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         Alighieri Dante:     more books (100)
  1. Monarchy, and Three Political Letters by Dante Alighieri, 1980-06
  2. The Purgatorio (Signet Classics) by Dante Alighieri, 2009-10-06
  3. The Divine Comedy by Dante, Illustrated, Hell, Volume 03 by Dante Alighieri, 2010-07-20
  4. Dante Alighieri by Ricardo J. Quinones, 1998-08-12
  5. The Paradiso (Signet Classics) by Dante Alighieri, 2009-10-06
  6. Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri, 2008-07-23
  7. The Divine Comedy by Dante, Illustrated, Hell, Volume 04 by Dante Alighieri, 2010-07-20
  8. Works of Dante Alighieri. Includes The Divine Comedy in three translations (with one version illustrated by Gustave Dore). Also includes The Banquet (mobi) by Dante Alighieri, 2008-11-13
  9. Divine Comedy, Cary's Translation, Purgatory by Dante Alighieri, 2009-07-23
  10. The Divine Comedy by Dante, Illustrated, Paradise, Volume 2 by Dante Alighieri, 2010-07-20
  11. Divine Comedy, Cary's Translation, Paradise by Dante Alighieri, 2009-07-23
  12. The Divine Comedy by Dante, Illustrated, Hell, Volume 10 by Dante Alighieri, 2010-07-20
  13. The Divine Comedy by Dante, Illustrated, Purgatory, Volume 1 by Dante Alighieri, 2010-02-06
  14. The Divine Comedy: Volume 3: Paradiso (Penguin Classics) (v. 3) by Dante Alighieri, 2008-02-26

21. Alighieri Dante,Dante Alighieri, The Divine Comedy: Inferno (Penguin Classics) P
alighieri dante,Dante Alighieri, The Divine Comedy Inferno (Penguin Classics) in Poetry Books / Book Reviews reviews at Review Centre.
http://www.reviewcentre.com/reviews22990.html
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ALIGHIERI DANTE,DANTE ALIGHIERI, THE DIVINE COMEDY: INFERNO (PENGUIN CLASSICS)

22. Alighieri Dante,David H. Higgins, The Divine Comedy (Oxford World's Classics) Bo
alighieri dante,David H. Higgins, The Divine Comedy (Oxford World s Classics) in Books About Fiction / Book Reviews reviews at Review Centre. alighieri dante,
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Book Reviews
Magazine Reviews You are here : Welcome Books Book Reviews Fiction Compare Books About Fiction
Reviews Review No : Rating : Review by : UK guest. Date : 11th Feb 2004 Respect : Review No : Rating : Review by : UK guest.

23. Alighieri Dante New Used Books Find The Lowest Price
alighieri dante Compare new and used books prices among 90 book stores in a click. Find the lowest price. Searched in books for alighieri dante.
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24. OUP USA: The Divine Comedy Of Dante Alighieri: Dante Alighieri
The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri. Volume 2 Purgatorio. Edited and Translated by Robert M. Durling Introduction and Notes by Ronald L. Martinez Illustrations
http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/LiteratureEnglish/WorldLiterature/

25. OUP: Divine Comedy Of Dante Alighieri: Dante Alighieri
The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri Volume 1 Inferno. Edited and translated by Robert M. Durling, Professor Emeritus of Italian
http://www.oup.co.uk/isbn/0-19-508744-5
VIEW BASKET Quick Links About OUP Career Opportunities Contacts Need help? oup.com Search the Catalogue Site Index American National Biography Booksellers' Information Service Children's Fiction and Poetry Children's Reference Dictionaries Dictionary of National Biography Digital Reference English Language Teaching Higher Education Textbooks Humanities International Education Unit Journals Law Medicine Music Oxford English Dictionary Reference Rights and Permissions Science School Books Social Sciences World's Classics UK and Europe Book Catalogue Help with online ordering How to order Postage Returns policy ... Description
The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri - Volume 1: Inferno
Edited and translated by Robert M. Durling , Professor Emeritus of Italian and English Literature, University of California, Santa Cruz Introduction and Notes by Ronald L. Martinez , Associate Professor of Italian, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, and Robert M. Durling Illustrations by Robert Turner
Publication date: 5 June 1997
Oxford Paperbacks (OUP USA) 682 pages, line drawings, 234mm x 156mm
There is an alternative edition (Hardback)
Ordering Individual customers
order by phone, post, or fax

