supreme Poet"). Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio are also called the tre corone ("three crowns") of Italian literature.

Early life edit

 
Dante's house museum in Florence
 
Alleged Dante portrait attributed to Giotto, in the chapel of the Bargello palace, Florence.[15] It was painted c. 1335 and has been restored.[16]

Dante was born in Florence, Republic of Florence, in what is now Italy. The exact date of his birth is unknown, although it is believed to be around 1265.[17] This can be deduced from autobiographic allusions in the Divine Comedy. Its first section, the Inferno, begins, "Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita" ("Midway upon the journey of our life"), implying that Dante was around 35 years old, since the average lifespan according to the Bible (Psalm 89:10, Vulgate) is 70 years; and since his imaginary travel to the netherworld took place in 1300, he was most probably born around 1265. Some verses of the Paradiso section of the Divine Comedy also provide a possible clue that he was born under the sign of Gemini: "As I revolved with the eternal twins, I saw revealed, from hills to river outlets, the threshing-floor that makes us so ferocious" (XXII  151–154). In 1265, the sun was in Gemini between approximately 11 May and 11 June (Julian calendar).[1]

Dante claimed that his family descended from the ancient Romans (Inferno, XV, 76), but the earliest relative he could mention by name was Cacciaguida degli Elisei (Paradiso, XV, 135), born no earlier than about 1100. Dante's father, Alighiero di Bellincione,[18] was a White Guelph who suffered no reprisals after the Ghibellines won the Battle of Montaperti in the middle of the 13th century. This suggests that Alighiero or his family may have enjoyed some protective prestige and status, although some suggest that the politically inactive Alighiero was of such low standing that he was not considered worth exiling.[19]

Dante's family was loyal to the Guelphs, a political alliance that supported the Papacy and that was involved in complex opposition to the Ghibellines, who were backed by the Holy Roman Emperor. The poet's mother was Bella, probably a member of the Abati family.[18] She died when Dante was not yet ten years old. His father Alighiero soon married again, to Lapa di Chiarissimo Cialuffi. It is uncertain whether he really married her, since widowers were socially limited in such matters, but she definitely bore him two children, Dante's half-brother Francesco and half-sister Tana (Gaetana).[18]

 
Portrait of Dante, c. 1375–1406, from a fresco in the Palazzo dei Giudici, Florence[15]

Dante said he first met Beatrice Portinari, daughter of Folco Portinari, when he was nine (she was eight),[20] and he claimed to have fallen in love with her "at first sight", apparently without even talking with her.[21] When he was 12, however, he was promised in marriage to Gemma di Manetto Donati, daughter of Manetto Donati, member of the powerful Donati family.[18] Contracting marriages for children at such an early age was quite common and involved a formal ceremony, including contracts signed before a notary.[18] Dante claimed to have seen Beatrice again frequently after he turned 18, exchanging greetings with her in the streets of Florence, though he never knew her well.[22]

Years after his marriage to Gemma, he claims to have met Beatrice again; he wrote several sonnets to Beatrice but never mentioned Gemma in any of his poems. He refers to other Donati relations, notably Forese and Piccarda, in his Divine Comedy. The exact date of his marriage is not known; the only certain information is that, before his exile in 1301, he had fathered three children with Gemma (Pietro, Jacopo and Antonia).[18]

Dante fought with the Guelph cavalry at the Battle of Campaldino (11 June 1289).[23] This victory brought about a reformation of the Florentine constitution. To take part in public life, one had to enroll in one of the city's many commercial or artisan guilds, so Dante entered the Physicians' and Apothecaries' Guild.[24] His name is occasionally recorded as speaking or voting in the councils of the republic. Many minutes from such meetings between 1298–1300 were lost, so the extent of his participation is uncertain.

Education and poetry edit

 
Mural of Dante in the Uffizi, Florence, by Andrea del Castagno, c. 1450

Not much is known about Dante's education; he presumably studied at home or in a chapter school attached to a church or monastery in Florence. It is known that he studied Tuscan poetry and that he admired the compositions of the Bolognese poet Guido Guinizelli—in Purgatorio XXVI he characterized him as his "father"—at a time when the Sicilian School (Scuola poetica Siciliana), a cultural group from Sicily, was becoming known in Tuscany. He also discovered the Provençal poetry of the troubadours, such as Arnaut Daniel, and the Latin writers of classical antiquity, including Cicero, Ovid and especially Virgil.[25]

Dante's interactions with Beatrice set an example of so-called courtly love, a phenomenon developed in French and Provençal poetry of prior centuries. Dante's experience of such love was typical, but his expression of it was unique. It was in the name of this love that Dante left his imprint on the dolce stil nuovo ("sweet new style", a term that Dante himself coined), and he would join other contemporary poets and writers in exploring never-before-emphasized aspects of love (Amore). Love for Beatrice (as Petrarch would express for Laura somewhat differently) would be his reason for writing poetry and for living, together with political passions. In many of his poems, she is depicted as semi-divine, watching over him constantly and providing spiritual instruction, sometimes harshly. When Beatrice died in 1290, Dante sought refuge in Latin literature.[26] The Convivio chronicles his having read Boethius's De consolatione philosophiae and Cicero's De Amicitia.

 
Dante and Beatrice, by Henry Holiday, inspired by La Vita Nuova, 1883

He next dedicated himself to philosophical studies at religious schools like the Dominican one in Santa Maria Novella. He took part in the disputes that the two principal mendicant orders (Franciscan and Dominican) publicly or indirectly held in Florence, the former explaining the doctrines of the mystics and of St. Bonaventure, the latter expounding on the theories of St. Thomas Aquinas.[22]

At around the age of 18, Dante met Guido Cavalcanti, Lapo Gianni, Cino da Pistoia and, soon after, Brunetto Latini; together they became the leaders of the dolce stil nuovo. Brunetto later received special mention in the Divine Comedy (Inferno, XV, 28) for what he had taught Dante: Nor speaking less on that account I go With Ser Brunetto, and I ask who are his most known and most eminent companions.[27] Some fifty poetical commentaries by Dante are known (the so-called Rime, rhymes), others being included in the later Vita Nuova and Convivio. Other studies are reported, or deduced from Vita Nuova or the Comedy, regarding painting and music.[citation needed]

Florence and politics edit

 
Statue of Dante at the Uffizi

Dante, like most Florentines of his day, was embroiled in the Guelph–Ghibelline conflict. He fought in the Battle of Campaldino (11 June 1289), with the Florentine Guelphs against Arezzo Ghibellines;[23][28] he fought as a feditore [it], responsible for the first attack.[29] To further his political career, he became a pharmacist. He did not intend to practice as one, but a law issued in 1295 required nobles aspiring to public office to be enrolled in one of the Corporazioni delle Arti e dei Mestieri, so Dante obtained admission to the Apothecaries' Guild. This profession was appropriate, as books were sold from apothecaries' shops. As a politician, he held various offices over some years in a city rife with political unrest.[30]

After defeating the Ghibellines, the Guelphs divided into two factions: the White Guelphs (Guelfi Bianchi)—Dante's party, led by Vieri dei Cerchi—and the Black Guelphs (Guelfi Neri), led by Corso Donati. Although the split was along family lines at first, ideological differences arose based on opposing views of the papal role in Florentine affairs. The Blacks supported the Pope and the Whites wanted more freedom from Rome. The Whites took power first and expelled the Blacks. In response, Pope Boniface VIII planned a military occupation of Florence. In 1301, Charles of Valois, brother of King Philip IV of France, was expected to visit Florence because the Pope had appointed him as peacemaker for Tuscany. But the city's government had treated the Pope's ambassadors badly a few weeks before, seeking independence from papal influence. It was believed Charles had received other unofficial instructions, so the council sent a delegation that included Dante to Rome to persuade the Pope not to send Charles to Florence.[31][32]

Exile from Florence edit

 
Statue of Dante in the Piazza Santa Croce in Florence, Enrico Pazzi, 1865

Pope Boniface quickly dismissed the other delegates and asked Dante alone to remain in Rome. At the same time (1 November 1301), Charles of Valois entered Florence with the Black Guelphs, who in the next six days destroyed much of the city and killed many of their enemies. A new Black Guelph government was installed, and Cante dei Gabrielli da Gubbio was appointed podestà of the city. In March 1302, Dante, a White Guelph by affiliation, along with the Gherardini family, was condemned to exile for two years and ordered to pay a large fine.[33] Dante was accused of corruption and financial wrongdoing by the Black Guelphs for the time that Dante was serving as city prior (Florence's highest position) for two months in 1300.[34] The poet was still in Rome in 1302, as the Pope, who had backed the Black Guelphs, had "suggested" that Dante stay there. Florence under the Black Guelphs, therefore, considered Dante an absconder.[35]

Dante did not pay the fine, in part because he believed he was not guilty and in part because all his assets in Florence had been seized by the Black Guelphs. He was condemned to perpetual exile; if he had returned to Florence without paying the fine, he could have been burned at the stake. (In June 2008, nearly seven centuries after his death, the city council of Florence passed a motion rescinding Dante's sentence.)[36] In 1306–07, Dante was a guest of Moroello Malaspina [it] in the region of Lunigiana.[37]

 
Dante in Verona, by Antonio Cotti, 1879

Dante took part in several attempts by the White Guelphs to regain power, but these failed due to treachery. Bitter at the treatment he received from his enemies, he grew disgusted with the infighting and ineffectiveness of his former allies and vowed to become a party of one. He went to Verona as a guest of Bartolomeo I della Scala, then moved to Sarzana in Liguria. Later he is supposed to have lived in Lucca with a woman named Gentucca. She apparently made his stay comfortable (and he later gratefully mentioned her in Purgatorio, XXIV, 37).[38] Some speculative sources claim he visited Paris between 1308 and 1310, and other sources even less trustworthy say he went to Oxford: these claims, first made in Boccaccio's book on Dante several decades after his death, seem inspired by readers who were impressed with the poet's wide learning and erudition. Evidently, Dante's command of philosophy and his literary interests deepened in exile and when he was no longer busy with the day-to-day business of Florentine domestic politics, and this is evidenced in his prose writings in this period. There is no real evidence that he ever left Italy. Dante's Immensa Dei dilectione testante to Henry VII of Luxembourg confirms his residence "beneath the springs of Arno, near Tuscany" in April 1311.[39]

