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Dante’s Divine Comedy

Dante’s Divine Comedy. One of the Best Poems of European Literature. Type of Literature. Late Medieval Literature (Dante finished shortly before his death in 1321 AD) Originally written in Italian “Divine” indicates subject matter “Comedy” indicates style of poem

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Dante’s Divine Comedy

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  1. Dante’s Divine Comedy One of the Best Poems of European Literature

  2. Type of Literature • Late Medieval Literature (Dante finished shortly before his death in 1321 AD) • Originally written in Italian • “Divine” indicates subject matter • “Comedy” indicates style of poem • Starts off oppressive but ends on a happy note

  3. Dante’s Life • Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) • Born in Florence on May 29, 1265 • 1274 - meets and falls in love with Beatrice Portinari • 1283 – However, he marries Gemma Donati and they have four children

  4. Dante’s Life • 1290 - Beatrice Dies • 1292 - Dante writes the Vita nuova a collection of sonnets and odes inspired by his love for Beatrice. • 1314 - Publication of Inferno. • 1321 - Dante falls ill on return from Venice, where he had been sent as ambassador by Guido Da Polenta, and dies September 13 or 14.

  5. Dante’s Inspiration • Dante’s love for Beatrice inspired him to write sonnets and odes in Vita nouva. • Dante pledged when he felt he was able to write a great piece of literature he would dedicate it to her memory. The Divine Comedy was written for her. • Dante and Beatrice never had anything more than an emotional relationship.

  6. Dante’s Divine Comedy

  7. Numbers in Medieval Society • Number were extremely important in Medieval Society. • 100 is the square of 10, and is therefore considered the perfect number. • The number 3 was associated with the Trinity and 9 was important as the square of 3.

  8. Structure of theDivine Comedy • Contains three great divisions • Cantica One: Hell (Inferno) • Cantica Two: Purgatory (Purgatorio) • Cantica Three: Paradise (Paradiso) • Each Cantica contains thirty-three cantos with an additional canto in Inferno serving as a prologue 33 + 33 + 33 + 1 = 100 cantos

  9. Structure of the Divine Comedy • The three greater divisions or canticas were to represent the Trinity. • The number 9, the square of three, figures centrally in the interior structure of each of the three divisions. • There are nine circles in the Inferno • There are nine ledges in the Purgatorio • There are nine planetary spheres in Paradiso

  10. Structure of theDivine Comedy • Dante varied the lengths of the individual cantos for a purpose: • The canto length in the Inferno is chaotic, this parallels the chaos between souls and God. • The canto length becomes more standardized in Purgatorio, this parallels the state of the soul and God • The canto length in Paradiso is uniform, this parallels the harmony between the souls and God.

  11. The Nature of the Divine Comedy

  12. Allegory and Journey • Allegory is a story operating at a literal and symbolic level, each character and action signify the literal as well as represent an idea. • The Divine Comedy is a narrative that details the journey of one man, Dante, through Hell, Purgatory and Heaven.

  13. Allegory and Journey • Dante represents every human. • The journey represents rejection of sin (Hell), redemption of the soul (Purgatory), and finally the unification between soul and God (Heaven).

  14. Journey and Allegory Continued • Virgil represents Reason, which can take Dante only through Hell and Purgatory. • Beatrice, or Divine Revelation, must take Dante through Heaven.

  15. Dante & Virgil’s Journey • Dante, guided by Virgil, heads down into the Inferno. • Hell is an inverted cone, wide at the top and narrow at the bottom. • Dante and Virgil travel through Hell and Dante recounts the sights of sinners being punished in ways that symbolically fit the sin.

  16. Structure of Inferno (cross section)

  17. Structure of Inferno (model)

  18. Structure of Inferno • There are 9 concentric circles in Hell. • Hell is geographically divided into Upper Hell and the Lower Hell by the Walls of the Dis.

  19. Four Areas of Hell, Four Types of Sin • Hell is theologically divided into four sections: • Opportunisim (vestibule/outside hell) • Sin of Paganism (circle 1) • Sins of Incontinence (circles 2-6) • Sins of Violence (circle 7) • Sins of Fraud (circles 8-9)

  20. Vestibule: Opportunism ABANDON ALL HOPE YE WHO ENTER HERE… • Sin: choosing neither right nor wrong. • Punishment: floating around outside Heaven, Hell and Purgatory chasing a banner (opportunity) being stung by bees (conscience or guilt).

  21. Circle One: Limbo • Sin: Not knowing Jesus Christ • Punishment: No physical torments, only the emotional torment of never knowing God or experiencing Heaven (no hope).

