List of cultural references in the Divine Comedy

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Dante, poised between the mountain of purgatory and the city of Florence, a detail of a painting by Domenico di Michelino, Florence 1465.

The

canticas): the Inferno (Hell), Purgatorio (Purgatory), and Paradiso (Paradise), and 100 cantos, with the Inferno having 34, Purgatorio having 33, and Paradiso having 33 cantos. Set at Easter
1300, the poem describes the living poet's journey through hell, purgatory, and paradise.

Throughout the poem, Dante refers to people and events from

Medieval
period up to and including his own day. A knowledge of at least the most important of these references can aid in understanding the poem fully.

For ease of reference, the cantica names are abbreviated to Inf., Purg., and Par. Roman numerals are used to identify cantos and Arabic numerals to identify lines. This means that Inf. X, 123 refers to line 123 in Canto X (or 10) of the Inferno and Par. XXV, 27 refers to line 27 in Canto XXV (or 25) of the Paradiso. The line numbers refer to the original Italian text.

Boldface links indicate that the word or phrase has an entry in the list. Following that link will present that entry.

Contents: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W ZReferences

A

Abraham Sacrificing Isaac by Laurent de La Hyre, 1650
Aeneas flees burning Troy, Federico Barocci, 1598 Galleria Borghese, Rome
Albertus Magnus (fresco, 1352, Treviso, Italy) by Tommaso da Modena (1326–1379)
The National Archaeological Museum of Naples
, 1st century BCE
St. Thomas Aquinas from the Demidoff Altarpiece by Carlo Crivelli
Attila meeting Pope Leo from the Chronicon Pictum, c. 1360.

B

  • Bacchus: The Roman name of the Greek god Dionysus, protector of wine.
    • Born in the Thebes. Inf. XX, 59.
  • Barbarossa: Frederick I Barbarossa, Holy Roman Emperor (1155–1190). He captured Milan
    in his Italian campaign in 1154. Purg. XVIII, 119.
  • Barrators: Those who have committed the sin of barratry.
    • The barrators, are found in the fifth pouch in a lake of boiling pitch guarded by the Malebranche. Inf. XXI–XXII.
  • Barratry: The sin of selling or paying for offices or positions in the public service or officialdom (cf. simony).
    • One of the sins of ordinary fraud punished in the eighth circle. Inf. XXI, 60.
  • "Beati misericordes": "Blessed are the merciful." (Mat 5:7)
    • Heard by Dante as he passed upward out of the terrace of the envious. Purg. XV, 38.
  • "Beati mundo corde": "Blessed are the pure in heart." (Mat 5:8).
    • Sung by an angel before Dante passed upward out of the terrace of the lustful. Purg. XXVII, 8.
  • "Beati pacifici": "Blessed are peacemakers." (Mat 5:9)
    • Heard by Dante as he passed upward out of the terrace of the angry. Purg. XVII, 68–69.
  • "Beati pauperes spiritu": "Blessed are the poor in spirit." (Mat 5:3)
    • Heard by Dante as he passed upward out of the terrace of the prideful. Purg. XII, 110.
  • "Beati quorum tecta sunt peccata": "Blessed are they whose sins are covered." (Psalm 32:1; Psalm 31:1 in the Latin Vulgate.)
    • Sung by Matilda as she conversed with Dante in Terrestrial Paradise. Purg. XXIX, 1–3.
  • Baptist: See John the Baptist.
The meeting of Dante and Beatrice, Henry Holiday
  • Beatrice (1266–1290): Dante's idealised childhood love, Beatrice Portinari. In the poem, she awaits the poet in Paradise, replaces Virgil as Dante's guide, and conducts him through the heavens. She symbolises Heavenly Wisdom.
    • The "worthier spirit" who Virgil says will act as Dante's guide in Paradise. Inf. I, 121–123.
    • Asks Virgil to rescue Dante and bring him on his journey. Inf. II, 53–74.
    • Asked by Lucia to help Dante. Inf. II, 103–114.
    • When Dante appears upset by Farinata's prophecy on his future exile, Virgil intervenes and explains to him that Beatrice, "quella il cui bell' occhio tutto vede" ("one whose gracious eyes see everything"), will eventually clarify all. Inf. X, 130–132.
    • Virgil, speaking with Chiron, alludes to Beatrice as she who has entrusted Dante to him. Inf. XII, 88.
    • Speaking with Brunetto Latini Dante alludes to her as the woman who shall fully explain the sense of Brunetto's prophecy regarding his exile from Florence. Inf. XV, 90.
    • Virgil uses the promise of meeting Beatrice to encourage Dante to enter the fire of Purgatory. Purg. XXVII, 36.
    • Dante meets Beatrice in Purgatory. Purg. XXX, 31.
  • Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum (The Ecclesiastical History of the English People) gained him the title "The father of English history
    ".
    • Encountered in the Fourth Sphere of Heaven (The sun). Par. X, 130–131.
  • Belacqua: Personal acquaintance of Dante's, perhaps Duccio di Bonavia, a music instrument maker noted for his laziness.
    • Dante encounters him in Ante-Purgatory, waiting a lifetime because he waited to his deathbed to repent. Purg. IV, 106–135.
  • Belisarius: (c. 500–565) Roman general who served under the Emperor Justinian and regained much of Italy for the Empire.
    • Commended by the soul of Justinian in Heaven. Par. VI, 25–27.
  • "Benedictus qui venis" ("Blessed are you who come") Variation of "Benedictus qui venit" ("Blessed is he who comes"), sung in the Sanctus of the Latin Mass. The phrase comes from the Gospel of Mark (Mark 11:10), when the crowds welcome Jesus into Jerusalem.
  • Mastro Benvenuto: Nicknamed Asdente ("toothless"), he was a late 13th-century Parma shoemaker, famous for his prophecies against Frederick II. Dante also mentions him with contempt in his Convivio, as does Salimbene in his Cronica, though with a very different tone.
    • Among the soothsayers. Inf. XX, 118–120.
  • Cistercian Order
    .
    • Guides Dante as he travels through the Empyrean. Par. XXXI, 102.
  • Gualdrada Berti: Daughter of Bellincione Berti dei Ravignani, from about 1180 wife to Guido the Elder of the great Guidi family, and grandmother of Guido Guerra. The 14th-century Florentine chronicler Giovanni Villani remembers her as a model of ancient Florentine virtue.
    • "The good Gualdrada". Inf. XVI, 37.
  • Bertran de Born (c. 1140 – c. 1215): French soldier and troubadour poet, and viscount of Hautefort, he fomented trouble between Henry II of England and his sons.
    • Among the sowers of discord, where he carries his severed head (although he died a natural death). Inf. XXVIII, 118–142.
    • "The lord of Hautefort." Inf. XXIX, 29.
  • Bonagiunta of Lucca: Tuscan poet. He uses the phrase "dolce stil novo" to describe the poetry of Dante, Guido Guinizelli, and Guido Cavalcanti. Purg. XXIV, 43–63.
  • Guido Bonatti: A prominent 13th-century astrologer, and a staunch Ghibelline, he is famous for having boasted of being responsible for the Senese victory at Montaperti in 1260.
    • Among the soothsayers. Inf. XX, 118.
  • Franciscan theologian
    .
Giotto di Bondone