In 1310, Holy Roman Emperor Henry VII of Luxembourg marched into Italy at the head of 5,000 troops. Dante saw in him a new Charlemagne who would restore the office of the Holy Roman Emperor to its former glory and also retake Florence from the Black Guelphs. He wrote to Henry and several Italian princes, demanding that they destroy the Black Guelphs.[40] Mixing religion and private concerns in his writings, he invoked the worst anger of God against his city and suggested several particular targets, who were also his personal enemies. It was during this time that he wrote De Monarchia, proposing a universal monarchy under Henry VII.[41]

 
Dante Alighieri, detail from Luca Signorelli's fresco in the Chapel of San Brizio, Orvieto Cathedral

At some point during his exile, he conceived of the Comedy, but the date is uncertain. The work is much more assured and on a larger scale than anything he had written in Florence; it is likely he would have undertaken such a work only after he realized his political ambitions, which had been central to him up to his banishment, had been halted for some time, possibly forever. It is also noticeable that Beatrice has returned to his imagination with renewed force and with a wider meaning than in the Vita Nuova; in Convivio (written c. 1304–07) he had declared that the memory of this youthful romance belonged to the past.[42]

An early indication that the poem was underway is a notice by Francesco da Barberino, tucked into his Documenti d'Amore (Lessons of Love), probably written in 1314 or early 1315. Francesco notes that Dante followed the Aeneid in a poem called "Comedy" and that the setting of this poem (or part of it) was the underworld; i.e., hell.[43] The brief note gives no incontestable indication that Barberino had seen or read even the Inferno, or that this part had been published at the time, but it indicates composition was well underway and that the sketching of the poem might have begun some years before. (It has been suggested that a knowledge of Dante's work also underlies some of the illuminations in Francesco da Barberino's earlier Officiolum [c. 1305–08], a manuscript that came to light in 2003.[44]) It is known that the Inferno had been published by 1317; this is established by quoted lines interspersed in the margins of contemporary dated records from Bologna, but there is no certainty as to whether the three parts of the poem were each published in full or, rather, a few cantos at a time. Paradiso was likely finished before he died, but it may have been published posthumously.[45]

 
Statue of Dante in Verona

In 1312, Henry assaulted Florence and defeated the Black Guelphs, but there is no evidence that Dante was involved. Some say he refused to participate in the attack on his city by a foreigner; others suggest that he had become unpopular with the White Guelphs, too, and that any trace of his passage had carefully been removed. Henry VII died (from a fever) in 1313 and with him any hope for Dante to see Florence again. He returned to Verona, where Cangrande I della Scala allowed him to live in certain security and, presumably, in a fair degree of prosperity. Cangrande was admitted to Dante's Paradise (Paradiso, XVII, 76).[46]

During the period of his exile, Dante corresponded with Dominican theologian Fr. Nicholas Brunacci OP [1240–1322], who had been a student of Thomas Aquinas at the Santa Sabina studium in Rome, later at Paris,[47] and of Albert the Great at the Cologne studium.[48] Brunacci became lector at the Santa Sabina studium, forerunner of the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, and later served in the papal curia.[49]

In 1315, Florence was forced by Uguccione della Faggiuola (the military officer controlling the town) to grant an amnesty to those in exile, including Dante. But for this, Florence required public penance in addition to payment of a high fine. Dante refused, preferring to remain in exile. When Uguccione defeated Florence, Dante's death sentence was commuted to house arrest, on condition that he go to Florence to swear he would never enter the town again. He refused to go, and his death sentence was confirmed and extended to his sons.[50] Despite this, he still hoped late in life that he might be invited back to Florence on honorable terms, particularly in praise of his poetry.[51]

Death and burial edit

 
 
Dante's tomb exterior and interior in Ravenna, built in 1780

Dante's final days were spent in Ravenna, where he had been invited to stay in the city in 1318 by its prince, Guido II da Polenta. Dante died in Ravenna on 14 September 1321, aged about 56, of quartan malaria contracted while returning from a diplomatic mission to the Republic of Venice. He was attended by his three children, and possibly by Gemma Donati, and by friends and admirers he had in the city.[52] He was buried in Ravenna at the Church of San Pier Maggiore (later called Basilica di San Francesco). Bernardo Bembo, praetor of Venice, erected a tomb for him in 1483.[53][54]

On the grave, a verse of Bernardo Canaccio, a friend of Dante, is dedicated to Florence:

In 1329, Bertrand du Pouget, Cardinal and nephew of Pope John XXII, classified Dante's Monarchia as heretical and sought to have his bones burned at the stake. Ostasio I da Polenta and Pino della Tosa, allies of Pouget, interceded to prevent the destruction of Dante's remains.[55]

 
Recreated death mask of Dante in Palazzo Vecchio, Florence

Florence eventually came to regret having exiled Dante. The city made repeated requests for the return of his remains. The custodians of the body in Ravenna refused, at one point going so far as to conceal the bones in a false wall of the monastery. Florence built a tomb for Dante in 1829, in the Basilica of Santa Croce. That tomb has been empty ever since, with Dante's body remaining in Ravenna. The front of his tomb in Florence reads Onorate l'altissimo poeta — which roughly translates as "Honor the most exalted poet" and is a quote from the fourth canto of the Inferno.[56]

In 1945, the fascist government discussed bringing Dante's remains to the Valtellina Redoubt, the Alpine valley in which the regime intended to make its last stand against the Allies. The case was made that "the greatest symbol of Italianness" should be present at fascism's "heroic" end.[57]

A copy of Dante's so-called death mask has been displayed since 1911 in the Palazzo Vecchio; scholars today believe it is not a true death mask and was probably carved in 1483, perhaps by Pietro and Tullio Lombardo.[58]

Legacy edit

 
Dante in the national side of the Italian 2 euro coin

The first formal biography of Dante was the Vita di Dante (also known as Trattatello in laude di Dante), written after 1348 by Giovanni Boccaccio.[59] Although several statements and episodes of it have been deemed unreliable on the basis of modern research, an earlier account of Dante's life and works had been included in the Nuova Cronica of the Florentine chronicler Giovanni Villani.[60]

Some 16th-century English Protestants, such as John Bale and John Foxe, argued that Dante was a proto-Protestant because of his opposition to the pope.[61][62]

The 19th century saw a "Dante revival", a product of the medieval revival, which was itself an important aspect of Romanticism.[63] Thomas Carlyle profiled him in "The Hero as Poet", the third lecture in On Heroes, Hero-Worship, & the Heroic in History (1841): "He is world-great not because he is worldwide, but because he is world-deep. . . . Dante is the spokesman of the Middle Ages; the Thought they lived by stands here, in everlasting music."[64] Leigh Hunt, Henry Francis Cary and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow were among Dante's translators of the era.

Italy's first dreadnought battleship was completed in 1913 and named Dante Alighieri in honor of him.[65]

 
Statue of Dante at the Dante Park of Manhattan, New York City

On 30 April 1921, in honor of the 600th anniversary of Dante's death, Pope Benedict XV promulgated an encyclical named In praeclara summorum, naming Dante as one "of the many celebrated geniuses of whom the Catholic faith can boast" and the "pride and glory of humanity".[66]

On 7 December 1965, Pope Paul VI promulgated the Latin motu proprio titled Altissimi cantus, which was dedicated to Dante's figure and poetry.[67] In that year, the pope also donated a golden iron Greek Cross to Dante's burial site in Ravenna, in occasion of the 700th anniversary of his birth.[68][69] The same cross was blessed by Pope Francis in October 2020.[70]

In 2007, a reconstruction of Dante's face was undertaken in a collaborative project. Artists from the University of Pisa and forensic engineers at the University of Bologna at Forlì constructed the model, portraying Dante's features as somewhat different from what was once thought.[71][72]

In 2008, the Municipality of Florence officially apologized for expelling Dante 700 years earlier.[73][74][75][76] In May 2021, a symbolic re-trial was held virtually in Florence to posthumously clear his name.[77]

A celebration was held in 2015 at Italy's Senate of the Republic for the 750th anniversary of Dante's birth. It included a commemoration from Pope Francis, who also issued the apostolic letter Cando lucis aeternae in honor of the anniversary.[78][79]

Works edit

Overview edit

 
Divina Commedia (1472)

Most of Dante's literary work was composed after his exile in 1301. La Vita Nuova ("The New Life") is the only major work that predates it; it is a collection of lyric poems (sonnets and songs) with commentary in prose, ostensibly intended to be circulated in manuscript form, as was customary for such poems.[80] It also contains, or constructs, the story of his love for Beatrice Portinari, who later served as the ultimate symbol of salvation in the Comedy, a function already indicated in the final pages of the Vita Nuova. The work contains many of Dante's love poems in Tuscan, which was not unprecedented; the vernacular had been regularly used for lyric works before, during all the thirteenth century. However, Dante's commentary on his own work is also in the vernacular—both in the Vita Nuova and in the Convivio—instead of the Latin that was almost universally used.[81]

The Divine Comedy describes Dante's journey through Hell (Inferno), Purgatory (Purgatorio), and Paradise (Paradiso); he is first guided by the Roman poet Virgil and then by Beatrice. Of the books, Purgatorio is arguably the most lyrical of the three, referring to more contemporary poets and artists than Inferno; Paradiso is the most heavily theological, and the one in which, many scholars have argued, the Divine Comedy's most beautiful and mystic passages appear.[82][83]

With its seriousness of purpose, its literary stature and the range—both stylistic and thematic—of its content, the Comedy soon became a cornerstone in the evolution of Italian as an established literary language. Dante was more aware than most early Italian writers of the variety of Italian dialects and of the need to create a literature and a unified literary language beyond the limits of Latin writing at the time; in that sense, he is a forerunner of the Renaissance, with its effort to create vernacular literature in competition with earlier classical writers. Dante's in-depth knowledge (within the limits of his time) of Roman antiquity, and his evident admiration for some aspects of pagan Rome, also point forward to the 15th century.

 
Dante, poised between the mountain of purgatory and the city of Florence, displays the incipit Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita in a detail of Domenico di Michelino's painting, Florence, 1465.

