Dante's House. Florence, Italy
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Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) was a Florentine poet of noble ancestry. His most noted work, Divina Comedia (The Divine Comedy), was seen as the basis for modern Italian making Tuscan the standard for the Italian language. The work is said to be the greatest literary statement in medieval history. Dante was born to Della degli Abati, who died when he was 7, and Dante Alighieri II, who died in the 1280’s. Dante was well educated in both Christian and Classical Literature. At age 12 he was promised in marriage to Gemma Donati, a girl he later married in 1285. But he had but one love, and that was not of his wife but of a girl named Beatrice. Beatrice was his guide in the Divine Comedy, and the same Beatrice for whom he wrote La Vita Nuova (The New Life). There are multitude of sonnets for Beatrice, and yet none for his wife. Dante was a nomad of country, but came to rest for a final home in Ravenna in 1320. Shortly before his death he was accused of Averriosm (treason against the country) and his book De Monarchia was ordered to be burned by Pope John XXII. Tina Samuels is a freelance writer and book author out of Rome, GA. She can be reached at tinasam69@hotmail.com. |
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