C

Cadmus fighting the dragon. Side A of a red-figured calix-krater found in Sant'Agata de' Goti (Campania), c. 350–340 BCE. From Paestum.
Cerberus, picture by William Blake (18th century)
The Death of Cleopatra by Reginald Arthur, Roy Miles Gallery, London
  • Cleopatra (69–30 BCE): Queen of Egypt, lover of Julius Caesar and Mark Antony. Like Dido, she "killed herself for love".
    • Found amongst the sexual sinners. Inf. V, 63.
  • Clio: The Muse of History.
    • Mentioned by Virgil as Statius' inspiration in writing the Thebaid. Purg. XXII, 58.
  • Clotho: The Fate who determines the lifespan of each mortal by measuring out thread and then cutting it.
    • Virgil cites her as the reason Dante is yet alive. Purg. XXI, 25–27.
  • Cistercian
    , to his nephew Robert, who had left the Cistercians to join the Cluniacs.
    • The "cloaks and cowls" of the hypocrites are compared to the Cluniac robes. Inf. XXIII, 61–63.
  • Cocytus: "The river of lamentation", in Greek mythology, it was the river on whose banks the dead who could not pay Charon wandered. It flowed into the river Acheron, across which lay Hades. In the Inferno it is a frozen lake forming the ninth circle and the bottom of Hell.
    • Formed from the tears of the statue of the Old Man of Crete. Inf. XIV, 94–120.
    • Is shut in by cold. Inf. XXXI, 121–122.
    • Described. Inf. XXXII, 22–39.
    • Frozen by flapping of the wings of Dis. Inf. XXXIV, 46–52.
  • Colchis: Ancient kingdom at the eastern end of the Black Sea. According to ancient Greek legend, Jason and the Argonauts sailed there in search of the Golden Fleece.
    • Dante compares the voyage to his journey through the heavens. Par. II, 16–18.
  • Conradin: (1252–1258) King of Sicily until 1258, when he was defeated and deposed by Charles of Anjou. Purg. XX, 68.
Constantine the Great
(mosaic in Hagia Sophia, Constantinople
, c. 1000)

D

The Death of Dido by Joshua Reynolds 1781
Diogenes, Detail of Rafaello Santi's The School of Athens (1510), Vatican collection
auto de fe, Pedro Berruguete
, 1475

E

  • Eagle: Bird which appeared on the Standard of the Roman Legions and symbolized the authority of the empire.
    • An Eagle appears twice in the Pageant of Church History. It first represents the persecution of the early Church by the Roman Empire. Purg. XXXII, 109–117. Then it returns, representing connection of the Church and Empire starting with the Emperor Constantine I. Purg. XXXII, 124–129.
    • The administration of justice is dispensed in the form of an Eagle which appears in Par. XVIII and answers Dante in Par. XIX and Par. XX on the matter of whether any who are not Christian can be saved.
  • Ebro: River in Spain.
    • Used as a reference to the time of day. Dante considered it to be 6 hours ahead of Purgatory. Purg. XXVII, 2–3.
  • Ecce ancilla Dei: "Behold the handmaid of God." (In the original Vulgate: "Ecce ancilla Domini.") Response of the Virgin Mary to the angel Gabriel when he announced that she would be the mother of Jesus.
    • Words seen in a wall-carving depicting the Annunciation. It is a visual representation of humility. Purg. X, 44.
The Furies hector Orestes, in Orestes Pursued by the Furies by William-Adolphe Bouguereau 1862