He wrote the Comedy in a language he called "Italian", in some sense an amalgamated literary language predominantly based on the regional dialect of Tuscany, but with some elements of Latin and other regional dialects.[84] He deliberately aimed to reach a readership throughout Italy including laymen, clergymen and other poets. By creating a poem of epic structure and philosophic purpose, he established that the Italian language was suitable for the highest sort of expression. In French, Italian is sometimes nicknamed la langue de Dante. Publishing in the vernacular language marked Dante as one of the first in Roman Catholic Western Europe (among others such as Geoffrey Chaucer and Giovanni Boccaccio) to break free from standards of publishing in only Latin (the language of liturgy, history and scholarship in general, but often also of lyric poetry). This break set a precedent and allowed more literature to be published for a wider audience, setting the stage for greater levels of literacy in the future. However, unlike Boccaccio, Milton or Ariosto, Dante did not really become an author read across Europe until the Romantic era. To the Romantics, Dante, like Homer and Shakespeare, was a prime example of the "original genius" who set his own rules, created persons of overpowering stature and depth, and went beyond any imitation of the patterns of earlier masters; and who, in turn, could not truly be imitated.[citation needed] Throughout the 19th century, Dante's reputation grew and solidified; and by 1865, the 600th anniversary of his birth, he had become established as one of the greatest literary icons of the Western world.[85]

 
Dante and Virgil visiting Hell, as depicted in Inferno, painted by Rafael Flores, 1855

New readers often wonder how such a serious work may be called a "comedy". In the classical sense the word comedy refers to works that reflect belief in an ordered universe, in which events tend toward not only a happy or amusing ending but one influenced by a Providential will that orders all things to an ultimate good. By this meaning of the word, as Dante himself allegedly wrote in a letter to Cangrande I della Scala, the progression of the pilgrimage from Hell to Paradise is the paradigmatic expression of comedy, since the work begins with the pilgrim's moral confusion and ends with the vision of God.[86]

A number of other works are credited to Dante. Convivio ("The Banquet")[87] is a collection of his longest poems with an (unfinished) allegorical commentary. Monarchia ("Monarchy")[88] is a summary treatise of political philosophy in Latin which was condemned and burned after Dante's death[89][90] by the Papal Legate Bertrando del Poggetto; it argues for the necessity of a universal or global monarchy to establish universal peace in this life, and this monarchy's relationship to the Roman Catholic Church as guide to eternal peace.[91] De vulgari eloquentia ("On the Eloquence in the Vernacular")[92] is a treatise on vernacular literature, partly inspired by the Razos de trobar of Raimon Vidal de Bezaudun.[93][94] Quaestio de aqua et terra ("A Question of the Water and of the Land") is a theological work discussing the arrangement of Earth's dry land and ocean. The Eclogues are two poems addressed to the poet Giovanni del Virgilio. Dante is also sometimes credited with writing Il Fiore ("The Flower"), a series of sonnets summarizing Le Roman de la Rose, and Detto d'Amore ("Tale of Love"), a short narrative poem also based on Le Roman de la Rose. These would be the earliest, and most novice, of his known works.[95] Le Rime is a posthumous collection of miscellaneous poems.

List of works edit

The major works of Dante's are the following.[96][97]

Collections edit

Dante's works reside in cultural institutions across the world. Many items have been digitised or are available for public consultation.

Notes edit

  1. ^ The name 'Dante' is understood to be a hypocorism of the name 'Durante', though no document known to survive from Dante's lifetime refers to him as ‘Durante’ (including his own writings). A document prepared for Dante's son Jacopo refers to "Durante, often called Dante". He may have been named for his maternal grandfather Durante degli Abati.[2]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b His birth date is listed as "probably in the end of May" by Robert Hollander in "Dante" in Dictionary of the Middle Ages, volume  4. According to Giovanni Boccaccio, the poet said he was born in May. See "Alighieri, Dante" in the Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani.
  2. ^ Gorni, Guglielmo (2009). "Nascita e anagrafe di Dante". Dante: storia di un visionario. Rome: Gius. Laterza & Figli. ISBN 9788858101742.
  3. ^ "Dante". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  4. ^ "Dante"[dead link] (US) and . Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 22 March 2020.
  5. ^ "Dante". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  6. ^ Wetherbee, Winthrop; Aleksander, Jason (30 April 2018). Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University – via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  7. ^ Hutton, Edward (1910). Giovanni Boccaccio, a Biographical Study. p. 273.
  8. ^ Bloom, Harold (1994). The Western Canon. Riverhead Books. ISBN 9781573225144.
  9. ^ Shaw, Prue (2014). Reading Dante: From Here to Eternity. New York: Liveright Publishing Corporation. pp. Introduction. ISBN 978-0-87140-742-9.
  10. ^ Quinones, Ricardo J. (9 May 2023). "Dante Alighieri – Biography, Poems, & Facts". Britannica.
  11. ^ Matheson, Lister M. (2012). Icons of the Middle Ages: Rulers, Writers, Rebels, and Saints. Greenwood Pub Group. p. 244.
  12. ^ Haller, Elizabeth K. (2012). "Dante Alighieri". In Matheson, Lister M. (ed.). Icons of the Middle Ages: Rulers, Writers, Rebels, and Saints. Vol. 1. Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood. p. 244. ISBN 978-0-313-34080-2.
  13. ^ Murray, Charles A. (2003). Human accomplishment: the pursuit of excellence in the arts and sciences, 800 B.C. to 1950 (1st ed.). New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-019247-1. OCLC 52047270.
  14. ^ Barański, Zygmunt G.; Gilson, Simon, eds. (2018). The Cambridge Companion to Dante's 'Commedia'. Cambridge University Press. p. 108. ISBN 9781108421294.
  15. ^ a b Santagata 2016, p. 6.
  16. ^ Gombrich, E. H. (1979). "Giotto's Portrait of Dante?". The Burlington Magazine. 121 (917): 471–483 – via JSTOR.
  17. ^ Chimenz, Siro A. (1960). "Alighieri, Dante". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani (in Italian). Vol. 2. Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Chimenz, S.A (2014). "Alighieri, Dante". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani (in Italian). Enciclopedia Italiana. Bibcode:2014bea..book...56. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  19. ^ Santagata, Marco (2012). Dante: Il romanzo della sua vita. Milan: Mondadori. p. 21. ISBN 978-88-04-62026-6.
  20. ^ "Beatrice and Dante Alighieri > A Love Story". 14 December 2016.
  21. ^ Alighieri, Dante (2013). Delphi Complete Works of Dante Alighieri. Vol. 6 (Illustrated ed.). Delphi Classics. ISBN 978-1-909496-19-4.
  22. ^ a b Alighieri, Dante (1904). Philip Henry Wicksteed, Herman Oelsner (ed.). The Paradiso of Dante Alighieri (fifth ed.). J.M. Dent and Company. p. 129.
  23. ^ a b Davenport, John (2005). Dante: Poet, Author, and Proud Florentine. Infobase Publishing. p. 53. ISBN 978-1-4381-0415-7. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  24. ^ di Serego Alighieri, Sperello; Capaccioli, Massimo (2022). The Sun and the other Stars of Dante Alighieri. Singapore: World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd. p. 48. ISBN 9789811246227.
  25. ^ "Dante Alighieri". poets.org. Academy of American Poets. Retrieved 20 December 2019.
  26. ^ Nilsen, Alleen Pace; Don L.F. Nilsen (2007). Names and Naming in Young Adult Literature. Scarecrow Studies in Young Adult Literature. Vol. 27. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. p. 133. ISBN 978-0-8108-6685-0.
  27. ^ Ruud, Jay (2008). Critical Companion to Dante. Infobase Publishing. p. 138. ISBN 978-1-4381-0841-4.
  28. ^ . Dante Alighieri Society of Massachusetts. Archived from the original on 12 December 2015. Retrieved 30 December 2015.
  29. ^ Santagata 2016, p. 62.
  30. ^ Sandor, Vlaicu; Dumitrascu, Dinu I.; Bojita, Marius T.; Dumitrascu, Dan L. (April 2022). "Medicine and Pharmacy in the Works of Dante Alighieri (1265–1321)". Medicine and Pharmacy Reports. 95 (2): 218–224. doi:10.15386/mpr-2451. PMC 9176311. PMID 35721038.
  31. ^ "Chronology". Renaissance Dante in Print (1472–1629). University of Notre Dame. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
  32. ^ Elena Lombardi, Francesca Southerden, Manuele Gragnolati, ed. (2021). The Oxford Handbook of Dante. Oxford University Press. p. 343. ISBN 9780198820741.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  33. ^ Dino Compagni, Cronica delle cose occorrenti ne' tempi suoi
  34. ^ Harrison 2015, pp. 36–37.
  35. ^ Harrison 2015, p. 36.
  36. ^ Moore, Malcolm (17 June 2008). . The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 22 June 2008. Retrieved 18 June 2008.
  37. ^ Raffa 2020, p. 24.
  38. ^ Santagata 2016, p. 208.
  39. ^ Santagata 2016, p. 249.
  40. ^ Latham, Charles S.; Carpenter, George R. (1891). A Translation of Dante’s Eleven Letters. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin. pp. 269–282.
  41. ^ Carroll, John S. (1903). Exiles of Eternity: An Exposition of Dante's Inferno. London: Hodder and Stoughton. pp. xlviii–l.
  42. ^ Wickstool, Philip Henry (1903). The Convivio of Dante Alighieri. London : J. M. Dent and co. p. 5. And in that I spoke before entrance on the prime of manhood, and in this when I had already passed the same.
  43. ^ See Bookrags.com and Tigerstedt, E.N. 1967, Dante; Tiden Mannen Verket (Dante; The Age, the Man, the Work), Bonniers, Stockholm, 1967.[dead link]
  44. ^ Bertolo, Fabio M. (2003). "L'Officiolum ritrovato di Francesco da Barberino". Spolia – Journal of Medieval Studies. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
  45. ^ Santagata 2016, p. 339.
  46. ^ "Cangrande della Scala – "Da molte stelle mi vien questa luce"" [Cangrande della Scala – "This light comes to me from many stars"]. dantealighieri.tk (in Italian). Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  47. ^ "Le famiglie Brunacci". Brunacci.it. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  48. ^ Garin, Eugenio (2008). History of Italian Philosophy: VIBS. Rodopi. p. 85. ISBN 978-90-420-2321-5. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  49. ^ "The testimonies of the chronicles". E-theca.net. Retrieved 9 May 2011.
  50. ^ Burdeau, Cain (21 May 2021). "Dante Gets a Bit of Justice, 700 Years After His Death". courthousenews.com. Courthouse News Service. Retrieved 28 August 2022.
  51. ^ Santagata 2016, p. 333–334.
  52. ^ Raffa 2020, pp. 23–24, 27, 28–30.
  53. ^ Pirro, Deirdre (10 April 2017). "Dante: the battle of the bones". The Florentine.
  54. ^ "Italy Magazine, Dante's Tomb". italymagazine.com. 31 October 2017.
  55. ^ Raffa 2020, p. 38.
  56. ^ Phelan, Jessica (4 September 2019). "Dante's last laugh: Why Italy's national poet isn't buried where you think he is". The Local Italy.
  57. ^ Raffa 2020, pp. 244–245.
  58. ^ "Dante death mask". florenceinferno.com. July 2013.
  59. ^ "Dante Alighieri". The Catholic Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
  60. ^ Vauchez, André; Dobson, Richard Barrie; Lapidge, Michael (2000). Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. p. 1517.; Caesar, Michael (1989). Dante, the Critical Heritage, 1314(?)–1870. London: Routledge. p. xi.
  61. ^ Boswell, Jackson Campbell (1999). Dante's Fame in England: References in Printed British Books, 1477–1640. Newark: University of Delaware Press. p. xv. ISBN 0-87413-605-9. After John Foxe's enormously influential Ecclesiastical History Contayning the Actes and Monumentes was published (1570), Dante's role as a proto-Protestant was sealed.
  62. ^ "Catholic Encyclopedia: Foxe's Book of Martyrs". www.newadvent.org. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  63. ^ "19th Century: A History of English Romanticism by Henry Augustin Beers: Ch. 3: Keats, Leigh Hunt, and the Dante Revival". www.online-literature.com. Retrieved 18 August 2022.
  64. ^ Carlyle, Thomas (1841). "Lecture III. The Hero as Poet. Dante: Shakspeare.". On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic in History.
  65. ^ . naval encyclopedia. 21 July 2019. Archived from the original on 30 January 2021. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  66. ^ "In praeclara summorum: Encyclical of Pope Benedict XV on Dante". The Holy See. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
  67. ^ "Altissimi cantus". Vatican State (in Latin and Italian). Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  68. ^ . Ravenna. Archived from the original on 21 March 2021. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  69. ^ "Pope Francis: The fascination of God makes its powerful attraction felt". Vatican News. 10 October 2020. Archived from the original on 16 October 2020. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  70. ^ Pietracci, Sara (11 October 2020). "Papa Francesco annuncia alla delegazione ravennate la preparazione di un documento pontificio su Dante" [Pope Francis says to the delegation from Ravenna he his working to a pontifical document related to Dante] (in Italian). Ravenna. Archived from the original on 21 March 2021. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  71. ^ Pullella, Philip (12 January 2007). "Dante gets posthumous nose job – 700 years on". Statesman. Reuters. Retrieved 5 November 2007.
  72. ^ Benazzi, S (2009). "The Face of the Poet Dante Alighieri, Reconstructed by Virtual Modeling and Forensic Anthropology Techniques". Journal of Archaeological Science. 36 (2): 278–283. Bibcode:2009JArSc..36..278B. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2008.09.006.
  73. ^ "Florence sorry for banishing Dante". UPI.
  74. ^ Israely, Jeff (31 July 2008). "A City's Infernal Dante Dispute". Time. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 25 September 2018.
  75. ^ Duff, Mark (18 June 2008). "Florence 'to revoke Dante exile'". BBC.
  76. ^ "Firenze riabilita Dante Alighieri: L'iniziativa a 700 anni dall'esilio". La Repubblica. 30 March 2008.
  77. ^ "Florence hosts 're-trial' of Dante, convicted and banished in 1302". DW. 21 May 2021.
  78. ^ . Press.vatican.va. Archived from the original on 4 May 2015. Retrieved 21 October 2015.
  79. ^ "Translator". Microsofttranslator.com. Retrieved 21 October 2015.
  80. ^ "New Life". Dante online. Retrieved 2 September 2008.
  81. ^ Scott, John (1995). "The Unfinished 'Convivio' as a Pathway to the 'Comedy'". Dante Studies, with the Annual Report of the Dante Society. 113 (113): 31–56. JSTOR 40166505 – via JSTOR.
  82. ^ Kalkavage, Peter (10 August 2014). "In the Heaven of Knowing: Dante's Paradiso". theimaginativeconservative.org. The Imaginative Conservative. Retrieved 28 August 2022.
  83. ^ Falconburg, Darrell. "The Way of Beauty in Dante". dappledthings.org. Dappled Things. Retrieved 28 August 2022.
  84. ^ Dante at the Encyclopædia Britannica
  85. ^ "An Italian Icon". fu-berlin.de. Freie Universität Berlin. 14 September 2021. Retrieved 28 August 2022.
  86. ^ "Epistle to Cangrande Updated". www.dantesociety.org. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
  87. ^ . Dante online. Archived from the original on 27 September 2008. Retrieved 2 September 2008.
  88. ^ . Dante online. Archived from the original on 27 September 2008. Retrieved 2 September 2008.
  89. ^ Anthony K. Cassell . Monarchia stayed on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum from its inception until 1881.
  90. ^ Giuseppe Cappelli, La divina commedia di Dante Alighieri, in Italian.
  91. ^ Lepsius, Oliver (2017). "Hans Kelsen on Dante Alighieri's Political Philosophy". European Journal of International Law. 27 (4): 1153. doi:10.1093/ejil/chw060.
  92. ^ . Dante online. Archived from the original on 27 September 2008. Retrieved 2 September 2008.
  93. ^ Ewert, A. (1940). "Dante's Theory of Language". The Modern Language Review. 35 (3): 355–366. doi:10.2307/3716632. JSTOR 3716632.
  94. ^ Faidit, Uc; Vidal, Raimon; Guessard, François (1858). Grammaires provençales de Hugues Faidit et de Raymond Vidal de Besaudun (XIIIe siècle) (2nd ed.). Paris: A. Franck.
  95. ^ Lansing, Richard (2000). The Dante Encyclopedia. New York: Garland. pp. 299, 334, 379, 734. ISBN 0815316593.
  96. ^ Wilkins, Ernest H. (1920). "An Introductory Dante Bibliography". Modern Philology. 17 (11): 623–632. doi:10.1086/387304. hdl:2027/mdp.39015033478622. JSTOR 432861. S2CID 161197863.
  97. ^ Bibliothèque nationale de France {BnF Data}. "Dante Alighieri (1265–1321)".
  98. ^ "Dante's House Museum". Museo Casa di Dante, Firenze. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
  99. ^ "DANTE ALIGHIERI (1265-1321) | Princeton University Library Special Collections". library.princeton.edu. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
  100. ^ UCL Special Collections (23 August 2018). "Dante Collection". UCL Special Collections. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
  101. ^ "Divina Commedia, MS 428 [between 1385 and 1400]". Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library. 23 March 2021. Retrieved 12 December 2023.

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Allitt, John Stewart (2011). Dante, il pellegrino (in Italian). Villa di Serio (BG): Edizioni Villadiseriane. ISBN 978-88-96199-80-0.
  • Anderson, William (1980). Dante the Maker. Routledge Kegan Paul. ISBN 978-0-7100-0322-5.
  • Barolini, Teodolinda (ed.). Dante's Lyric Poetry: Poems of Youth and of the 'Vita Nuova'. University of Toronto Press, 2014.
  • Gardner, Edmund Garratt (1921). Dante. London: Oxford University Press. OCLC 690699123. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  • Guénon, René (1925). The Esoterism of Dante, trans. by C.B. Berhill, in the Perennial Wisdom Series. Ghent, NY: Sophia Perennis et Universalis, 1996. viii, 72 p. N.B.: Originally published in French, entitled L'Esoterisme de Danté, in 1925. ISBN 0-900588-02-0
  • Hede, Jesper (2007). Reading Dante: The Pursuit of Meaning. Lanham: Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0-7391-2196-2.
  • Miles, Thomas (2008). "Dante: Tours of Hell: Mapping the Landscape of Sin and Despair". In Stewart, Jon (ed.). Kierkegaard and the Patristic and Medieval Traditions. Ashgate. pp. 223–236. ISBN 978-0-7546-6391-1.
  • Musa, Mark (1974). Advent at the Gates: Dante's Comedy. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0253301406.
  • Raffa, Guy P. (2009). The Complete Danteworlds: A Reader's Guide to the Divine Comedy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-70270-4.
  • Scartazzini, Giovanni Andrea (1874–1890). La Divina Commedia riveduta e commentata (4 volumes). OCLC 558999245.
  • Scartazzini, Giovanni Andrea (1896–1898). Enciclopedia dantesca: dizionario critico e ragionato di quanto concerne la vita e le opere di Dante Alighieri (2 volumes). OCLC 12202483.
  • Scott, John A. (1996). Dante's Political Purgatory. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-585-12724-8.
  • Seung, T.K. (1962). The Fragile Leaves of the Sibyl: Dante's Master Plan. Westminster, MD: Newman Press. OCLC 1426455.
  • Toynbee, Paget (1898). A Dictionary of the Proper Names and Notable Matters in the Works of Dante. London: The Clarendon Press. OCLC 343895. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  • Whiting, Mary Bradford (1922). Dante the Man and the Poet. Cambridge: W. Heffer & Sons. OCLC 224789.

