Classics and the Western Canon discussion
Divine Comedy, Dante
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Background and Resources

Wow! That's quite a bit larger than Florence. Thanks for looking at the math. It sounds like Dante wasn't too careful about his calculations. Why do you suppose he was so specific about distance at times, like the ninth bolgia being 22 miles around? Was he just eyeballing it?

Wow! That..."
Eyeballing is all I can come up with.

These may be somewhere else among our links, but tonight was my first awareness of this still another set of illustrations of Commedia, these by Iv..."
One interesting thing about this artist is that he also did illustrations for Purgatory and Paradise. I don't think Dore did, did he?

I wonder why his Beatrice is shown as basically nude. Most of the figures in Hell seem to have been naked, but in Paradise also?

This site has thumbnails of Dore's illustrations for each of the sections of the Commedia:
www.worldofdante.org/gallery_dore.html
Now, while we are discussing this, let me see for Blake:
http://www.blakearchive.org/exist/bla...
Seem to be illustrations for all three sections at well.

Merry Christmas, everyone.

I assume that they're using Hell, then, not always in the modern dictionary definition sense of a place of post-death punishment, but as the location of the soul and/or body after death, since some of these belief systems don't see the afterlife as a place of eternal punishment.

Yes, but most seem to have some provision for postmortem punishment, or at least correction, at least for the worst offenders. Medieval Christianity does seem to go to the limit though: eternal torments for most.

.."
The ones who are damned in this verse are those who fail to feed the hungry, care for the sick, and visit the imprisoned. These are everyday sins of omission, not at all the spectacular sorts of crimes punished in Dante's hell. Is there a place in Dante's hell for "these"?

The article is available online here: http://www.economist.com/news/christm...
Quote from the article: "Plato, who said he wanted to delete every reference to future pain from Homer as damaging to moral character;"
Plato writes about punishment (albeit not eternal) in the afterlife in the Republic, The Laws and other works. He rejects Homer's description of the gods as damaging to moral character, but accepts belief in the afterlife as moralizing the people.
The author hasn't done his/her homework properly, ISTM, which makes the credibility of his/her remaining references rather suspect.

Thx, Nemo. I had tried googling for it yesterday, but for some reason (probably simple error or oversight) didn't get to a site I trusted and yet could access.

.."
The ones who are damned in this verse are those who fail to feed the hungry, c..."
Excellent point! The hard-hearted are certainly in Christ's Hell, but not Dante's.

Dante's Inferno: A New Commentary by Nicola Fosca, Jason Baxter, Patrick Gardner, Robert Hollander
Did anyone here comment on this resource for The Inferno? I apologize if I have missed it.
I don't know the book, but sounds of possible interest and value if/when revisiting this section of The Divine Comedy. Nicola Fosca sounds of particular interest.

I had never thought about the Matthew passage that way, that living a life committing no sin of commission can still land you in the Christian (but not Dantean) Hell.

I had never thought about the Matthew passage that w..."
Dante did not have space enough nor time to cover every sin in Inferno, so he focused on what he considered to be the "big ones." There will be plenty of the omission kind in Purgatorio, I am guessing.

And we must ask what are the 'big ones' some 900 years later? The same? Different?

I think within groups that are 'pious' or at least consider themselves so, the big ones are sins of sexual 'incontinence', something Dante would have put in the upper levels of Hell as sins committed because of lack of impulse control.
Within groups that do not consider themselves particularly religious, it seems that the big sins are related to violating the civil rights of others. Or the big sins are sins that still have to do with impulse control, but they will be considered big because of the magnitude of their scale (mass murder vs. murdering only one person).

I think within groups that are 'pious' or at least consider themselves so, the big ones are sins of sexual 'incontinence', something Dante would have put ..."
From what I can see, purely sexual sins are actually treated mildly even by religious folks nowadays. Primiscuity and adultery are taken seriously, but modest amounts of discrete premarital sex are pretty much accepted. Of course, standards may differ in different communities. The big sins today are those of cruelty--deliberately causing pain, harm, or distress, or indifference to the harm one causes.


Absolutely. For some Americans, the big ones include bullying. For much of the world, that's still a minor concern, if a concern at all.
For radical Islamists in Mali, they just stoned a couple to death for having a child out of wedlock; obviously a "big one" to them but a non-event for most Westerners.

Or perhaps even the centerpiece of a widely celebrated mystery (Christmas)?
For one of my takes on the topic, see my post here:
Msg 12 http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1...

"Father Guido Sarducci Explains The Afterlife"
http://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/...

(I was looking at a historical time scale last night and noted that the Inquisition was listed as starting in 1231.)
http://www.historicaltimeline.com/ht_...


Blake's Illustrations To The Divine Comedy by Albert S. Roe.

The Drawings By Sandro Botticelli For Dante's Divine Comedy After The Originals In The Berlin Museums And The Vatican by Kenneth Clark.