F

  • Fabii
    : Roman family of the Republican Age.
    • Cited as examples of dedication to the public life and to the glory of ancient Rome. Par. VI, 47.
  • Fabricius: Caius Fabricius, famous Roman hero of the 3rd century BCE. He is remembered for his frugality and his refusal to accept substantial bribes from Pyrrhus.
    • Cited by Hugh Capet, who is repenting on the terrace of the greedy, as an example of life without greed. Purg. XX, 25–27.
  • Falterona: Mountain in the Apennine Range
Farinata degli Uberti, as depicted by Andrea del Castagno. Villa Carducci, Florence.
Francis of Assisi, late 13th century
  • Franciscan Order, formally recognized by Pope Honorius III
    in 1223.
  • Franco Bolognese: 14th-century manuscript illuminator.
  • Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor: Was renowned for his Epicurean lifestyle, and alleged to have punished traitors by cloaking them in leaden capes and placing them into boiling cauldrons.
    • Among the Epicurean heretics. Inf. X, 119.
    • His capes compared to those of the hypocrites. Inf. XXIII, 66.
    • His government of Italy viewed favorably. Purg. XVI, 115–120.
  • Vanni Fucci: Nicknamed Bestia, for his brutality, he was the Illegitimate son of Fuccio de' Lazzari. He took part in the vicious struggles that divided his city Pistoia, siding with the Black Guelphs, repeatedly sacked the houses of his political enemies. In 1293, he stole the reliquary of San Jacopo from the sacristy of the Cathedral of Pistoia, for which crime the innocent Rampino Foresi was arrested and nearly executed, before the guilt of Fucci and his accomplices was discovered.
    • Among the thieves, like the mythical phoenix, he is burned to ashes and restored. Inf. XXIV, 97–118.
    • Refers to himself as a "mule" meaning "bastard" ("mul ch'i' fui"). Inf. XXIV, 125.
    • Prophesies the triumph in Florence of the Black Guelphs over the Whites. Inf. XXIV, 143–151.
    • Swears against God while performing an obscene gesture (a "fig", the insertion of a thumb between the first and second fingers of a closed fist). Inf. XXV, 1–18.
  • Furies: see Erinyes
    .

G

H

medieval
depiction of a Harpy.
Helen, detail from an Attic red-figure krater, c. 450–440 BCE, Louvre (G 424)
  • Helen: Wife of the Spartan king Menelaus and lover of the Trojan Paris, her abduction caused the Trojan War.
    • Found amongst the sexual sinners. Inf. V, 64–65.
  • Helicon: Mountain in Boeotia sacred to the Muses. Purg. XXIX, 40.
  • Heliodorus: Minister to Seleucus IV, Hellenistic ruler of the Seleucid Empire. According to II Maccabees 3:21–28, he was sent to Jerusalem to plunder the treasury of the Temple, but was turned back by supernatural figures, including a man mounted on a horse.
    • Cited by souls on the terrace of the greedy as an example of greed. Purg. XX, 113.
  • Decameron
    (VIII, 3). Inf. XXIV, 93.
  • Xerxes
    , king of the Persians, spanned the Hellespont with a bridge to invade Greece. When a storm destroyed the bridge, the king ordered his soldiers to flog the waters as punishment.
    • Dante compares the narrow Lethe River to the narrow Hellespont. Purg. XXVIII, 70–72.
    • The ancient towns of Abydos and Sestos were on the shores of the Hellespont. Purg. XXVIII, 74.
  • Henry of England (Arrigo d'Inghilterra): Henry III (1216–1272)
    • Dante sees him in the "Valley of the Princes," waiting as a late-repenter to enter Purgatory. Purg. VII, 130.
  • philosopher
    .
    • Encountered by Dante in Limbo. Inf. IV, 138.
  • Hera (Juno in Roman mythology): Greek goddess, she is the wife of Zeus (Jupiter). A jealous goddess, she often sought revenge against Zeus' many lovers. One of those was Semele, who was the daughter of Cadmus, King of Thebes and the mother of Dionysus by Zeus. One of Hera's many acts of revenge against Semele, was to cause Athamas, husband of Semele's sister Ino, to be driven mad. Mistaking Ino, holding their two infant sons Learchus and Melicertes, for a lioness and her cubs, he killed Learchus, and Ino still holding Melicertes jumped off a cliff into the sea. (Ovid, Metamorphoses IV, 416–542). Another lover of Zeus, and victim of Hera was Aegina, daughter of the river-god Asopus (see Aegina above).
    • Her revenge against "Aegina's people". Inf. XXIX, 58–65.
    • Her (Juno's) revenge against Semeles' "Theban family". Inf. XXX, 1–12.
  • the Twelve Labours
    .
Vatican Palace
, 1511.
Icarus and Daedalus by Charles Paul Landon

