Satan has three mouths, and "In each of his mouths he was breaking a sinner/ with his teeth in the manner of a scutch, so that he made the three suffer at once" (translation by Durling and Martinez)-just like the image of Satan inside the Florence Baptistery. For example, at the end of the Inferno, when Dante's fictional self reaches the deepest part of Hell and encounters "the emperor of the dolorous kingdom" (Satan), Dante’s description is strikingly specific. Quite a few correspondences can be discerned between certain descriptions in the Comedy and particular images within this baptistery-indeed, too many to be mere coincidence. There are many indications that Dante too was dazzled by the sight. The ceiling inside the baptistery is covered with mosaic images that still dazzle visitors today. The Florence Baptistery (illustrated above), which Dante fondly referred to in his Comedy as his "bel (beautiful) San Giovanni," is one such example, which the poet would have known well, even from the days of his youth. Incredible works of art and architecture filled the city well before Dante's birth in late medieval times. Florence was full of artistic marvels well before the Renaissance.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |