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  1. Due to the presence of so many rulers among the lustful, the fifth Canto of Inferno has been called the "canto of the queens". Dante comes across Francesca da Rimini , who married the deformed Giovanni Malatesta (also known as "Gianciotto") for political purposes but fell in love with his younger brother Paolo Malatesta ; the two began to carry ...

    • Summary: Canto XVIII
    • Summary: Canto XIX
    • Summary: Canto Xx
    • Analysis: Cantos XVIII–XX

    Virgil and Dantefind themselves outside the Eighth Circle of Hell, known as Malebolge (“Evil Pouches”). Dante describes the relationship between the circle’s structure and its name: the circle has a wall running along the outside and features a great circular pit at its center; ten evenly spaced ridges run between the wall and the pit. These ridges...

    Dante already knows that the Third Pouch punishes the Simoniacs, those who bought or sold ecclesiastical pardons or offices. He decries the evil of simony before he and Virgil even view the pouch. Within, they see the sinners stuck headfirst in pits with only their feet protruding. As these souls writhe and flail in the pits, flames lap endlessly a...

    In the Fourth Pouch, Dante sees a line of sinners trudging slowly along as if in a church procession. Seeing no apparent punishment other than this endless walking, he looks closer and finds, to his amazement, that each sinner’s head points the wrong way—the souls’ necks have been twisted so that their tears of pain now fall on their buttocks. Dant...

    In life, the Panders and the Seducers in the First Pouch acted as slave drivers, moving women as merchandise from one buyer to the next. Now they run from one demon’s whip to another’s. The fate of the Flatterers is even more fitting, almost humorous in its allegorical suitability. For the excrement-lined pit they inhabit is, like these sycophants,...

  2. In Italian literature: Dante (1265–1321) …three cantiche, or narrative sections: Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. Each section contains 33 cantos, though the Inferno has one more (34), since the very first canto serves as a prologue to the entire work.

  3. Inferno’s Publication History and Reception: Dante likely began to compose Inferno in 1307 or 1308, although the precise date is unknown. He labored at The Divine Comedy for the rest of his life ...

  4. Dante Alighieri and Inferno Background. Dante Alighieri was born in 1265 in Florence, Italy, to a family of moderate wealth that had a history of involvement in the complex Florentine political scene. Around 1285, Dante married a woman chosen for him by his family, although he remained in love with another woman—Beatrice, whose true ...

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  6. by Dante Alighieri. How many cantos are in Dante's Inferno? Quick answer: There are thirty-four cantos in Dante's Inferno. Each part of the Divine Comedy, including Purgatorio and...

  7. A summary of Cantos I & II in Dante Alighieri's Inferno. Learn exactly what happened in this chapter, scene, or section of Inferno and what it means. Perfect for acing essays, tests, and quizzes, as well as for writing lesson plans.

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