I

J

Iolcos
.
  • Jason: Greek mythological hero who led the Argonauts to Colchis in search of the Golden Fleece.
    • Found among the Seducers, for his seduction and abandonment of Hypsipyle and Medea. Inf. XVIII, 83–99.
    • The Argonauts' voyage compared to a voyage into the mysteries of the heavens. Par. II, 16–18.
  • Jason: Brother of the High Priest of Israel Onias III, he succeeded his brother in c. 175 BCE. According to 2 Maccabees he obtained his office by bribing the Seleucid king Antiochus IV Epiphanes.
  • Jehoshaphat: Fourth king of the Kingdom of Judah.
    • Mentioned in relation to the end of time. Inf. X, 11.
  • Jephthah: Judge in ancient Israel who made a careless vow to offer up a sacrifice of thanksgiving for victory in battle and accidentally committed his daughter to that sacrifice. The story appears in Judges 11.
    • Beatrice cites Jephthah as an example of poor judgment. Par. IV, 64–68.
  • Jerusalem: Location of the Temple of Solomon and site of Jesus' crucifixion. Considered in the Middle Ages as the geographical center of the inhabited world.
    • Hell is located directly below Jerusalem. Inf. XXXIV, 112.
    • Purgatory is a mountain at the antipodes of Jerusalem. Inf. XXXIV, 118–126, Purg. IV, 67–71.
  • Jesus: Central figure of Christianity. According to Christian legend, in what is called the Harrowing of Hell, he descended into Hell after his death and rescued certain souls from Limbo.
  • Jocasta: Wife and mother of Oedipus, ancient king of Thebes. They had two sons, Polynices and Eteocles. Statius' Thebaid tells the story of the family conflict.
    • Mentioned as the subject of Statius' work. Purg. XXII, 55–57.
  • florin
    .
    • In Florence, "the first patron gave way" to him. Inf. XIII, 143–144.
    • "The currency which bears" his seal. Inf. XXX, 74.
    • A voice in Purgatory on the terrace of the gluttonous cites John as an example in Temperance. Purg. XXII, 151–154.
  • John the Evangelist: The name used to refer to the author of the Gospel of John. He is also traditionally identified with John the Apostle and the author of the Book of Revelation.
    • Dante interprets a passage of John's Revelation (17:1–3) as a prophecy on the future corruption of the Roman Curia. Inf. XIX, 106–108.
    • John's vision (Rev. 4:6–11) of four beasts in the heavenly court draws from a vision of similar beasts by the prophet Ezekiel (Ezekiel 1:1–21). The beasts appear as allegories of the four Gospels in the Pageant of the Church Triumphant. Purg. XXIX, 103–105.
  • Jordan: River on the border of Israel.
    • Crossed by ancient Israelites led by Joshua after an older, less eager generation had died off. Mentioned as a lesson in sloth. Purg. XVIII, 133–135.
  • Jove: See Zeus
    .
  • Roman Catholic
    church took place in 1300. Inf. XVIII, 28–33.
  • Judas Iscariot: Disciple who betrayed Jesus.
    • Virgil's visit to "Judas' circle". Inf. IX, 25–27.
    • "The transgressing soul" replaced by Saint Matthias. Inf. XIX 94–96.
    • Along with Brutus and Cassius, one of the three betrayer/suicides who, for those sins, were eternally chewed by one of the three mouths of Satan. Inf. XXXIV, 53–67
    • The innermost ring of Cocytus, where the treacherous to masters and benefactors are punished, is named Judecca. Inf. XXXIV, 117.
Denarius commemorating Julius Caesar for his success during the Gallic Wars.
  • Julia: Daughter of Julius Caesar and wife of Pompey
    .
  • Julius Caesar (100–44 BCE): The celebrated Roman dictator and military commander.
    • Virgil's remembers him (erroneously) as ruler of Rome at his birth. Inf. I, 70.
    • Encountered by Dante in Limbo, "armato con li occhi grifagni" ("falcon-eyed and fully armed"). Inf. IV, 123.
    • Advised by Curio to lead his army across the Rubicon, which is considered an act of war against the Roman Republic. Inf. XXVIII, 97–99.
    • Souls in the terrace of sloth cite his campaigns in France and Spain as an inspiring example of energy. Purg. XVIII, 101.
    • His rumored sexual relations with Bithynian King Nicomedes mentioned on the terrace of the lustful. Purg. XXVI, 77. (See Suetonius, The Lives of the Twelve Caesars, Julius Caesar, 49.)
    • His unlawful entry into Rome cited as the beginning of the Roman Empire which ultimately brought an imperial peace to the world. Par. VI, 55–87.
  • Juno: See Hera.
  • Justinian: Flavius Petrus Sabbatius Iustinianus, an emperor of Byzantium, known as "the last Roman emperor". A saintly man respected for his law reforms.
    • His "mending [Italy's] bridle". Purg. VI, 88–93.
    • Encountered in the Second Sphere: Mercury, as an unnamed "holy form [concealed] within his rays". Par. V, 115–139.
    • His discourse on the history of Rome. Par. VI, 1–111.
    • His description of the souls in Mercury. Par. VI, 112–142.
  • Juvenal: Decimus Iunius Iuvenalis, Roman poet of the 1st and 2nd centuries CE.
    • On arrival in Limbo, he informed Virgil about Statius' poetic accomplishments. Purg. XXII, 13–15.

K

  • "Kill! Kill!" ("Martira, martira!"): The martyrdom of
    St. Stephen
    by an angry mob. He died without anger as he was stoned to death. His last words were a prayer for forgiveness for his enemies. (Acts 7:58–60)
    • Seen in a vision by Dante as he enters the terrace of the angry in Purgatory. Purg. XV, 106–114.

L

  • "Labïa mëa, Domine": Abbreviation of "Domine, labia mea aperies; et os meum annunciabit laudem tuam." ("O Lord, open thou my lips, and my mouth shall proclaim thy praise.") (Psalm 51:15; Ps 50:15 in the Vulgate.) Verse recited at the beginning of the first monastic prayer office of the day.
    • Chanted in penitence by souls on the terrace of the gluttonous in Purgatory. Purg. XXIII, 10–12.
  • Lacedaemon: Also known as Sparta, a leading city in ancient Greece.
    • Dante commends Lacedaemon as an example of orderly government. Purg. VI, 139.
  • Lachesis: One of the three Fates
    in Greco-Roman mythology. With a measuring rod, she measures out the life-span of every mortal.
    • Mentioned with reference to death. Purg. XXV, 79.
  • Laertes: Mythical father of Odysseus (Ulysses), he was one of the Argonauts. In the Odyssey he takes part in the massacre of Penelope's suitors.
    • Not even Ulysses' love for his father (and wife and son) was enough to overrule his desire "to gain experience of the world and of the vices and the worth of men". Inf. XXVI, 94–99.
  • Arthurian legend. Reading tales of his amorous adventures led Paulo and Francesca
    astray.
    • Inf. V, 128.
  • Lano: See Arcolano of Siena.
  • Brunetto Latini: Famous Florentine Guelph politician and writer, friend and teacher of Dante until his death in 1294.
    • Encountered by Dante among the sodomites in the seventh circle. The meeting between Dante and Brunetto is one of the most important in the Inferno, as Brunetto is given the key role of prophesying the future exile of Dante. Dante extols his encyclopaedia, Li Livres dou Tresor, of which Dante has Brunetto say: "Sieti raccomandato il mio Tesoro, nel qual io vivo ancora". Inf. XV, 22–124.
  • Lateran Palace: The principle papal residence, from the beginning of the 4th century, until the beginning of Avignon Papacy, in 1305.
    • Used by Dante to allude to Boniface's warring against Christians, rather than "Jews" or "Saracens". Inf. XXVII, 86.
  • Latinus: The "Latian king" and one of a group of figures associated with the history of Troy, Virgil's Aeneid, and the history of Rome encountered by Dante in Limbo. Inf. IV, 121–128.
  • Lavinia: Daughter of Latinus and Amata and wife of Aeneas.
    • One of a group of figures associated with the history of Troy, Virgil's Aeneid, and the history of Rome encountered by Dante in Limbo. Inf. IV, 121–128; Par. VI, 3.
    • Dante has a vision of Lavinia mourning for her mother Amata, who committed suicide after inciting a war between the Latins and the Trojans. The vision comes as Dante departs the terrace of the angry in Purgatory. Purg. XVI, 34–39.
  • Lawrence
    : Deacon in the Church in Rome, martyred in 258. According to tradition, he was tied to a grate and burned to death.
    • Beatrice cites Lawrence as an example of a steadfast will. Par. IV, 83.
  • Leah: Sister to Rachel, first wife of Jacob, and mother of six of the tribes of ancient Israel. She was the less attractive of the two sisters, but Jacob was tricked into marrying her first. (Gen 29:16–25)
    • In a dream, Dante sees her gathering flowers. Purg. XXVII, 97–108.
  • Leander: Ancient Greek youth who carried on a love affair with Hero, a priestess of Aphrodite, who lived on the opposite shore of the Hellespont. Each night he would swim across the strait to be with her.
    • Dante compares the Lethe River to the Hellespont, and his desire for Matilda to that of Leander for Hero.
  • Learchus: See Hera.
  • Lethe: One of the rivers of Hades in Greek mythology. To drink its waters is to forget everything. In the Comedy, its source is in Terrestrial Paradise at the top of Purgatory. When it reaches the base of the mountain, it flows down a narrow passageway to the center of the earth.
    • Its location is asked about and given. Inf. XIV, 130–138.
    • Probably the little stream Dante hears at the center of the earth. Inf. XXXIV 130–132.
    • Guido Guinizelli tells Dante that even Lethe will not erase his memory of their conversation. Purg. XXVI, 106–108.
    • Dante arrives at its banks. Purg. XXVIII, 25.
    • Matilda explains that its source is miraculous because there is no rain in Terrestrial Paradise. Purg. XXVIII, 121–133.
    • Dante must repent of his infidelity to Beatrice before he is allowed to drink from the Lethe and forget the act. Purg. XXX, 142–145.
    • Matilda bears Dante through the Lethe. Purg. XXXI, 94–96.
    • Dante sees the source of the Lethe in Terrestrial Paradise. Purg. XXXIII, 123.
  • eponymous
    forebear of a tribe of ancient Israel. The tribe of Levi was responsible for duties of worship and did not receive a tribal homeland.
    • Dante refers to the clergy as "Levi's sons." Purg. XVI, 131.
  • Libra: Constellation of the zodiac. During the events of the Comedy, it would be highest in the sky at about 1 A.M.
    • Used to indicate the time of day. Purg. XXVII, 3.
  • Limbo: The first circle of Dante's Hell and the scene of Inf. IV. It is a kind of antechamber in which the souls of the good who died before Jesus spend eternity with no punishment other than the lack of the divine presence. In Dante's version, figures from Classical antiquity significantly outnumber those from the Old Testament.
  • Linus: Mythical son of Apollo who taught music to Orpheus.
    • Encountered by Dante in Limbo. Inf. IV, 141.
  • Ab Urbe Condita
    , telling the history of Rome from the origins down to his own times.
    • The historian "who does not err". Inf. XXVIII, 12.
  • Lombards: Germanic tribe who invaded Italy in the 6th century BCE and established a kingdom in the northern part of the peninsula.
    • The conquering Lombards were Arian Christians in belief, where they came into conflict with the Catholic Church in Rome. Par. VI, 94–95.
  • Theologian and Bishop; author of The Sentences, a famous medieval textbook of theology
    .
  • Lucan (39–65): Latin poet, whose Pharsalia, an epic poem on the civil war between Julius Caesar and Pompey, is an important source for Dante. Like Seneca he was forced to commit suicide by Nero for his participation in the Pisonian
    conspiracy.
  • Lucca: A Tuscan city of considerable importance in the Middle Ages; generally Guelph, it was traditionally an ally of Florence and an enemy of Pisa.
    • Dante, through the words of a devil, accuses its magistrates of being all corrupt: "torno...a quella terra, che n'è ben fornita: ogn'uom v'è barattier,...del no, per li denar, vi si fa ita" Inf. XXI, 39–42.
  • Lucia of Syracuse: (Saint Lucy) 4th-century martyr saint associated with light and those, like Dante, who suffered from poor eyesight. She symbolises Illuminating Grace in the poem.
    • Serves as an intermediary between the "gentle lady" (see Mary) and Beatrice. Inf. II, 97–108.
    • Lifts Dante in his sleep to the Gate of St. Peter in Purgatory. Purg. IX, 55.
  • Tarquinius Superbus was revenged by Brutus
    when he overthrew the king.
    • Encountered by Dante in Limbo. Inf. IV, 128.
    • Cited as a reason for the end of Roman monarchy. Par. VI, 41.
  • Luke: Writer of the third Gospel. Luke includes a story of the resurrected Jesus quietly joining two disciples as they walked the road to Emmaus. (Luke 24:13–27)
    • When Statius joins Virgil and Dante as they walked in Purgatory, Dante compares the meeting to the event in Luke. Purg. XXI, 7–13.
  • Lycurgus: Ancient king of Nemea. According to Statius's Thebaid (V.499–730), Lycurgus received Hypsipyle and her two sons as refugees from Lemnos and put his own son in her care. When she accidentally permitted the Lycurgus' son to die of a snakebite, the enraged king wanted to kill her. Her two sons rushed to her side to protect her.
    • Mentioned by Dante. Purg. XXVI, 94–96.