26. Dante Alighieri On The Web
http//www.greatdante.net Home. Site created on 1997/5/8. Last updated on 2004/2/8. What's new. 2004/2/8) dante's Complete Work is now available also in PDF format and in LaTeX sources. 2001/1/25) dante alighieri on the Web has its own Internet domain please update your
http://www.greatdante.net/
http://www.greatdante.net Home Site created on 1997/5/8
Last updated on 2004/2/8
What's new
Dante's Complete Work is now available also in PDF format and in LaTeX sources. You're welcome to report any problem or error you may encounter with them.
I've noticed that the guestbook was down for some time, due to a little technical problem which is now fixed. I apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused. Furthermore, as you may notice looking at the bottom of this page, a new minimalistic counter is now implemented, since the previous one was also not working anymore. Unfortunately, I couldn't keep track of the previous counter value, so we're starting from again.
In order to avoid mass email spamming, I've modified all the email addresses in the site so that now they're in the form "name (at) greatdante (dot) net". Of course, you just need to substitute @ for (at) and . for (dot). I'm sorry for the additional trouble, but email spamming was becoming really too heavy during the last months.
I've moved to the USA to attend abroad a term of my Master degree course. This means I'll probably be slower when answering your inquiries and some of them will be delayed till I'll be able to look up my books about Dante which I couldn't bring here. This will last approximately until the end of December. Sorry in advance for any inconvenience, but please keep visiting my site and sending comments and questions!

27. Dante
dante alighieri was born into a Florentine family of noble ancestry. Little is known about dante s childhood. His mother, Bella
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/dante.htm
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B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) The greatest Italian poet and one of the most important writers of European literature. Dante is best known for the epic poem COMMEDIA, c. 1310-14, later named LA DIVINA COMMEDIA. It has profoundly affected not only the religious imagination but all subsequent allegorical creation of imaginary worlds in literature. Dante spent much of his life traveling from one city to another. This had perhaps more to do with the restless times than his wandering character or fixation on the Odyssey. However, his Commedia can also be called a spiritual travel book. "It were a shameful thing if one should rhyme under the semblance of metaphor or rhetorical similitude, and afterwards, being questioned thereof, should be unable to rid his words of such semblance, unto their right understanding." (from Vita Nuova , c. 1293) Dante Alighieri was born into a Florentine family of noble ancestry. Little is known about Dante's childhood. His mother, Bella degli Abati, died when he was seven years old. His father, Alighiero II, made his living by money-lending and renting of property. After the death of his wife he remarried, but died in the early 1280s, before the future poet reached manhood. Brunetto Latini, a man of letters and a politician, became a father figure for Dante, but later in his Commedia Dante placed Latini in Hell, into the seventh circle, among those who were guilty of "violence against nature" - sodomy.

28. DANTE CHRONOLOGY
Chronology of dante alighieri (12651321) 1265 - dante is born, probably May 29, under the sign of Gemini. 1274 - First meets, and falls in love with Beatrice Portinari, according to the Vita nuova .
http://www.italnet.nd.edu/Dante/text/Chronology.html
Chronology of Dante Alighieri (1265-1321)
- Dante is born, probably May 29, under the sign of Gemini.
- First meets, and falls in love with Beatrice Portinari, according to the Vita nuova
- Dante's father dies. He is married shortly thereafter to Gemma Donati, with whom he has four children (Jacopo, Pietro, Giovanni and Antonia).
- Participates as a cavalryman in the battle of Campaldino. The Guelf League (Florence and Lucca) defeats the Ghibellines ofArezzo. Dante recalls this battle in Purgatorio
- Death of Beatrice.
- Writes the Vita nuova
- Dante meets Charles Martel, King of Hungary and heir to the kingdom of Naples and the country of Provence. Dante recounts their meeting in Paradiso VIII.
- Joins the guild of the apothecaries for the purpose of entering public life.
- Dante is prior for two months (15 June-15 August), one of the six highest magistrates in Florence. Boniface VIII proclaims the Jubilee Year. Fictional date (Eastertime) of the journey of the Divine Comedy
- Dante is sent to Rome as an envoy to Pope Boniface VIII, as Charles of Valois approaches Florence.
- The Black Guelfs seize power in Florence. Dante is banished from the city for two years and forever excluded from public office. Later in the same year his banishment is made perpetual, and he is condemned to be burned alive if taken in the territory of the Florentine Republic.