External links edit

  • Works by Dante Alighieri in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by Dante Alighieri at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Dante Alighieri at Internet Archive
  • Works by Dante Alighieri at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Dante Alighieri at Curlie
  • Works by Dante Alighieri at One More Library (Works in English, Italian, Latin, Arabic, German, French and Spanish)
  • Wetherbee, Winthrop. "Dante Alighieri". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • The Dante Museum in Florence: his life, his books and a history & literature blog about Dante
  • The multimedia, texts, maps, gallery, searchable database, music, teacher resources, timeline
  • The Princeton Dante Project 3 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine texts and multimedia
  • The Dartmouth Dante Project searchable database of commentary
  • Dante Online manuscripts of works, images and text transcripts by Società Dantesca Italiana
  • Digital Dante – Divine Comedy with commentary, other works, scholars on Dante
  • Open Yale Course on Dante by Yale University
  • DanteSources project about Dante's primary sources developed by ISTI-CNR and the University of Pisa
  • Italian and Latin texts, concordances and frequency lists by IntraText
  • Dante Today 11 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine citings and sightings of Dante in contemporary culture
  • Bibliotheca Dantesca journal dedicated to Dante and his reception
  • Dante Collection at University College London (c. 3000 volumes of works by and about Dante)

dante, alighieri, dante, redirects, here, other, uses, dante, disambiguation, italian, ˈdante, aliˈɡjɛːri, 1265, september, 1321, most, likely, baptized, durante, alighiero, degli, alighieri, note, often, referred, dante, english, ɑː, ɑː, italian, poet, writer. Dante redirects here For other uses see Dante disambiguation Dante Alighieri Italian ˈdante aliˈɡjɛːri c 1265 14 September 1321 most likely baptized Durante di Alighiero degli Alighieri note 1 and often referred to as Dante English ˈ d ɑː n t eɪ ˈ d ae n t eɪ ˈ d ae n t i 3 4 US ˈ d ɑː n t i 5 was an Italian poet writer and philosopher 6 His Divine Comedy originally called Comedia modern Italian Commedia and later christened Divina by Giovanni Boccaccio 7 is widely considered one of the most important poems of the Middle Ages and the greatest literary work in the Italian language 8 9 Dante AlighieriPosthumous portrait in temperaby Sandro Botticelli 1495Bornc May 1265 1 Florence Republic of FlorenceDied 1321 09 14 14 September 1321 aged c 56 Ravenna Papal StatesResting placeTomb of DanteOccupationStatesman poet language theorist political theoristLanguageItalianTuscanLatinNationalityFlorentinePeriodLate Middle AgesLiterary movementDolce Stil NovoNotable worksDivine ComedySpouseGemma DonatiChildren4 including JacopoParentsAlighiero di Bellincione father Bella mother Dante is known for establishing the use of the vernacular in literature at a time when most poetry was written in Latin which was accessible only to educated readers His De vulgari eloquentia On Eloquence in the Vernacular was one of the first scholarly defenses of the vernacular His use of the Florentine dialect for works such as The New Life 1295 and Divine Comedy helped establish the modern day standardized Italian language By writing his poem in the Italian vernacular rather than in Latin Dante influenced the course of literary development making Italian the literary language in western Europe for several centuries 10 His work set a precedent that important Italian writers such as Petrarch and Boccaccio would later follow Dante was instrumental in establishing the literature of Italy and is considered to be among the country s national poets and the Western world s greatest literary icons 11 His depictions of Hell Purgatory and Heaven provided inspiration for the larger body of Western art and literature 12 13 He influenced English writers such as Geoffrey Chaucer John Milton and Alfred Tennyson among many others In addition the first use of the interlocking three line rhyme scheme or the terza rima is attributed to him He is described as the father of the Italian language 14 and in Italy he is often referred to as il Sommo Poeta the Supreme Poet Dante Petrarch and Boccaccio are also called the tre corone three crowns of Italian literature Contents 1 Early life 2 Education and poetry 3 Florence and politics 4 Exile from Florence 5 Death and burial 6 Legacy 7 Works 7 1 Overview 7 2 List of works 7 3 Collections 8 Notes 9 Citations 9 1 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Dante s house museum in Florence nbsp Alleged Dante portrait attributed to Giotto in the chapel of the Bargello palace Florence 15 It was painted c 1335 and has been restored 16 Dante was born in Florence Republic of Florence in what is now Italy The exact date of his birth is unknown although it is believed to be around 1265 17 This can be deduced from autobiographic allusions in the Divine Comedy Its first section the Inferno begins Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita Midway upon the journey of our life implying that Dante was around 35 years old since the average lifespan according to the Bible Psalm 89 10 Vulgate is 70 years and since his imaginary travel to the netherworld took place in 1300 he was most probably born around 1265 Some verses of the Paradiso section of the Divine Comedy also provide a possible clue that he was born under the sign of Gemini As I revolved with the eternal twins I saw revealed from hills to river outlets the threshing floor that makes us so ferocious XXII 151 154 In 1265 the sun was in Gemini between approximately 11 May and 11 June Julian calendar 1 Dante claimed that his family descended from the ancient Romans Inferno XV 76 but the earliest relative he could mention by name was Cacciaguida degli Elisei Paradiso XV 135 born no earlier than about 1100 Dante s father Alighiero di Bellincione 18 was a White Guelph who suffered no reprisals after the Ghibellines won the Battle of Montaperti in the middle of the 13th century This suggests that Alighiero or his family may have enjoyed some protective prestige and status although some suggest that the politically inactive Alighiero was of such low standing that he was not considered worth exiling 19 Dante s family was loyal to the Guelphs a political alliance that supported the Papacy and that was involved in complex opposition to the Ghibellines who were backed by the Holy Roman Emperor The poet s mother was Bella probably a member of the Abati family 18 She died when Dante was not yet ten years old His father Alighiero soon married again to Lapa di Chiarissimo Cialuffi It is uncertain whether he really married her since widowers were socially limited in such matters but she definitely bore him two children Dante s half brother Francesco and half sister Tana Gaetana 18 nbsp Portrait of Dante c 1375 1406 from a fresco in the Palazzo dei Giudici Florence 15 Dante said he first met Beatrice Portinari daughter of Folco Portinari when he was nine she was eight 20 and he claimed to have fallen in love with her at first sight apparently without even talking with her 21 When he was 12 however he was promised in marriage to Gemma di Manetto Donati daughter of Manetto Donati member of the powerful Donati family 18 Contracting marriages for children at such an early age was quite common and involved a formal ceremony including contracts signed before a notary 18 Dante claimed to have seen Beatrice again frequently after he turned 18 exchanging greetings with her in the streets of Florence though he never knew her well 22 Years after his marriage to Gemma he claims to have met Beatrice again he wrote several sonnets to Beatrice but never mentioned Gemma in any of his poems He refers to other Donati relations notably Forese and Piccarda in his Divine Comedy The exact date of his marriage is not known the only certain information is that before his exile in 1301 he had fathered three children with Gemma Pietro Jacopo and Antonia 18 Dante fought with the Guelph cavalry at the Battle of Campaldino 11 June 1289 23 This victory brought about a reformation of the Florentine constitution To take part in public life one had to enroll in one of the city s many commercial or artisan guilds so Dante entered the Physicians and Apothecaries Guild 24 His name is occasionally recorded as speaking or voting in the councils of the republic Many minutes from such meetings between 1298 1300 were lost so the extent of his participation is uncertain Education and poetry edit nbsp Mural of Dante in the Uffizi Florence by Andrea del Castagno c 1450Not much is known about Dante s education he presumably studied at home or in a chapter school attached to a church or monastery in Florence It is known that he studied Tuscan poetry and that he admired the compositions of the Bolognese poet Guido Guinizelli in Purgatorio XXVI he characterized him as his father at a time when the Sicilian School Scuola poetica Siciliana a cultural group from Sicily was becoming known in Tuscany He also discovered the Provencal poetry of the troubadours such as Arnaut Daniel and the Latin writers of classical antiquity including Cicero Ovid and especially Virgil 25 Dante s interactions with Beatrice set an example of so called courtly love a phenomenon developed in French and Provencal poetry of prior centuries Dante s experience of such love was typical but his expression of it was unique It was in the name of this love that Dante left his imprint on the dolce stil nuovo sweet new style a term that Dante himself coined and he would join other contemporary poets and writers in exploring never before emphasized aspects of love Amore Love for Beatrice as Petrarch would express for Laura somewhat differently would be his reason for writing poetry and for living together with political passions In many of his poems she is depicted as semi divine watching over him constantly and providing spiritual instruction sometimes harshly When Beatrice died in 1290 Dante sought refuge in Latin literature 26 The Convivio chronicles his having read Boethius s De consolatione philosophiae and Cicero s De Amicitia nbsp Dante and Beatrice by Henry Holiday inspired by La Vita Nuova 1883He next dedicated himself to philosophical studies at religious schools like the Dominican one in Santa Maria Novella He took part in the disputes that the two principal mendicant orders Franciscan and Dominican publicly or indirectly held in Florence the former explaining the doctrines of the mystics and of St Bonaventure the latter expounding on the theories of St Thomas Aquinas 22 At around the age of 18 Dante met Guido Cavalcanti Lapo Gianni Cino da Pistoia and soon after Brunetto Latini together they became the leaders of the dolce stil nuovo Brunetto later received special mention in the Divine Comedy Inferno XV 28 for what he had taught Dante Nor speaking less on that account I go With Ser Brunetto and I ask who are his most known and most eminent companions 27 Some fifty poetical commentaries by Dante are known the so called Rime rhymes others being included in the later Vita Nuova and Convivio Other studies are reported or deduced from Vita Nuova or the Comedy regarding painting and music citation needed Florence and politics editFurther information Guelphs and Ghibellines nbsp Statue of Dante at the UffiziDante like most Florentines of his day was embroiled in the Guelph Ghibelline conflict He fought in the Battle of Campaldino 11 June 1289 with the Florentine Guelphs against Arezzo Ghibellines 23 28 he fought as a feditore it responsible for the first attack 29 To further his political career he became a pharmacist He did not intend to practice as one but a law issued in 1295 required nobles aspiring to public office to be enrolled in one of the Corporazioni delle Arti e dei Mestieri so Dante obtained admission to the Apothecaries Guild This