M

Guido Reni's archangel Michael (in the Capuchin church of Sta. Maria della Concezione, Rome) trampling Satan

N

O

P

Joseph Anton Koch, Paolo and Francesca discovered by Giovanni, 1805–1810
St. Peter, oil on panel by Francesco del Cossa (1473), Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan

Q

  • "Qui lugent": ("Who mourn") An abbreviation of "Beati qui lugent quoniam ipsi consolabuntur." ("Blessed are they who mourn, for they shall be comforted") (Mat 5:4; 5:5 in the Vulgate)
    • Spoken by an angel as Dante passes out of the terrace of the slothful. Purg. XIX, 50.
  • Quintius:
    Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus (520–430 BCE). Ancient Roman noble who assumed dictatorial powers in a crisis and then promptly relinquished them to return to his farm. The city of Cincinnati
    , Ohio, is named in his honor.
    • Cited as an exemplar of ancient Roman virtue. Par. VI, 46–47.

R

S

  • Sabellus and Nasidius: Two soldiers of Cato's army in Lucan's poem Pharsalia (IX, 761–804), who are bitten by snakes, while marching in the Libyan Desert, after which their bodies "transform". Sabellus' transforms into a rotting formless mass; Nasidius' swells, then bursts.
    • Their cruel fate is compared to that of the thieves. Inf. XXV, 94–95.
  • Sabine Women
    : Young women abducted by Roman youths in the early days of Rome. Par. VI, 41.
  • Muslim leader renowned for his military prowess, generosity, and merciful attitude to his opponents during the Crusades
    .
  • Salve Regina: Hymn to the Virgin Mary used in evening services. The song addresses Mary from "the vale of tears."
    • Sung at sunset by souls in waiting to enter Purgatory in the "Valley of the Princes." Purg. VII, 83.
  • Samaria: Region north of Jerusalem and west of the Jordan River. According to John 4:4–28, Jesus encountered a Samaritan woman at a well. Their dialogue is about spiritual thirst.
    • Dante's eagerness to learn the meaning of the earthquake in Purgatory is compared to spiritual thirst. Purg. XXI, 1–4.
  • Sardinia: Italian Island north of Tunisia and south of Corsica. In Dante's time it was plagued by malaria.
    • Sickness from July until September. Inf. XXIX, 46–48.
  • Sannella: (Simonetti della Sannella) Italian noble family, latter known as Simonetti, one of the ancient Florentine families from the time of Cacciaguida
    .
    • Mentioned together with other noble families, such as: Arca, Soldanier, Ardinghi, and Bostichi Par. XVI.
Gustave Doré's depiction of Satan from John Milton's Paradise Lost.