  22. Incontinence: Circles 2-6 • Sins of incontinence are irrational sins against God. Sins in which people give into their physical or emotional urges without regard to rational thought or moral consequences. -The sinners are sentenced to their punishment by Minos (pictured here).

  23. Circle 2: Sins of Lust • Sin: Lust or Adultery • Punishment: To have one’s soul float around in a whirlwind, never to touch anything again, just as one gave into physical desires.

  24. Circle 3: Gluttony • Sin: to give into one’s physical desires to eat and drink regardless of consequences • Punishment: To be bloated and mired in filth and feces, while hail rains down from the sky;symbolic of the garbage they produced

  25. Circle 4: Hoarders & Wasters • Sin: Hoarding (greed) or Wasting (prodigality) without thought to consequence. • Punishment: They are divided into two groups (greedy vs. wasters), each pushing boulders against each other (symbolic of their mundane existence on earth, with sin punishing its opposite sin).

  26. Circle 5: Anger • Sin: Wrathfulness or great anger in life • Punishment: to be immersed in the filthy river Styx and constantly tear at one another • Sin: Sullen, those who refused to welcome the light of God into their hearts • Punishment: To forever be buried underneath the Styx, never seeing light.

  27. Circle 6: Heretics • Sin: Heretics denied the idea of immortality/heaven and therefore denied God • Punishment: To exist eternally in fiery graves of God’s wrath. Becausethey believed the soul dies with the body, they will suffer that fate in Hell

  28. Circle 7: Violence • Circle 7 is an area divided into three separate rounds, each round is an area in which specific groups of sinners are punished. • Round One: The Violent Against Neighbors • Round Two: The Violent Against Themselves • Round Three: The Violent Against God, Nature and Art

  29. Circle 7: The Violent and the Bestial

  30. Circle 7: Outer Ring- The Violent Against Neighbors • Murderers and Warmakers are immersed in boiling blood ; symbolic of the blood of those they killed. • Centaurs (pictured here) guard the banks and shoot arrows at anyone who tries to escape

  31. Circle 7: Middle Ring- The Violent Against Self • The Wood of the Suicides • Their souls are encased in thorny trees. • The harpies feed upon their leaves.

  32. Circle 7: Inner Ring - The Violent Against God • Blasphemers, sodomites, and usurers all committed a profane act against God • They are lain over burning sand or forced to run around in circles • The sky rains fire symbolic of God’s wrath

  33. Circle 8: The Fraudulent and Malicious • Circle 8 consists of 10 bolgias or pockets. • They are often referred to as malebolges, or ‘pockets of evil.’ • Each pocket or bolgia is where a group of specific sinners is punished.

  34. Ten Malebolgias of Circle 8 • Bolgia 1: Panderers and Seducers. Run forever in opposite directions and are whipped by demons • Bolgia 2: Flatterers. Lie up to their necks in human feces • Bolgia 3: Simoniacs. Those who mocked the church are placed head-first in flaming holes • Bolgia 4: Fortune Tellers. Their heads are put on their bodies backward • Bolgia 5: The Grafters. Trapped in a lake of burning pitch (oil)

  35. Circle 8 – Inside Malebolge… • Bolgia 6: The Hypocrites. Made to wear brightly painted lead cloaks • Bolgia 7: Thieves. Chased by venomous snakes and who, after being bitten by the venomous snakes, turn into snakes themselves and chase the other thieves in turn • Bolgia 8: Evil Counselors. Eternally trapped in flames • Bolgia 9: Sowers of discord. Their bodies are ripped apart, healed, and they destroyed again • Bolgia 10: Falsifiers. Alchemists, counterfeiters, and perjurers are cursed with disease

  36. Circle 9: Treachery Circle 9 includes four areas called rounds: • Round 1: Treacherous to Kin. They are frozen up to their necks in ice and cry eternally for those they betrayed • Round 2: Treacherous to Country. Frozen in a lake up to their necks

  37. Circle 9: Treachery • Round 3: Treacherous to Guests & Hosts. Their tears freeze instantly and pierce their eyes • Round 4: Treacherous to Their Masters. Lucifer’s three faces eternally consume the bodies of Brutus and Cassius for betraying Caesar, and Judas Iscariot for betraying Christ • The Center: Satan

  38. Circle 9: Treachery

  39. Dante Emerges from Hell • Dante views Satan and proceeds to climb his spiny back to emerge on Earth, not far from the nine ledges of Purgatory.

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