Divine Comedy - definitie. Wat is Divine Comedy
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Wat (wie) is Divine Comedy - definitie


Divine Comedy         
  • [[Title page]] of the first printed edition ([[Foligno]], 11 April 1472)
  • Dante gazes at Mount Purgatory in an allegorical portrait by [[Agnolo Bronzino]], painted c. 1530
  • First edition to name the poem ''Divina Comedia'', 1555
  • Charon]] comes to ferry souls across the river [[Acheron]] to Hell.
  • Illustration of [[Lucifer]] in the first fully illustrated print edition. Woodcut for ''Inferno'', canto 34. Pietro di Piasi, Venice, 1491.
  • ''Paradiso'', Canto III: Dante and Beatrice speak to [[Piccarda]] and [[Constance of Sicily]], in a fresco by [[Philipp Veit]].
  • A detail from one of [[Sandro Botticelli]]'s illustrations for ''Inferno'', Canto XVIII, 1480s. Silverpoint on parchment, completed in pen and ink.
  • url= https://www.musee-orsay.fr/en/artworks/dante-et-virgile-153692}}</ref>
LONG ITALIAN NARRATIVE POEM BY DANTE ALIGHIERI
Divina commedia; Divina Commedia; La divina commedia; Dante's Divine Comedy; Mount Purgatory; La Divina Commedia; Paradise (cantica); Divine comedy; 9 spheres of heaven; La commedia; The Devine Comedy; Tiers of heaven and hell; Divine Commedia; The Divine Comedy; Commedia (poem); Jacopo da Santo Andrea; Hell and Purgatory; Divina comedia; La Divina Comedia Di Dante; Divine Comedy (poem)
The Divine Comedy ( ) is an Italian narrative poem by Dante Alighieri, begun 1308 and completed in 1320, a year before his death in 1321. It is widely considered the pre-eminent work in Italian literatureFor example, Encyclopedia Americana, 2006, Vol.
The Divine Comedy discography         
WIKIMEDIA BAND DISCOGRAPHY
Charmed Life – The Best of the Divine Comedy; Charmed Life - The Best of the Divine Comedy; Charmed Life – The Best of The Divine Comedy; Charmed Life - The Best of The Divine Comedy
The discography of Irish chamber pop band the Divine Comedy consists of twelve studio albums, two live albums, two compilation albums, five extended plays and twenty-six singles.
Divine Comedy in popular culture         
  • Dante appears in [[Honoré de Balzac]]'s 1831 novel ''[[Les Proscrits]]''
  • Dave Sim's ''Cerebus in Hell'' satirically utilizes [[Gustave Doré]]'s engravings for the ''Divine Comedy'', such as this one of Dante and Virgil in the Inferno, as backgrounds.<ref name="MacDonald 2016"/>
  • Liszt]]'s ''[[Dante Symphony]]'' for the Gates of Hell. It begins in D minor and ends ambiguously on G♯, a tritone higher.
  • Francesca da Rimini]]'' in 1906
  • A scene from [[Pier Paolo Pasolini]]'s 1975 film ''[[Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom]]'', inspired by the ''Inferno''
  • Dante is depicted (bottom, centre) in [[Andrea di Bonaiuto]]'s 1365 fresco ''Church Militant and Triumphant'' in the [[Santa Maria Novella]] church, Florence
  • [[Auguste Rodin]]'s sculpture ''[[The Gates of Hell]]'', [[Musée Rodin]]
The Divine Comedy has been a source of inspiration for artists, musicians, and authors since its appearance in the late 13th and early 14th centuries. Works are included here if they have been described by scholars as relating substantially in their structure or content to the Divine Comedy.
Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor Divine Comedy
1. The novel ends, as The Divine Comedy begins, in a forest.
2. In a bit of divine comedy, Barr compared the moment to 13th–century Italy.
3. The novel‘s title is a reference to the concentric circles of hell in medieval Italian writer Dante Alighieri‘s Divine Comedy.
4. Housed in the Vatican until 1608 and mentioned in Dante‘s poem the "Divine Comedy", it disappeared during building works.
5. That followed a reading of Dante‘s "Divine Comedy" and a gilted fairytale scene of opulent dining and fanciful characters in carriages reminiscent of Italian director Federico Fellini.