T

Johann Heinrich Füssli
, c. 1780–85
Aeneas defeats Turnus, Luca Giordano, 1634–1705, The genius of Aeneas is shown ascendant, looking into the light of the future, while that of Turnus is setting, shrouded in darkness.
  • Tagliacozzo: Site of a defeat by Manfred's nephew Conradin, by Charles of Anjou, who, following the advice of his general Erard ("Alardo") de Valery, surprised Conradin, with the use of reserve troops.
    • "Where old Alardo conquered without weapons". Inf. XXVIII, 17–18.
  • Tarpeian Rock: cliff on the Capitoline Hill in Rome, where an ancient temple to Saturn was located.
    • Compared to the gate of Purgatory. Purg. IX, 135.
  • Tarquin: Last king of Rome, he was overthrown by Lucius Junius Brutus, considered the founder of the Republic.
    • Seen in Limbo. Inf. IV, 121–128.
  • Taurus: Zodiac constellation in the form of a bull.
    • When Dante enters the terrace of the lustful in Purgatory, Taurus is on the meridian line. Hence it is 2 P.M. in Purgatory. Purg. XXV, 3.
  • Te Deum laudamus
    : "We praise Thee, O God." Ancient Latin hymn sung in the morning monastic offices. Also sung in special occasions of celebration.
    • Heard by Dante as he enters Purgatory. Purg. IX, 141.
  • Te lucis ante: "To Thee before the close of day." Latin hymn sung at Compline, the final monastic prayer office of the day.
    • Souls in the "Valley of the Princes" sing the hymn at the end of the day. Purg. VIII, 13–17.
  • Telemachus: Son of Odysseus (Ulysses) and Penelope, he plays an important role in the Odyssey. In the lost Telegony he appears to have married Circe and been granted immortality.
    • Not even Ulysses' love for his son (and wife and father) was enough to overrule his desire "to gain experience of the world and of the vices and the worth of men". Inf. XXVI, 94–99.
  • Temple: reference to the
    Templars, a military order founded during the Crusades
    .
  • Terence: Publius Terentius Afer. Roman playwright of the 2nd century BCE.
    • Resident of Limbo. Purg. XXII, 97.
  • Terrestrial Paradise: According to the Comedy, Terrestrial Paradise is the Garden of Eden where the original man and woman first lived. (Gen 2 & 3) It is located at the top of the mountain of Purgatory. The events of Cantos XXVIII through XXXIII in the Purgatorio take place there.
  • Thebes: City of Ancient Greece.
    • Statius tells Dante and Virgil that he composed the Thebaid, an epic poem on the history of Thebes. "I sang of Thebes." Purg. XXI, 92.
  • Thaïs: A courtesan in Terence's Eunuchus. Perhaps misled by Cicero's commentary (De amicitia XXVI, 98), he places her among the flatterers.
    • Virgil contemptuously calls her "puttana" ("whore"). Inf. XVIII, 127–135.
  • philosopher
    .
    • Encountered by Dante in Limbo. Inf. IV, 137.
  • Thaumas: Greek sea god, whose daughter is Iris, the goddess of rainbows.
    • Statius comments that rainbows do not occur in Purgatory. Purg. XXI, 50–51.
  • Oracles of Delphi
    .
    • Beatrice compares her own obscure oracles about the future to those of Themis or the Sphinx. Purg. XXXIII, 47.
  • Theobald IV of Champagne, on his death in 1253 he succeeded him as Count of Champagne and, as Theobald II, king of Navarre
    . He died childless in 1270.
    • The "good king Theobald" ("buon re Tebaldo"). Inf. XXII, 52.
  • Love
    .
  • Herakles
    .
    • His name invoked by the Erinyes. Inf. XI, 54.
    • The "Duke of Athens" who killed the Minotaur. Inf. XII, 17.
    • Helped to defeat drunken Centaurs at Hippodamia's wedding feast. Purg. XXIV, 23.
  • Thetis: Noble ancient Greek woman. Wife of Peleus and mother of Achilles.
    • Resident of Limbo. Purg. XXII, 113.
  • Thisbe: In a tale by Ovid
    (Metamorphoses IV, 55–166), Thisbe and Pyramus are lovers in ancient Babylon separated by a wall.
  • Thymbraeus: An epithet of Apollo derived from the town Thymbra, where there was a temple dedicated to him.
    • In Purgatory, Thymbreaus (Apollo) is depicted on the pavement casting Briareus from Olympus. Purg. XII, 31.
  • Tiber: River which runs through Rome and empties into the Tyrrhenian Sea.
    • Souls bound for Purgatory wait on the seashore for the angelic ferry. Purg. II, 101.
  • Tigris and Euphrates: Rivers in the Middle East. According to Genesis 2, they had their origins in the Garden of Eden.
    • Dante compares these two rivers to the two rivers he sees in Terrestrial Paradise. Purg. XXXIII, 112.
  • Timaeus: A dialogue of Plato where the celestial source and destiny of the human soul are discussed.
    • Beatrice corrects Dante of mistaken ideas he drew from this dialogue. Par. IV, 22–63.
  • Tiresias: A mythical blind soothsayer who was transformed into a woman and then back into a man, seven years later. He has an important role in classical literature, including the Odyssey.
    • His double transformation is told. Inf. XX, 40–45.
    • Father of Manto. Inf. XX, 58, Purg. XXII, 113.
  • Tisiphone: see Erinyes.
  • Titan
    of the Dawn.
    • Mentioned in reference to dawn in Purgatory. Purg. IX, 1.
  • Titus: Roman Emperor (79–81). As a general, he completed the campaign to put down a Jewish revolt and recapture Jerusalem in 70 CE. Par. VI, 92–93.
    • Statius tells Dante and Virgil that he was from the age of Titus. Purg. XXI, 82.
  • Gaia. Tityus was a giant killed by Zeus for attacking Leto
    .
    • Seen chained in the "Well of the Giants". Inf. XXXI, 124.
  • Raphael
    .
    • Beatrice tells Dante that Raphael may have appeared in human form, but that this form is an accommodation to the limits of the human imagination. Par. IV, 48.
  • Tomyris: Queen of the Massagetae in the 6th century BCE. According to Herodotus, Cyrus the Great led a failed invasion of her lands. After his defeat and death in battle, Tomyris plunged his severed head into a wineskin filled with blood.
    • Cyrus' death is depicted on the pavement in Purgatory as an example of arrogance. Purg. XII, 56.
  • Torquatus
    : Titus Manlius Torquatus, Consul and Dictator in Rome during the 4th century, BCE.
    • Cited as an example of the noble Roman. Par. VI, 46.
  • Tours: City in France. Pope Martin IV was treasurer of the church there when he was elected pope in 1281.
  • Trajan: Roman Emperor (98–117) at the height of the Empire. According to Medieval legend, he was posthumously converted to Christianity by Pope Gregory the Great.
    • Appears depicted in a wall carving as an exemplar of humility, granting justice to a widow. Purg. X, 73–93.
  • Troy: Also called Ilium, the site of the Trojan War, described in Homer's Iliad, and the home of Aeneas. The Greeks were victorious by means of the wooden Trojan Horse, which the Greeks left as a "gift" for the Trojans. The Trojans brought the horse through the gates into their walled city, and the Greek soldiers who had hid inside the horse were able to open the gates and let in the rest of the Greek army.
    • Aeneas' escape. Inf. I, 73.
    • "That horse's fraud that caused a breach". Inf. XXVI, 58–60.
    • Trojan (meaning perhaps, through Aeneas, their Samnite descendants) wars in Apulia. Inf. XXVIII, 7–9.
    • The "pride of Troy ... dared all" but "was destroyed". Inf. XXX, 13–15.
    • Destruction of Troy depicted on the pavement in Purgatory as an example of arrogance. Purg. XII, 61.
  • Tullio/Tully: See Cicero.
  • Turnus: A chieftain of the Rutuli whose conflict with Aeneas is the subject of the second half of the Aeneid, at the end of which he was killed by Aeneas in single combat (Aeneid II, 919)—one of those who "died for Italy". Inf. I, 106–108.
  • Isolde
    .
    • Found amongst the sexual sinners. Inf. V, 67.
  • Tuscany: region of Italy where Florence is located.
  • Gaia
    . Typhon was a giant with a hundred serpent heads.
    • Seen chained in the "Well of the Giants". Inf. XXXI, 124.

