Dante Alieghieri

susy7

Jedi Master
Hello, I would have liked to know what drove Dante to write the Divine Comedy? It is all the more mysterious to put people where it should not be like Virgil or Homer, if I am these writings we would be in the 8th circles of hell. Is it a "message" and I'm not talking about rose-crosses or others. thank you in advance
 
Hello, I would have liked to know what drove Dante to write the Divine Comedy? It is all the more mysterious to put people where it should not be like Virgil or Homer, if I am these writings we would be in the 8th circles of hell. Is it a "message" and I'm not talking about rose-crosses or others. thank you in advance
Maybe he took it symbolically also in relation to his own life. I have not read or studied his work, but found on the server of the Russian media Tass some notes.

First the characters to the left are as they appear in the Divine Comedy:
Dante.tass.com scr 2025-11-23 150652.png

Next, the real life characters in relation to their location:
Danet.tass.com scr  2025-11-23 151222.png

Maybe Dante showed the way for how people can communicate when it is difficult by mixing the real with the abstract and symbolical leaving the readers to find meanings.
 
Hello, I would have liked to know what drove Dante to write the Divine Comedy? It is all the more mysterious to put people where it should not be like Virgil or Homer, if I am these writings we would be in the 8th circles of hell. Is it a "message" and I'm not talking about rose-crosses or others. thank you in advance
Perhaps you can find some answers in this book by René Guénon; I recall seeing a document about this in Italian.

The Esotericism of Dante

The Esotericism of Dante (L'ésotérisme de Dante) is an essay published in 1925 by René Guénon, in which he argues that Dante Alighieri was a member of an initiatory order and that, in writing the Divine Comedy, he intended to leave readers of his work a doctrinal message hidden within the verses.

The hidden message in the poem is said to be rich in Masonic and Hermetic parallels and, as such, could only be read and understood by initiates, who possess the correct keys to understanding the sacred and ancient texts. Starting with the verses of the Inferno, "O ye who have sound intellects, behold the doctrine that is hidden beneath the veil of strange verses,"[1] the author believes that those who possess sound intellects are the "initiates," who could discover the doctrine inherent beneath the veil of the poem.

Guénon argues that the three canticles of the Divine Comedy represent a path of initiation: Hell represents the profane world, inhabited by those who have not received initiation; Purgatory refers to the initiatory trials; and Paradise is the abode of the "enlightened."

In the "kingdom of the enlightened," Dante cited the celestial Princes, who could be identified with one of the degrees of Scottish Freemasonry, and the degree of "Trinitarian Scotsman" refers to the number three, a recurring theme in Dante's poem and a reference to the Trinity.

The same number three also appears repeatedly in the path of initiation: there are three Masonic principles (liberty, equality, and brotherhood), three theological virtues (faith, hope, and charity), and three alchemical elements (sulfur, mercury, and salt) necessary to create the "Great Work."

Guénon also emphasized that Dante's journey through the worlds or cosmic cycles takes place during Holy Week, that is, at the time of the liturgical year that corresponds to the spring equinox, the period reserved for the initiations of the Cathars.

Also for those who have delved into Dante Alighieri they affirm that he was a Cathar.

It wouldn't surprise me if the famous writer Dan Brown used Dante Alighieri in one of his famous books: Inferno...

And that Dante could be a undergroder, well, at this point it wouldn't surprise me as a possibility; in this "world",
for me, anything is possible...
 
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