Some or most of these might well be out of print, but library copies may be around, especially if one has access to county or state-wide collections or to college libraries. (WorldCat is a wonderful resource for finding books.) I have an inexpensive copy of The Divine Comedy with Doré's illustrations, probably bought from among B&N's famous bargain books.

"The Comedy was put on the Index in 1614, with the injunction that certain passages be expurgated, including Inferno XIX, 48-117 (simoniac popes); Purgatorio XIX, 106-18 (on Pope Adrian V's avarice and conversion); and Paradiso IX, 136-142 (against the avarice of the Vatican high clergy)."
http://www.italnet.nd.edu/Dante/text/...

"The Comedy was put on the Index in 1614, with the injunction that certain passag..."
Not surprising at all. Dante sounds very much like a pre-Protestant reformer in places.

"The Comedy was put on the Index in 1614, with the injunction that c..."
But 1614 is 300 years after the thing was written!
I listened to a wonderful "Course Guide" this morning on The Inferno.
The Modern Scholar. Monsters, Gods, and Heroes: Approaching the Epic in Literature
Monsters, Gods and Heroes
The Modern Scholar. Monsters, Gods, and Heroes: Approaching the Epic in Literature


The Modern Scholar. Monsters, Gods, and Heroes: Approaching the Epic in Literature
[bookcover:Monsters, Gods and Heroes|709..."
I think Timothy Shutt's lectures on Dante are excellent, Adelle.
And I have a message from my library that Lewis's Great Divorce is now in ;).

Hurrah!

The Modern Scholar. Monsters, Gods, and Heroes: Approaching the Epic in Literature
[bookcover:Monsters, Gods and Heroes|709..."
I actually have that, from years ago. But hadn't remembered that it had anything on the Divine Comedy.
Everyman wrote: "I actually have that, from years ago.."
Then you, sir, are a fortunate man.
It was wonderful. I listened-- to refresh my memory -- to the lectures on The Iliad, The Odyssey, The Aeneid, and The Inferno. (A side benefit was that I got my kitchen cupboards and pantry cleaned and organized.)
And I thought of Louis Armstrong and I thought "Thank God I got to read all these wonderful works.". :)
You wouldn't be making a tragic mistake were you to dust it off and give it a listen.
Then you, sir, are a fortunate man.
It was wonderful. I listened-- to refresh my memory -- to the lectures on The Iliad, The Odyssey, The Aeneid, and The Inferno. (A side benefit was that I got my kitchen cupboards and pantry cleaned and organized.)
And I thought of Louis Armstrong and I thought "Thank God I got to read all these wonderful works.". :)
You wouldn't be making a tragic mistake were you to dust it off and give it a listen.

I was, amazingly, able to find it on my bookshelves in only about two minutes. It's been dusted off and I hope to have some extra time for listening to it this weekend (though I'll be spending most of the weekend building new windows for the hen house, so ...)