U

  • Ugolino della Gherardesca: Leader of one of two competing Guelph factions in Pisa. In 1288 he conspired with the Archbishop Ruggiere degli Ubaldini to oust the leader of the other faction, his grandson Nino de' Visconti. Ugolino was, in turn, betrayed by Ruggiere and imprisoned with several of his sons and grandsons. They all died of starvation in prison.
    • Found with Ruggiere amongst those damned for treason. Inf. XXXII, 124–XXXIII 90.
  • Ulysses: See Odysseus.
  • Usury: The practice of charging a fee for the use of money; viewed by the medieval church as a sin because it went contrary to the idea that wealth is based on natural increase, which was believed to be a gift from God.
    • Explained by Virgil to Dante. Inf. XI, 97–111.
    • The usurers are punished in the seventh circle Inf. XVII, 34–75.
  • Urania: The ancient Muse of Astronomy. She became the Muse of poets describing sacred themes.
    • Dante invokes her in Purg. XXIX, 41.

V

Virgil Reading the Aeneid to Augustus, Octavia, and Livia by Jean-Baptiste Wicar, Art Institute of Chicago
  • Varro: Either
    Publius Terentius Varro or Lucius Varius Rufus
    . Both were Roman writers of the 1st century BCE.
  • Venerable Bede: See Saint Bede
    .
  • Venetian Arsenal: Shipyard and naval depot for Venice, built c. 1104, in Castello sestiere, it was one of the most important shipyards in Europe, and was instrumental in maintaining Venice as a great naval power.
    • Described. Inf. XXI, 7–15.
  • "Veni, sponsa, de Libano" ("Come with me from Lebanon, my spouse.") (Song of Solomon 4:8)
  • "Venite, benedicti Patris mei." ("Come, blessed of my Father.") (Mat 25:34)
    • Sung by an angel as Dante finishes the last purgation. Purg. XXVII, 58.
  • Venus: Roman goddess of love. In Greek mythology she was known as Aphrodite.
    • Dante compares the loving eyes of Matilda to those of Venus inspired by her son Cupid.
  • Vespers: Evening monastic prayer service. As a reference to a period of time, Vespers is 3 P.M. to 6 P.M.
    • Used to indicate the time of day. Purg. III, 25; XV, 6; XV, 139.
  • Vexilla regis prodeunt: ("The royal banner draws forth.") Medieval Latin hymn.
    • Virgil introduces Satan with "Vexilla regis produent inferni" ("the king's banners come out of hell"). Inf. XXXIV, 1.
  • "Vinum non habent": "They have no wine." (John 2:3) Words spoken by Mary to Jesus at the wedding feast at Cana to prompt him to supply more wine for the feast.
    • Heard by souls in the terrace of the envious as a lesson in generosity. Purg. XIII, 29.
  • "Virum non cognosco": ("I have not known a man.") The Virgin Mary's response to the angel's announcement of the virgin birth of her son Jesus.
    • Recited penitentially by souls on the terrace of the lustful in Purgatory. Purg. XXV, 128.
  • Volto Santo ("Holy face") of Lucca: An early Byzantine crucifix
    made of very dark wood, greatly venerated as having been miraculously created.
  • Virgil (Publius Vergilius Maro) (70–19 BCE): Latin poet. He serves as Dante's guide through the Inferno and Purgatorio. In the absence of texts of Homer, the readers in the Middle Ages considered Virgil's Aeneid to be the great epic poem of the Classical world. In Dante's time, many believed that Virgil had predicted the arrival of Christianity in lines from his Eclogue IV: "at the boy's birth in whom/the iron shall cease, the golden race arise" (trans John Dryden). This made him doubly suited to his role as guide. He also symbolises Reason. Virgil accompanies Dante from Inf. I, 61 to Purg. XXX, 54.
    • Sudden appearance. Inf. I, 61–63
    • The "light and honor of all other poets" (Mandelbaum). Inf. I, 82
    • Dante's inspiration. Inf. I, 85–87
    • Offers to be Dante's guide. Inf. I, 112–114
    • In Purgatory, the poet Statius claims that Virgil's Aeneid was his poetic inspiration. It was my "mother" and my "nurse." Purg. XXI, 97–98.
    • In a story created by Dante, Statius relates how reading Virgil's Eclogue IV helped to convert him to Christianity. "Per te poeta fui, per te cristiano." ("Through you I became a poet; through you a Christian.") There is no evidence that Statius was a Christian. Purg. XXII, 64–93.
    • Departs from Dante without saying farewell. Purg. XXX, 49–54.
  • Vitaliano del Dente: Paduan banker, he was podestà of Vicenza in 1304 and of Padua in 1307.
  • Vulcan: In Roman mythology, blacksmith of the gods and, with the help of the Cyclops, maker of thunderbolts for Jove
    .
    • From whom Jove "took in wrath the keen-edged thunderbolt". Inf. XIV, 52–57.

W

Z

References

External links

  • Parker, Deborah World of Dante Website with searchable database of cultural references in the Divine Comedy.