29. Benvenuti Nel Sito Ufficiale Della Società Dante Alighieri
Portale di arte e letteratura notizie, aggiornamenti e novit  nel panorama culturale italiano.
http://www.soc-dante-alighieri.it/
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30. The Classic Text: Dante Alighieri
by dante alighieri remains today one of the pillars upon which the European literary tradition has Originally titled simply Commedia, dante's masterpiece was written at the end of
http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/Library/special/exhibits/clastext/clspg064.htm
T he Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri remains today one of the pillars upon which the European literary tradition has been built. Originally titled simply Commedia , Dante's masterpiece was written at the end of his life and finished just before his death in 1321. In an era of hand-copied manuscripts, it reached a large and appreciative audience quickly. By the year 1400, no fewer than 12 commentaries devoted to detailed expositions of its meaning had appeared to support the text. Giovanni Boccaccio wrote on the poet's life and in 1373-1374 delivered the first public lectures on Dante's Commedia D ante's work flourished in the fifteenth century along with the printing press, and he became known as the divino poeta or divine poet. In 1555, a fine edition of his Commedia was published in Venice with the adjective divine applied to the poem's title for the first time, resulting in the title still in use today, The Divine Comedy O f Dante's approach to this classic text, Benét's Reader's Encyclopedia T he Divine Comedy is also important for its place in the history of the development of the Italian language. Dante opposed the assumptions of his day that prescribed Latin as the only appropriate language for serious writing. He advocated the use of a courtly Italian enriched with the best of every spoken dialect to form a serious literary language. This would help to unify the separated Italian territories by the creation of a national culture, an end to which Dante strived his entire life. While falling short of his goal of unification, Dante did use his native Tuscan as a basis for several of his works, including

31. Dante Alighieri
Life and work of 13th century Italian poet and philosopher; by Winthrop Wetherbee.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/dante/
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Dante's engagement with philosophy cannot be studied apart from his vocation as a writer, in which he sought to raise the level of public discourse by educating his countrymen and inspiring them to pursue happiness in the contemplative life. He was one of the most learned Italian laymen of his day, intimately familiar with Aristotelian logic and natural philosophy, theology (he had a special affinity for the thought of Albert the Great and Thomas Aquinas), and classical literature. His writings reflect this in its mingling of philosophical and theological language, invoking Aristotle and the neo-Platonists side by side with the poet of the psalms. Like Aquinas, Dante wished to summon his audience to the practice of philosophical wisdom, though by means of truths embedded in his own poetry, rather than mysteriously embodied in scripture.

32. Dante Alighieri - Kalliope
Portr¦tter, biografi og samtid.
http://www.kalliope.org/ffront.cgi?fhandle=dante

33. Dante Alighieri Society Of Massachusetts
Organization promoting the study of Italian language and culture.
http://www.dantealighieri.net/cambridge
The Dante Alighieri Society of Massachusetts is a non profit organization whose objective is to promote and foster Italian culture. La Dante Alighieri Società del Massachusetts si propone di tutelare e diffondere la lingua e la cultura italiana.

34. Dante Alighieri Collection At Bartleby.com
Contains a brief biography and bibliography; etext of the Harvard Classics translation of the Divine Comedy, and quotations from Bartlett's .
http://www.bartleby.com/people/DanteAli.html
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35. Dante Alighieri Eindhoven Netherlands
Sito ufficiale della sede olandese di Eindhoven. Si occupa della diffusione della lingua italiana.
http://www.danteeindhoven.nl/
Dante Alighieri Eindhoven Netherlands

36. Dante Alighieri On The Web
Home page. Why dante? His time. His life. His work. RTF version (232 Kb). English versions of the Commedia available here (from Digital dante Project).
http://www.greatdante.net/texts.htm
http://www.greatdante.net Home Miscellaneous Texts Download Site's FAQ ... Hannibal refs to Dante Click on a link to download the file, or to visualize it if it's HTML.
Divina Commedia
HTML version (530 Kb)
Text only version (218 Kb)

PDF and LaTeX sources version (1095 Kb)

RTF version (232 Kb)

English versions of the Commedia available here (from Digital Dante Project
Another different English translation available here
An English prose translation of the Commedia online here
Vita nuova
HTML version (108 Kb)
Text only version (G. Barbera 1965 edition) (42 Kb)

Text only version (Bemporad 1932 edition) (42 Kb)

PDF and LaTeX sources version (239 Kb)

An English translation of the Vita Nuova available online here
The Convivio
HTML version (400 Kb) Text only version (133 Kb) PDF and LaTeX sources version (774 Kb) RTF version (143 Kb) English version of the Convivio available here (from Digital Dante Project
Rime
HTML version (32 Kb) Text only version (13 Kb) PDF and LaTeX sources version (82 Kb) RTF version (15 Kb)
Il Fiore
HTML version (132 Kb) Text only version (50 Kb) PDF and LaTeX sources version (292 Kb) RTF version (57 Kb)
Detto d'Amore
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De vulgari eloquentia
HTML version (84 Kb) Text only version (31 Kb) PDF and LaTeX sources version (173 Kb) RTF version (34 Kb)
The Monarchia
HTML version (130 Kb) Text only version (47 Kb) PDF and LaTeX sources version (252 Kb) RTF version (50 Kb)
The Epistles
HTML version (70 Kb) Text only version (29 Kb) PDF and LaTeX sources version (144 Kb) RTF version (31 Kb) English versions of the

37. C.L.I. Dante Alighieri - Italiano Per Stranieri
Group and individual courses. Information on accommodations and extracurricular activities as well as an application form.
http://www.clidante.it/
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38. Dante Alighieri: Drei Frau'n Umringten Meines Herzens Pforte
Gedicht von dante in dt. œbertragung von Albert Ritter.
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Coffeehouse/3112/texte/dante1.htm
Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) Drei Frau'n umringten meines Herzens Pforte
Und lagerten sich hin,
Denn Minne thront darin,
Sie, die Gebieterin ob meinem Leben. -
Sie sind so schön und aller Tugend Horte,
Daß sie - die voller Macht
In meinem Herzen wacht -
Sich kaum getraut, ihnen das Wort zu geben.
Und jede scheint vor Weh und Angst zu beben:
So weiß sich ein Vertriebner kaum zu fassen,
Den alle Welt verlassen. Was nützt der edlen Tugend hehres Kleid? Einst, in vergangner Zeit, Ist man in Freude noch darob geraten; Jetzt weckt es Haß und Kälte weit und breit. So ganz vereinsamt nahten Sie denn wie eines Freundes Haus - zu schauen, Die drinnen wohnte, unsere hehre Frauen. Beredt erzählt die eine ihre Qualen, Stützt auf die Hand sich leicht. Geknickter Rose gleicht Sie, und der nackte Arm - darauf sie ruhe - Fühlt aus den Augen gehn der Tränen Strahlen; Die andre Hand hehlt das Gesicht, von Zähren naß; Der Leib nur zeigt das Weib - kein Gurt, noch Schuhe. Minne schaut auf des Mantels Riß, als tue

39. Stranieri
Reggio Calabria Sito principale dell'Ateneo.
http://www.unistrada.it/Stranieri.htm
U n i v e r s i t à p e r S t r a n i e r i D a n t e A l i g h i e r i - R e g g i o C a l a b r i a I CORSI I Corsi sono aperti a tutti i cittadini stranieri ed agli italiani residenti all'estero di età non inferiore ai 16 anni. Le classi risultano generalmente costituite da un numero di 12 studenti. La frequenza ai Corsi consente l'acquisizione delle conoscenze linguistiche necessarie per l'accesso alle Università degli Studi italiane. FINALITÀ E CONTENUTI DEI CORSI ORDINARI, STRAORDINARI E SPECIALI: Corso Principianti Consente l’acquisizione di una competenza comunicativa di “sopravvivenza”. Corso Elementare 1 Consente l’acquisizione di una competenza comunicativa di base nell’uso prevalentemente orale della lingua. Corso Elementare 2 Privilegia gli aspetti funzionali della comunicazione orale e scritta; offre nozioni di civiltà contemporanea. Corso Intermedio Consente il raggiungimento di un grado di conoscenza della lingua scritta e orale che permette allo studente di affrontare argomenti della realtà quotidiana e di inserirsi in contesti culturali più complessi. Corso Avanzato Consente il consolidamento delle competenze linguistiche e comunicative, l’approfondimento di strutture grammaticali più complesse, l’arricchimento del lessico.

40. Dante Alighieri - Biography And Works
dante alighieri. Extensive Biography of dante alighieri and a searchable collection of works. Literature Network dante alighieri. Fiction. Inferno. Paradiso. Purgatorio. dante alighieri. Search
http://www.literature-web.net/dante
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Dante Alighieri
Search all of Dante Alighieri Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) is generally considered the greatest of Italian poets, and also one of the greatest poets that Western civilization has produced. His reputation is primarily based upon his magnum opus The Divine Comedy . He was active in politics during the early part of his life and took an active interest in church reform.
Dante was born in Florence, Italy, in 1265. Heir of a poor but noble family, he was one of the seven elected officials in charge of the government of Florence. Civil war was common in Florence at the time and the issues were further complicated by the question of Papal influence. In 1300, Dante along with his fellow magistrates confirmed anti-papal measures. When in 1302, the French prince acting under orders from the Pope captured power in Florence, Dante was sentenced on charges of corruption and opposition to the Church and exiled from Florence on pain of execution by burning if he ever returned.. He spent the rest of his life in exile, pining for his native city. He withdrew from active politics to a large extent and concentrated on his literary creations.
His first book was the Vita Nuova The New Life ), published in 1294, in which he relates how he fell in love with a young girl Beatrice. Though Beatrice and Dante both married other people, Dante's spiritual love for her persists and she functions as his chief Muse and inspiration.. In 1304 or shortly thereafter he published

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