profession was appropriate as books were sold from apothecaries shops As a politician he held various offices over some years in a city rife with political unrest 30 After defeating the Ghibellines the Guelphs divided into two factions the White Guelphs Guelfi Bianchi Dante s party led by Vieri dei Cerchi and the Black Guelphs Guelfi Neri led by Corso Donati Although the split was along family lines at first ideological differences arose based on opposing views of the papal role in Florentine affairs The Blacks supported the Pope and the Whites wanted more freedom from Rome The Whites took power first and expelled the Blacks In response Pope Boniface VIII planned a military occupation of Florence In 1301 Charles of Valois brother of King Philip IV of France was expected to visit Florence because the Pope had appointed him as peacemaker for Tuscany But the city s government had treated the Pope s ambassadors badly a few weeks before seeking independence from papal influence It was believed Charles had received other unofficial instructions so the council sent a delegation that included Dante to Rome to persuade the Pope not to send Charles to Florence 31 32 Exile from Florence edit nbsp Statue of Dante in the Piazza Santa Croce in Florence Enrico Pazzi 1865Pope Boniface quickly dismissed the other delegates and asked Dante alone to remain in Rome At the same time 1 November 1301 Charles of Valois entered Florence with the Black Guelphs who in the next six days destroyed much of the city and killed many of their enemies A new Black Guelph government was installed and Cante dei Gabrielli da Gubbio was appointed podesta of the city In March 1302 Dante a White Guelph by affiliation along with the Gherardini family was condemned to exile for two years and ordered to pay a large fine 33 Dante was accused of corruption and financial wrongdoing by the Black Guelphs for the time that Dante was serving as city prior Florence s highest position for two months in 1300 34 The poet was still in Rome in 1302 as the Pope who had backed the Black Guelphs had suggested that Dante stay there Florence under the Black Guelphs therefore considered Dante an absconder 35 Dante did not pay the fine in part because he believed he was not guilty and in part because all his assets in Florence had been seized by the Black Guelphs He was condemned to perpetual exile if he had returned to Florence without paying the fine he could have been burned at the stake In June 2008 nearly seven centuries after his death the city council of Florence passed a motion rescinding Dante s sentence 36 In 1306 07 Dante was a guest of Moroello Malaspina it in the region of Lunigiana 37 nbsp Dante in Verona by Antonio Cotti 1879Dante took part in several attempts by the White Guelphs to regain power but these failed due to treachery Bitter at the treatment he received from his enemies he grew disgusted with the infighting and ineffectiveness of his former allies and vowed to become a party of one He went to Verona as a guest of Bartolomeo I della Scala then moved to Sarzana in Liguria Later he is supposed to have lived in Lucca with a woman named Gentucca She apparently made his stay comfortable and he later gratefully mentioned her in Purgatorio XXIV 37 38 Some speculative sources claim he visited Paris between 1308 and 1310 and other sources even less trustworthy say he went to Oxford these claims first made in Boccaccio s book on Dante several decades after his death seem inspired by readers who were impressed with the poet s wide learning and erudition Evidently Dante s command of philosophy and his literary interests deepened in exile and when he was no longer busy with the day to day business of Florentine domestic politics and this is evidenced in his prose writings in this period There is no real evidence that he ever left Italy Dante s Immensa Dei dilectione testante to Henry VII of Luxembourg confirms his residence beneath the springs of Arno near Tuscany in April 1311 39 In 1310 Holy Roman Emperor Henry VII of Luxembourg marched into Italy at the head of 5 000 troops Dante saw in him a new Charlemagne who would restore the office of the Holy Roman Emperor to its former glory and also retake Florence from the Black Guelphs He wrote to Henry and several Italian princes demanding that they destroy the Black Guelphs 40 Mixing religion and private concerns in his writings he invoked the worst anger of God against his city and suggested several particular targets who were also his personal enemies It was during this time that he wrote De Monarchia proposing a universal monarchy under Henry VII 41 nbsp Dante Alighieri detail from Luca Signorelli s fresco in the Chapel of San Brizio Orvieto CathedralAt some point during his exile he conceived of the Comedy but the date is uncertain The work is much more assured and on a larger scale than anything he had written in Florence it is likely he would have undertaken such a work only after he realized his political ambitions which had been central to him up to his banishment had been halted for some time possibly forever It is also noticeable that Beatrice has returned to his imagination with renewed force and with a wider meaning than in the Vita Nuova in Convivio written c 1304 07 he had declared that the memory of this youthful romance belonged to the past 42 An early indication that the poem was underway is a notice by Francesco da Barberino tucked into his Documenti d Amore Lessons of Love probably written in 1314 or early 1315 Francesco notes that Dante followed the Aeneid in a poem called Comedy and that the setting of this poem or part of it was the underworld i e hell 43 The brief note gives no incontestable indication that Barberino had seen or read even the Inferno or that this part had been published at the time but it indicates composition was well underway and that the sketching of the poem might have begun some years before It has been suggested that a knowledge of Dante s work also underlies some of the illuminations in Francesco da Barberino s earlier Officiolum c 1305 08 a manuscript that came to light in 2003 44 It is known that the Inferno had been published by 1317 this is established by quoted lines interspersed in the margins of contemporary dated records from Bologna but there is no certainty as to whether the three parts of the poem were each published in full or rather a few cantos at a time Paradiso was likely finished before he died but it may have been published posthumously 45 nbsp Statue of Dante in VeronaIn 1312 Henry assaulted Florence and defeated the Black Guelphs but there is no evidence that Dante was involved Some say he refused to participate in the attack on his city by a foreigner others suggest that he had become unpopular with the White Guelphs too and that any trace of his passage had carefully been removed Henry VII died from a fever in 1313 and with him any hope for Dante to see Florence again He returned to Verona where Cangrande I della Scala allowed him to live in certain security and presumably in a fair degree of prosperity Cangrande was admitted to Dante s Paradise Paradiso XVII 76 46 During the period of his exile Dante corresponded with Dominican theologian Fr Nicholas Brunacci OP 1240 1322 who had been a student of Thomas Aquinas at the Santa Sabina studium in Rome later at Paris 47 and of Albert the Great at the Cologne studium 48 Brunacci became lector at the Santa Sabina studium forerunner of the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas and later served in the papal curia 49 In 1315 Florence was forced by Uguccione della Faggiuola the military officer controlling the town to grant an amnesty to those in exile including Dante But for this Florence required public penance in addition to payment of a high fine Dante refused preferring to remain in exile When Uguccione defeated Florence Dante s death sentence was commuted to house arrest on condition that he go to Florence to swear he would never enter the town again He refused to go and his death sentence was confirmed and extended to his sons 50 Despite this he still hoped late in life that he might be invited back to Florence on honorable terms particularly in praise of his poetry 51 Death and burial edit nbsp nbsp Dante s tomb exterior and interior in Ravenna built in 1780 Dante s final days were spent in Ravenna where he had been invited to stay in the city in 1318 by its prince Guido II da Polenta Dante died in Ravenna on 14 September 1321 aged about 56 of quartan malaria contracted while returning from a diplomatic mission to the Republic of Venice He was attended by his three children and possibly by Gemma Donati and by friends and admirers he had in the city 52 He was buried in Ravenna at the Church of San Pier Maggiore later called Basilica di San Francesco Bernardo Bembo praetor of Venice erected a tomb for him in 1483 53 54 On the grave a verse of Bernardo Canaccio a friend of Dante is dedicated to Florence parvi Florentia mater amoris Florence mother of little loveIn 1329 Bertrand du Pouget Cardinal and nephew of Pope John XXII classified Dante s Monarchia as heretical and sought to have his bones burned at the stake Ostasio I da Polenta and Pino della Tosa allies of Pouget interceded to prevent the destruction of Dante s remains 55 nbsp Recreated death mask of Dante in Palazzo Vecchio FlorenceFlorence eventually came to regret having exiled Dante The city made repeated requests for the return of his remains The custodians of the body in Ravenna refused at one point going so far as to conceal the bones in a false wall of the monastery Florence built a tomb for Dante in 1829 in the Basilica of Santa Croce That tomb has been empty ever since with Dante s body remaining in Ravenna The front of his tomb in Florence reads Onorate l altissimo poeta which roughly translates as Honor the most exalted poet and is a quote from the fourth canto of the Inferno 56 In 1945 the fascist government discussed bringing Dante s remains to the Valtellina Redoubt the Alpine valley in which the regime intended to make its last stand against the Allies The case was made that the greatest symbol of Italianness should be present at fascism s heroic end 57 A copy of Dante s so called death mask has been displayed since 1911 in the Palazzo Vecchio scholars today believe it is not a true death mask and was probably carved in 1483 perhaps by Pietro and Tullio Lombardo 58 Legacy edit nbsp Dante in the national side of the Italian 2 euro coinThe first formal biography of Dante was the Vita di Dante also known as Trattatello in laude di Dante written after 1348 by Giovanni Boccaccio 59 Although several statements and episodes of it have been deemed unreliable on the basis of modern research an earlier account of Dante s life and works had been included in the Nuova Cronica of the Florentine chronicler Giovanni Villani 60 Some 16th century English Protestants such as John Bale and John Foxe argued that Dante was a proto Protestant because of his opposition to the pope 61 62 The 19th century saw a Dante revival a product of the medieval revival which was itself an important aspect of Romanticism 63 Thomas Carlyle profiled him in The Hero as Poet the third lecture in On Heroes Hero Worship amp the Heroic in History 1841 He is world great not because he is worldwide but because he is world deep Dante is the spokesman of the Middle Ages the Thought they lived by stands here in everlasting music 64 Leigh Hunt Henry Francis Cary and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow were among Dante s translators of the era Italy s first dreadnought battleship was completed in 1913 and named Dante Alighieri in honor of him 65 nbsp Statue of Dante at the Dante Park of Manhattan New York CityOn 30 April 1921 in honor of the 600th anniversary of Dante s death Pope Benedict XV promulgated an encyclical named In praeclara summorum naming Dante as one of the many celebrated geniuses of whom the Catholic faith can boast and the pride and glory of humanity 66 On 7 