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  2. De vulgari eloquentia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_vulgari_eloquentia

    De vulgari eloquentia (Ecclesiastical Latin: [de vulˈɡari eloˈkwentsi.a], Italian: [de vulˈɡaːri eloˈkwɛntsja]; "On eloquence in the vernacular") is the title of a Latin essay by Dante Alighieri. Although meant to consist of four books, it abruptly terminates in the middle of the second book.

  3. Propaganda and censorship in Italy during the First World War

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda_and_censorship...

    There was also a British Italian League and a Society of the Friends of Italy. At a more official level, there was also the Italian Chamber of Commerce and the Dante Alighieri Society with offices in London, Glasgow and Cardiff. In addition, a group of correspondents from major Italian newspapers based in Britain had established a press office ...

  4. Dante Alighieri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dante_Alighieri

    The first formal biography of Dante was the Vita di Dante (also known as Trattatello in laude di Dante), written after 1348 by Giovanni Boccaccio. [70] Although several statements and episodes of it have been deemed unreliable on the basis of modern research, an earlier account of Dante's life and works had been included in the Nuova Cronica of ...

  5. The Wood of the Self-Murderers: The Harpies and the Suicides

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wood_of_the_Self...

    The harpies in Dante's version feed from the leaves of oak trees, which entomb suicides.At the time Canto XIII (or The Wood of Suicides) was written, suicide was considered by the Catholic Church as at least equivalent to murder and a contravention of the Commandment "Thou shalt not kill", and many theologians believed it to be an even deeper sin than murder, as it constituted a rejection of ...

  6. Divine Comedy in popular culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divine_Comedy_in_popular...

    Dante is depicted (bottom, centre) in Andrea di Bonaiuto's 1365 fresco Church Militant and Triumphant in the Santa Maria Novella church, Florence. In 1373, a little more than half a century after Dante's death, the Florentine authorities softened their attitude to him and decided to establish a department for the study of the Divine Comedy.

  7. Questione della lingua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Questione_della_lingua

    The first person to turn his attention to the matter was Dante Alighieri, who in his De vulgari eloquentia (c. 1303 –c. 1305) put forward the view that the language of literature should be based on no single dialect, but should draw on the best elements of all, to achieve the universal quality to which he aspired as a stylistic ideal (though in practice he himself wrote in an enriched form ...

  8. Neutrality (philosophy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutrality_(philosophy)

    In colloquial use, neutral can be synonymous with unbiased. However, bias is a favoritism for one side, [4] [5] distinct from the tendency to act on that favoritism. Neutrality is distinct (though not exclusive) from apathy, ignorance, indifference, doublethink, equality, [6] agreement, and objectivity. Apathy and indifference each imply a ...

  9. Francesca da Rimini and Paolo Malatesta Appraised by Dante ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francesca_da_Rimini_and...

    In the first volume, Inferno, of The Divine Comedy, Dante and Virgil meet Francesca and her lover Paolo in the second circle of hell, reserved for the lustful. Da Rimini's father had forced her to marry the lame Giovanni Malatesta for political reasons, but she fell in love with Giovanni's brother Paolo.