I suspect this will be dreadful but hilarious:
http://www.salon.com/2013/01/15/dan_b...
Sadly, because I can't read and understand Italian, I don't really get a sense of how Dante's rhyme works,
Here are two poems in English using Dante's aba bcb cdc etc rhyme.
Shelley's "Ode to the West Wind"
http://www.bartleby.com/101/610.html
Frost's "Aquainted with the Night"
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/acquai...
Here are two poems in English using Dante's aba bcb cdc etc rhyme.
Shelley's "Ode to the West Wind"
http://www.bartleby.com/101/610.html
Frost's "Aquainted with the Night"
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/acquai...
This is neat:
"Virgil's family name was Maro, by which Dante calls Virgil in some of his other works.
Maro is, by chance, an anagram for Rome and amor. With a little ingenuity, those three words can be used to summarize the main themes of the whole Comedy:
1. Maro: nature and natural grace as embodied in Virgil
2. Roma: natural and supernatural authority
3. Amor: human and divine love.
Dante liked such word play" (8)
from To Hell & Back with Dante. Joseph Gallagher.To Hell & Back with Dante: A Modern Reader's Guide to the Divne Comedy
"Virgil's family name was Maro, by which Dante calls Virgil in some of his other works.
Maro is, by chance, an anagram for Rome and amor. With a little ingenuity, those three words can be used to summarize the main themes of the whole Comedy:
1. Maro: nature and natural grace as embodied in Virgil
2. Roma: natural and supernatural authority
3. Amor: human and divine love.
Dante liked such word play" (8)
from To Hell & Back with Dante. Joseph Gallagher.To Hell & Back with Dante: A Modern Reader's Guide to the Divne Comedy
Thank you, Laurele!
(It's a challenge for me to follow the theology. It IS hard for me to follow at times. So researching bits and pieces on the side helps me to stay engaged.)
I was familiar with the term The Unmoved Mover. But...I didn't REALY understand the term.
Galileo lived in the 1500s. Dante in the 1200s.
In Book 2, the third chapter of Convivio, "Dante explains that the third 'heaven' is that of Venus. This leads to a long astronomical digression. Aristotle had stated that the heavens were eight in muber. The truth, discovered by Ptolomy, is that there are nine heaverns, ascending from the earth in the following order (which was retained in Dante's Paradiso: Moon, Mercury, Venus, Sun, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, the Fixed Stars, and the Primum Mobile.
The ninth, invisible heaven answered the need to explain motion in Aristotelian physics. According to the Greek philosopher, physical motion cannot be explained solely in terms of physical principles; it must depend on some immaterial cause, in order to breath through the vicious circle of mover and object moved.
This immaterial cause--the unmoved mover--is, in Christian terms, God, whose power of attraction over the Primum Mobile is so strong that the latter is propelled by the swiftest motion, since motion, when not due to a physical cuase, is the result of unsatisfied longing.
The Primum Mobile is motivated by its intense desire to be united with God, while it transmits motion to the rest of the universe.
Finally, outside both space and time is found the tenth heaven or Empyrean, 'posited by Catholics' (Conv. 2.3.8), the abode of God and the blessed souls, 'according to the teaching of the Holy Church, which cannot lie; and Aristotle seems to indicate this to those who understand him correctly' (Conv. 2.3.10).
Possessing all that can possibly be desired, the Empyrean is a place of perfect peace, hense motionless, situated in the very mide of God and encompassing the entire universe (Conv. 2.3.11)" (Scott, Understanding Dante, p117.
[I turn the pages and read here and there where it looks interesting.]
Alternatively, Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unmoved_...
(It's a challenge for me to follow the theology. It IS hard for me to follow at times. So researching bits and pieces on the side helps me to stay engaged.)
I was familiar with the term The Unmoved Mover. But...I didn't REALY understand the term.
Galileo lived in the 1500s. Dante in the 1200s.
In Book 2, the third chapter of Convivio, "Dante explains that the third 'heaven' is that of Venus. This leads to a long astronomical digression. Aristotle had stated that the heavens were eight in muber. The truth, discovered by Ptolomy, is that there are nine heaverns, ascending from the earth in the following order (which was retained in Dante's Paradiso: Moon, Mercury, Venus, Sun, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, the Fixed Stars, and the Primum Mobile.
The ninth, invisible heaven answered the need to explain motion in Aristotelian physics. According to the Greek philosopher, physical motion cannot be explained solely in terms of physical principles; it must depend on some immaterial cause, in order to breath through the vicious circle of mover and object moved.
This immaterial cause--the unmoved mover--is, in Christian terms, God, whose power of attraction over the Primum Mobile is so strong that the latter is propelled by the swiftest motion, since motion, when not due to a physical cuase, is the result of unsatisfied longing.
The Primum Mobile is motivated by its intense desire to be united with God, while it transmits motion to the rest of the universe.
Finally, outside both space and time is found the tenth heaven or Empyrean, 'posited by Catholics' (Conv. 2.3.8), the abode of God and the blessed souls, 'according to the teaching of the Holy Church, which cannot lie; and Aristotle seems to indicate this to those who understand him correctly' (Conv. 2.3.10).
Possessing all that can possibly be desired, the Empyrean is a place of perfect peace, hense motionless, situated in the very mide of God and encompassing the entire universe (Conv. 2.3.11)" (Scott, Understanding Dante, p117.
[I turn the pages and read here and there where it looks interesting.]
Alternatively, Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unmoved_...

Those are such hard words to comprehend, given his earth-centric astronomy.
LOL. OK...:)..."the truth" ...
Yes. I should have put quotation marks around that!
"The truth"...circa 1300.
Yes. I should have put quotation marks around that!
"The truth"...circa 1300.

Dorothy Sayers followed this rhyme scheme in her translation, so if you can find one of her volumes, you can experience it. It's fairly mesmerizing over the course of a whole canto.
Books mentioned in this topic
Paradiso (other topics)To Hell & Back with Dante: A Modern Reader's Guide to the Divine Comedy (other topics)
Monsters, Gods and Heroes (other topics)
The Drawings By Sandro Botticelli For Dante's Divine Comedy After The Originals In The Berlin Museums And The Vatican (other topics)
Sandro Botticelli: The Drawings for Dante's Divine Comedy (other topics)
More...
by Galileo Galilei, 1588
https://www.mtholyoke.edu/courses/mpe...
(Mazzotta in on..."
It looks to me like Galileo had great fun with this. He makes Hell a covered conical valley with an apex angle of 60 degrees, extending from the center of the Earth up to 405 15/22 miles below the surface (his miles seem to be a little longer than ours). This makes the radius of Hell at the outer reaches of Limbo about 2840 miles. However, each level steps inwards some distance, so the cone gets narrower as you go down.
The size Galileo reports seems impossible--far more than a flesh-and-blood Dante could traverse in one night. There is a vertical climb down of over 405 miles between most levels, and the levels are 16-112 miles across. He has each of the bolgias in the Circle of the Fraudulent as 1/2 mile across, but the first bolgia contains only two files of countermarching panders and seducers, so the width seems excessive.
I don't think it's possible to draw a map of Hell that is really consistent with both the Inferno and late medieval geography. But it's fun to try.