December 1965 Pope Paul VI promulgated the Latin motu proprio titled Altissimi cantus which was dedicated to Dante s figure and poetry 67 In that year the pope also donated a golden iron Greek Cross to Dante s burial site in Ravenna in occasion of the 700th anniversary of his birth 68 69 The same cross was blessed by Pope Francis in October 2020 70 In 2007 a reconstruction of Dante s face was undertaken in a collaborative project Artists from the University of Pisa and forensic engineers at the University of Bologna at Forli constructed the model portraying Dante s features as somewhat different from what was once thought 71 72 In 2008 the Municipality of Florence officially apologized for expelling Dante 700 years earlier 73 74 75 76 In May 2021 a symbolic re trial was held virtually in Florence to posthumously clear his name 77 A celebration was held in 2015 at Italy s Senate of the Republic for the 750th anniversary of Dante s birth It included a commemoration from Pope Francis who also issued the apostolic letter Cando lucis aeternae in honor of the anniversary 78 79 Works editSee also Category Works by Dante Alighieri Overview edit nbsp Divina Commedia 1472 Most of Dante s literary work was composed after his exile in 1301 La Vita Nuova The New Life is the only major work that predates it it is a collection of lyric poems sonnets and songs with commentary in prose ostensibly intended to be circulated in manuscript form as was customary for such poems 80 It also contains or constructs the story of his love for Beatrice Portinari who later served as the ultimate symbol of salvation in the Comedy a function already indicated in the final pages of the Vita Nuova The work contains many of Dante s love poems in Tuscan which was not unprecedented the vernacular had been regularly used for lyric works before during all the thirteenth century However Dante s commentary on his own work is also in the vernacular both in the Vita Nuova and in the Convivio instead of the Latin that was almost universally used 81 The Divine Comedy describes Dante s journey through Hell Inferno Purgatory Purgatorio and Paradise Paradiso he is first guided by the Roman poet Virgil and then by Beatrice Of the books Purgatorio is arguably the most lyrical of the three referring to more contemporary poets and artists than Inferno Paradiso is the most heavily theological and the one in which many scholars have argued the Divine Comedy s most beautiful and mystic passages appear 82 83 With its seriousness of purpose its literary stature and the range both stylistic and thematic of its content the Comedy soon became a cornerstone in the evolution of Italian as an established literary language Dante was more aware than most early Italian writers of the variety of Italian dialects and of the need to create a literature and a unified literary language beyond the limits of Latin writing at the time in that sense he is a forerunner of the Renaissance with its effort to create vernacular literature in competition with earlier classical writers Dante s in depth knowledge within the limits of his time of Roman antiquity and his evident admiration for some aspects of pagan Rome also point forward to the 15th century nbsp Dante poised between the mountain of purgatory and the city of Florence displays the incipit Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita in a detail of Domenico di Michelino s painting Florence 1465 He wrote the Comedy in a language he called Italian in some sense an amalgamated literary language predominantly based on the regional dialect of Tuscany but with some elements of Latin and other regional dialects 84 He deliberately aimed to reach a readership throughout Italy including laymen clergymen and other poets By creating a poem of epic structure and philosophic purpose he established that the Italian language was suitable for the highest sort of expression In French Italian is sometimes nicknamed la langue de Dante Publishing in the vernacular language marked Dante as one of the first in Roman Catholic Western Europe among others such as Geoffrey Chaucer and Giovanni Boccaccio to break free from standards of publishing in only Latin the language of liturgy history and scholarship in general but often also of lyric poetry This break set a precedent and allowed more literature to be published for a wider audience setting the stage for greater levels of literacy in the future However unlike Boccaccio Milton or Ariosto Dante did not really become an author read across Europe until the Romantic era To the Romantics Dante like Homer and Shakespeare was a prime example of the original genius who set his own rules created persons of overpowering stature and depth and went beyond any imitation of the patterns of earlier masters and who in turn could not truly be imitated citation needed Throughout the 19th century Dante s reputation grew and solidified and by 1865 the 600th anniversary of his birth he had become established as one of the greatest literary icons of the Western world 85 nbsp Dante and Virgil visiting Hell as depicted in Inferno painted by Rafael Flores 1855New readers often wonder how such a serious work may be called a comedy In the classical sense the word comedy refers to works that reflect belief in an ordered universe in which events tend toward not only a happy or amusing ending but one influenced by a Providential will that orders all things to an ultimate good By this meaning of the word as Dante himself allegedly wrote in a letter to Cangrande I della Scala the progression of the pilgrimage from Hell to Paradise is the paradigmatic expression of comedy since the work begins with the pilgrim s moral confusion and ends with the vision of God 86 A number of other works are credited to Dante Convivio The Banquet 87 is a collection of his longest poems with an unfinished allegorical commentary Monarchia Monarchy 88 is a summary treatise of political philosophy in Latin which was condemned and burned after Dante s death 89 90 by the Papal Legate Bertrando del Poggetto it argues for the necessity of a universal or global monarchy to establish universal peace in this life and this monarchy s relationship to the Roman Catholic Church as guide to eternal peace 91 De vulgari eloquentia On the Eloquence in the Vernacular 92 is a treatise on vernacular literature partly inspired by the Razos de trobar of Raimon Vidal de Bezaudun 93 94 Quaestio de aqua et terra A Question of the Water and of the Land is a theological work discussing the arrangement of Earth s dry land and ocean The Eclogues are two poems addressed to the poet Giovanni del Virgilio Dante is also sometimes credited with writing Il Fiore The Flower a series of sonnets summarizing Le Roman de la Rose and Detto d Amore Tale of Love a short narrative poem also based on Le Roman de la Rose These would be the earliest and most novice of his known works 95 Le Rime is a posthumous collection of miscellaneous poems List of works edit The major works of Dante s are the following 96 97 Il Fiore and Detto d Amore The Flower and Tale of Love 1283 87 La Vita Nuova The New Life 1294 De vulgari eloquentia On the Eloquence in the Vernacular 1302 05 Convivio The Banquet 1307 Monarchia Monarchy 1313 Divina Commedia Divine Comedy 1320 Eclogues 1320 Quaestio de aqua et terra A Question of the Water and of the Land 1320 Le Rime The Rhymes nbsp Illustration for Purgatorio of The Divine Comedy by Gustave Dore nbsp Illustration for Paradiso of The Divine Comedy by Gustave Dore nbsp Illustration for Paradiso of The Divine Comedy by Gustave DoreCollections edit Dante s works reside in cultural institutions across the world Many items have been digitised or are available for public consultation Dante s House Museum it Florence Italy opened in Dante s residence in 1965 and was refurbished in 2020 98 Princeton University Library New Jersey USA holds 160 volumes of Dante s works and books about his life including two 15th century editions of the Divine Comedy 99 University College London Special Collections London UK holds c 3000 volumes of material by and about Dante including 36 editions of the Divine Comedy The collection was bequeathed to the University by scholar Henry Clark Barlow in 1876 100 The Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Yale University Library Connecticut USA holds a manuscript edition of the Divine Comedy c 1385 1400 101 Notes edit The name Dante is understood to be a hypocorism of the name Durante though no document known to survive from Dante s lifetime refers to him as Durante including his own writings A document prepared for Dante s son Jacopo refers to Durante often called Dante He may have been named for his maternal grandfather Durante degli Abati 2 Citations edit a b His birth date is listed as probably in the end of May by Robert Hollander in Dante in Dictionary of the Middle Ages volume 4 According to Giovanni Boccaccio the poet said he was born in May See Alighieri Dante in the Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Gorni Guglielmo 2009 Nascita e anagrafe di Dante Dante storia di un visionario Rome Gius Laterza amp Figli ISBN 9788858101742 Dante Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 20 May 2019 Dante dead link US and Dante Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 22 March 2020 Dante Merriam Webster com Dictionary Retrieved 20 May 2019 Wetherbee Winthrop Aleksander Jason 30 April 2018 Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Hutton Edward 1910 Giovanni Boccaccio a Biographical Study p 273 Bloom Harold 1994 The Western Canon Riverhead Books ISBN 9781573225144 Shaw Prue 2014 Reading Dante From Here to Eternity New York Liveright Publishing Corporation pp Introduction ISBN 978 0 87140 742 9 Quinones Ricardo J 9 May 2023 Dante Alighieri Biography Poems amp Facts Britannica Matheson Lister M 2012 Icons of the Middle Ages Rulers Writers Rebels and Saints Greenwood Pub Group p 244 Haller Elizabeth K 2012 Dante Alighieri In Matheson Lister M ed Icons of the Middle Ages Rulers Writers Rebels and Saints Vol 1 Santa Barbara CA Greenwood p 244 ISBN 978 0 313 34080 2 Murray Charles A 2003 Human accomplishment the pursuit of excellence in the arts and sciences 800 B C to 1950 1st ed New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 019247 1 OCLC 52047270 Baranski Zygmunt G Gilson Simon eds 2018 The Cambridge Companion to Dante s Commedia Cambridge University Press p 108 ISBN 9781108421294 a b Santagata 2016 p 6 Gombrich E H 1979 Giotto s Portrait of Dante The Burlington Magazine 121 917 471 483 via JSTOR Chimenz Siro A 1960 Alighieri Dante Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani in Italian Vol 2 Istituto dell Enciclopedia Italiana a b c d e f Chimenz S A 2014 Alighieri Dante Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani in Italian Enciclopedia Italiana Bibcode 2014bea book 56 Retrieved 7 March 2016 Santagata Marco 2012 Dante Il romanzo della sua vita Milan Mondadori p 21 ISBN 978 88 04 62026 6 Beatrice and Dante Alighieri gt A Love Story 14 December 2016 Alighieri Dante 2013 Delphi Complete Works of Dante Alighieri Vol 6 Illustrated ed Delphi Classics ISBN 978 1 909496 19 4 a b Alighieri Dante 1904 Philip Henry Wicksteed Herman Oelsner ed The Paradiso of Dante Alighieri fifth ed J M Dent and Company p 129 a b Davenport John 2005 Dante Poet Author and Proud Florentine Infobase Publishing p 53 ISBN 978 1 4381 0415 7 Retrieved 7 March 2016 di Serego Alighieri Sperello Capaccioli Massimo 2022 The Sun and the other Stars of Dante Alighieri Singapore World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd p 48 ISBN 9789811246227 Dante Alighieri poets org Academy of American Poets Retrieved 20 December 2019 Nilsen Alleen Pace Don L F Nilsen 2007 Names and Naming in Young Adult Literature Scarecrow Studies in Young Adult Literature Vol 27 Lanham MD Scarecrow Press p 133 ISBN 978 0 8108 6685 0 Ruud Jay 2008 Critical Companion to Dante Infobase Publishing p 138 ISBN 978 1 4381 0841 4 Guelphs and Ghibellines