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Selected Graphics: Dante’s Divine Comedy

Posted on March 24, 2024March 26, 2024 By Gayla

These illustrations from a 15th-century book show various areas of hell, purgatory, and heaven, based on Dante’s musings in The Divine Comedy. Hell and purgatory were painted by Priamo della Quercia, and Giovanni di Paoli di Grazia did heaven.

The Divine Comedy

Dante’s journey through the World of the Dead was entertaining, if you like that kind of thing, but not that funny – so why is it called a comedy? Because the poem ends with Dante experiencing a vision of God — that’s the mix of happy ending and Godly influence that qualified as a comedy in those days. In fact, Dante originally called it just Comedy, but a later editor changed it to “Divine Comedy”, so people didn’t get the wrong idea.

These gorgeous and inventive illuminations of the Divine Comedy were produced between 1444 and 1450 — more than a century after Dante wrote it. The work was split between two artists: Priamo della Quercia took Hell and Purgatory, while the more well-known Giovanni di Paoli di Grazia illustrated Heaven.

The book originally belonged to Alfonso V, king of Aragon, Naples, and Sicily. His great-grandson, Ferdinand, Duke of Calabria, donated it to a convent in Valencia in 1538. In 1901, it was bought by Henry Yates Thompson, who donated it to the British Museum in 1941.

Dante’s companion through hell and purgatory is the Roman poet Virgil. But Virgil is a pagan, so cannot enter paradise. Thereafter, Dante is accompanied by Beatrice, based on a girl he met when she was nine years old and fell instantly in love with. He saw her again only once more, nine years later — she was a banker’s daughter and married to another banker — but she was a huge influence on Dante, as his muse.

The Divine Comedy is over 14,000 lines long, and very intricately constructed. To see the original poem, and translations, and commentary, and context, visit the delightful site Digital Dante, from the Columbia University Center for Digital Research and Scholarship.

Thanks to the Public Domain Review and the British Museum for making these pixels accessible for public use.

A 24 x 36″ poster of these graphics is available in the Gems Press shop.

Five Just Princes, atop the eagle of Justice
Dante and Apollo before Parnassus
Dante and Beatrice before the Seven Spheres of Man
Dante and Beatrice ascending to the Heaven of Jupiter
Dante and Beatrice ascending to the Heaven of Mars
Dante being rowed by Charon across the River Acheron, from the closing lines of Canto III in the Inferno
Dante and Virgil encountering groups of coiners, counterfeiters, alchemists, and forgers
Dante and Virgil at the gates of Purgatory, and the Proud carrying heavy stones
Dante and Virgil entering the area devoted to simoniacs and magicians, while Dante speaks to the upside-down figure of Pope Nicholas III, with a figure of the True Church in the centre, as a lady dressed in blue with a gold star on her breast, and a seven-headed monster before her (presumably the false church)
Virgil and Dante entering the eighth circle, that of adulterers, seducers, and flatterers
Dante and Virgil entering the fourth circle, with Plutus Avaricius, the Prodigals and the Wrathful
Dante and Virgil before Forise Donati, who explains the punishment due to the Gluttons, who see food they cannot reach
Dante and Virgil observing the fate of the Lustful
Dante and Virgil witnessing Vanno Fucci, the pillager of a church in Pistoia, being attacked by the monster Cacus, who is half-centaur and half-dragon, and Dante and Virgil speaking to three other souls, tormented by snakes and lizards
Dante and Virgil looking into the tomb of Pope Anastasius, and the three tiers of the violent, suicides, and other malefactors
Dante and Virgil with Pope Adrian V, Hugh Capet, and Statius, in Purgatory
Dante and Virgil witnessing the gigantic figure of Dis, with his three mouths biting on the sinners Cassius, Judas, and Brutus, and Dante and Virgil emerging from the Inferno
Beatrice watching as Dante kneels before Adam, who stands within a circle of golden stars with five naked souls
Dante and Beatrice before the eagle of Justice
Beatrice explaining some scientific theories to Dante, including the appearance of the moon
Beatrice explaining to Dante that the universe is a hierarchy of being, with creatures devoid of reason in the early 'sea of being', and heaven as nine spheres rules by the figure of love
Dante and Beatrice before the Light
Selected Graphics

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