Dante Alighieri Society of Massachusetts Archived from the original on 12 December 2015 Retrieved 30 December 2015 Santagata 2016 p 62 Sandor Vlaicu Dumitrascu Dinu I Bojita Marius T Dumitrascu Dan L April 2022 Medicine and Pharmacy in the Works of Dante Alighieri 1265 1321 Medicine and Pharmacy Reports 95 2 218 224 doi 10 15386 mpr 2451 PMC 9176311 PMID 35721038 Chronology Renaissance Dante in Print 1472 1629 University of Notre Dame Retrieved 25 December 2023 Elena Lombardi Francesca Southerden Manuele Gragnolati ed 2021 The Oxford Handbook of Dante Oxford University Press p 343 ISBN 9780198820741 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link Dino Compagni Cronica delle cose occorrenti ne tempi suoi Harrison 2015 pp 36 37 Harrison 2015 p 36 Moore Malcolm 17 June 2008 Dante s infernal crimes forgiven The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 22 June 2008 Retrieved 18 June 2008 Raffa 2020 p 24 Santagata 2016 p 208 Santagata 2016 p 249 Latham Charles S Carpenter George R 1891 A Translation of Dante s Eleven Letters Boston Houghton Mifflin pp 269 282 Carroll John S 1903 Exiles of Eternity An Exposition of Dante s Inferno London Hodder and Stoughton pp xlviii l Wickstool Philip Henry 1903 The Convivio of Dante Alighieri London J M Dent and co p 5 And in that I spoke before entrance on the prime of manhood and in this when I had already passed the same See Bookrags com and Tigerstedt E N 1967 Dante Tiden Mannen Verket Dante The Age the Man the Work Bonniers Stockholm 1967 dead link Bertolo Fabio M 2003 L Officiolum ritrovato di Francesco da Barberino Spolia Journal of Medieval Studies Retrieved 18 August 2012 Santagata 2016 p 339 Cangrande della Scala Da molte stelle mi vien questa luce Cangrande della Scala This light comes to me from many stars dantealighieri tk in Italian Retrieved 1 February 2021 Le famiglie Brunacci Brunacci it Retrieved 27 March 2017 Garin Eugenio 2008 History of Italian Philosophy VIBS Rodopi p 85 ISBN 978 90 420 2321 5 Retrieved 27 March 2017 The testimonies of the chronicles E theca net Retrieved 9 May 2011 Burdeau Cain 21 May 2021 Dante Gets a Bit of Justice 700 Years After His Death courthousenews com Courthouse News Service Retrieved 28 August 2022 Santagata 2016 p 333 334 Raffa 2020 pp 23 24 27 28 30 Pirro Deirdre 10 April 2017 Dante the battle of the bones The Florentine Italy Magazine Dante s Tomb italymagazine com 31 October 2017 Raffa 2020 p 38 Phelan Jessica 4 September 2019 Dante s last laugh Why Italy s national poet isn t buried where you think he is The Local Italy Raffa 2020 pp 244 245 Dante death mask florenceinferno com July 2013 Dante Alighieri The Catholic Encyclopedia Retrieved 2 May 2010 Vauchez Andre Dobson Richard Barrie Lapidge Michael 2000 Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers p 1517 Caesar Michael 1989 Dante the Critical Heritage 1314 1870 London Routledge p xi Boswell Jackson Campbell 1999 Dante s Fame in England References in Printed British Books 1477 1640 Newark University of Delaware Press p xv ISBN 0 87413 605 9 After John Foxe s enormously influential Ecclesiastical History Contayning the Actes and Monumentes was published 1570 Dante s role as a proto Protestant was sealed Catholic Encyclopedia Foxe s Book of Martyrs www newadvent org Retrieved 13 January 2022 19th Century A History of English Romanticism by Henry Augustin Beers Ch 3 Keats Leigh Hunt and the Dante Revival www online literature com Retrieved 18 August 2022 Carlyle Thomas 1841 Lecture III The Hero as Poet Dante Shakspeare On Heroes Hero Worship and the Heroic in History Italian dreadnought battleship Dante Alighieri 1910 naval encyclopedia 21 July 2019 Archived from the original on 30 January 2021 Retrieved 25 January 2021 In praeclara summorum Encyclical of Pope Benedict XV on Dante The Holy See Retrieved 7 November 2014 Altissimi cantus Vatican State in Latin and Italian Retrieved 21 March 2021 Dante Alighieri s tomb Ravenna Archived from the original on 21 March 2021 Retrieved 21 March 2021 Pope Francis The fascination of God makes its powerful attraction felt Vatican News 10 October 2020 Archived from the original on 16 October 2020 Retrieved 21 March 2021 Pietracci Sara 11 October 2020 Papa Francesco annuncia alla delegazione ravennate la preparazione di un documento pontificio su Dante Pope Francis says to the delegation from Ravenna he his working to a pontifical document related to Dante in Italian Ravenna Archived from the original on 21 March 2021 Retrieved 21 March 2021 Pullella Philip 12 January 2007 Dante gets posthumous nose job 700 years on Statesman Reuters Retrieved 5 November 2007 Benazzi S 2009 The Face of the Poet Dante Alighieri Reconstructed by Virtual Modeling and Forensic Anthropology Techniques Journal of Archaeological Science 36 2 278 283 Bibcode 2009JArSc 36 278B doi 10 1016 j jas 2008 09 006 Florence sorry for banishing Dante UPI Israely Jeff 31 July 2008 A City s Infernal Dante Dispute Time ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 25 September 2018 Duff Mark 18 June 2008 Florence to revoke Dante exile BBC Firenze riabilita Dante Alighieri L iniziativa a 700 anni dall esilio La Repubblica 30 March 2008 Florence hosts re trial of Dante convicted and banished in 1302 DW 21 May 2021 Messaggio del Santo Padre al Presidente del Pontificio Consiglio della Cultura in occasione della celebrazione del 750 anniversario della nascita di Dante Alighieri Press vatican va Archived from the original on 4 May 2015 Retrieved 21 October 2015 Translator Microsofttranslator com Retrieved 21 October 2015 New Life Dante online Retrieved 2 September 2008 Scott John 1995 The Unfinished Convivio as a Pathway to the Comedy Dante Studies with the Annual Report of the Dante Society 113 113 31 56 JSTOR 40166505 via JSTOR Kalkavage Peter 10 August 2014 In the Heaven of Knowing Dante s Paradiso theimaginativeconservative org The Imaginative Conservative Retrieved 28 August 2022 Falconburg Darrell The Way of Beauty in Dante dappledthings org Dappled Things Retrieved 28 August 2022 Dante at the Encyclopaedia Britannica An Italian Icon fu berlin de Freie Universitat Berlin 14 September 2021 Retrieved 28 August 2022 Epistle to Cangrande Updated www dantesociety org Retrieved 9 June 2021 Banquet Dante online Archived from the original on 27 September 2008 Retrieved 2 September 2008 Monarchia Dante online Archived from the original on 27 September 2008 Retrieved 2 September 2008 Anthony K Cassell The Monarchia Controversy Monarchia stayed on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum from its inception until 1881 Giuseppe Cappelli La divina commedia di Dante Alighieri in Italian Lepsius Oliver 2017 Hans Kelsen on Dante Alighieri s Political Philosophy European Journal of International Law 27 4 1153 doi 10 1093 ejil chw060 De vulgari Eloquentia Dante online Archived from the original on 27 September 2008 Retrieved 2 September 2008 Ewert A 1940 Dante s Theory of Language The Modern Language Review 35 3 355 366 doi 10 2307 3716632 JSTOR 3716632 Faidit Uc Vidal Raimon Guessard Francois 1858 Grammaires provencales de Hugues Faidit et de Raymond Vidal de Besaudun XIIIe siecle 2nd ed Paris A Franck Lansing Richard 2000 The Dante Encyclopedia New York Garland pp 299 334 379 734 ISBN 0815316593 Wilkins Ernest H 1920 An Introductory Dante Bibliography Modern Philology 17 11 623 632 doi 10 1086 387304 hdl 2027 mdp 39015033478622 JSTOR 432861 S2CID 161197863 Bibliotheque nationale de France BnF Data Dante Alighieri 1265 1321 Dante s House Museum Museo Casa di Dante Firenze Retrieved 12 December 2023 DANTE ALIGHIERI 1265 1321 Princeton University Library Special Collections library princeton edu Retrieved 12 December 2023 UCL Special Collections 23 August 2018 Dante Collection UCL Special Collections Retrieved 12 December 2023 Divina Commedia MS 428 between 1385 and 1400 Beinecke Rare Book amp Manuscript Library 23 March 2021 Retrieved 12 December 2023 References edit Harrison Robert 19 February 2015 Dante on Trial NY Review of Books pp 36 37 Raffa Guy P 2020 Dante s Bones How a Poet Invented Italy Cambridge Massachusetts Belknap Press ISBN 978 0 674 98083 9 Santagata Marco 2016 Dante The Story of His Life Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674504868 Further reading editAllitt John Stewart 2011 Dante il pellegrino in Italian Villa di Serio BG Edizioni Villadiseriane ISBN 978 88 96199 80 0 Anderson William 1980 Dante the Maker Routledge Kegan Paul ISBN 978 0 7100 0322 5 Barolini Teodolinda ed Dante s Lyric Poetry Poems of Youth and of the Vita Nuova University of Toronto Press 2014 Gardner Edmund Garratt 1921 Dante London Oxford University Press OCLC 690699123 Retrieved 7 March 2016 Guenon Rene 1925 The Esoterism of Dante trans by C B Berhill in the Perennial Wisdom Series Ghent NY Sophia Perennis et Universalis 1996 viii 72 p N B Originally published in French entitled L Esoterisme de Dante in 1925 ISBN 0 900588 02 0 Hede Jesper 2007 Reading Dante The Pursuit of Meaning Lanham Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 2196 2 Miles Thomas 2008 Dante Tours of Hell Mapping the Landscape of Sin and Despair In Stewart Jon ed Kierkegaard and the Patristic and Medieval Traditions Ashgate pp 223 236 ISBN 978 0 7546 6391 1 Musa Mark 1974 Advent at the Gates Dante s Comedy Bloomington IN Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253301406 Raffa Guy P 2009 The Complete Danteworlds A Reader s Guide to the Divine Comedy Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 70270 4 Scartazzini Giovanni Andrea 1874 1890 La Divina Commedia riveduta e commentata 4 volumes OCLC 558999245 Scartazzini Giovanni Andrea 1896 1898 Enciclopedia dantesca dizionario critico e ragionato di quanto concerne la vita e le opere di Dante Alighieri 2 volumes OCLC 12202483 Scott John A 1996 Dante s Political Purgatory Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 585 12724 8 Seung T K 1962 The Fragile Leaves of the Sibyl Dante s Master Plan Westminster MD Newman Press OCLC 1426455 Toynbee Paget 1898 A Dictionary of the Proper Names and Notable Matters in the Works of Dante London The Clarendon Press OCLC 343895 Retrieved 7 March 2016 Whiting Mary Bradford 1922 Dante the Man and the Poet Cambridge W Heffer amp Sons OCLC 224789 External links editDante Alighieri at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Works by Dante Alighieri in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Dante Alighieri at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Dante Alighieri at Internet Archive Works by Dante Alighieri at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Dante Alighieri at Curlie Works by Dante Alighieri at One More Library Works in English Italian Latin Arabic German French and Spanish Wetherbee Winthrop Dante Alighieri In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy The Dante Museum in Florence his life his books and a history amp literature blog about Dante The World of Dante multimedia texts maps gallery searchable database music teacher resources timeline The Princeton Dante Project Archived 3 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine texts and multimedia The Dartmouth Dante Project searchable database of commentary Dante Online manuscripts of works images and text transcripts by Societa Dantesca Italiana Digital Dante Divine Comedy with commentary other works scholars on Dante Open Yale Course on Dante by Yale University DanteSources project about Dante s primary sources developed by ISTI CNR and the University of Pisa Works Italian and Latin texts concordances and frequency lists by IntraText Dante Today Archived 11 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine citings and sightings of Dante in contemporary culture Bibliotheca Dantesca journal dedicated to Dante and his reception Dante Collection at University College London c 3000 volumes of works by and about Dante Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dante Alighieri amp oldid 1206138121, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.