Born in Florence, Italy, in 1265, Dante Alighieri led a distinguished and dramatic life. Well-educated and of noble lineage, Dante was betrothed to Gemma Donati when he was a child. During the Middle Ages, marriage betrothals determined family alliances so although Dante and Gemma had at least three children, Pietro, Jacopo, and Antonia (Dante's work sometimes mentions a third son, Giovanni), the love of Dante's life was Beatrice. Dante canonized his courtly love for Beatrice in many of his works including TheDivine Comedy . Throughout his life, Dante reveled in the misery of admiring Beatrice from afar and his later works show that Beatrice became Dante's inspiration even though she died when she was only twenty-five years old.
Dante first got involved in politics in 1289 when he fought for Florence against the city of Arezzo. Later, Dante became a prior for the city of Florence and an ambassador to San Gimignano. Two political factions developed during this period: the Guelphs and the Ghibellines. Middle-class merchants who wanted to rid Italy of its foreign emperor and increase the power of the individual communes made up the Guelph party while feudal aristocrats who wanted to retain the power of the emperor in Italy made up the Ghibelline party. Additionally, two factions divided the Guelph party: the Whites, those who favored imperial rule, and the Blacks, those who favored papal rule. Dante opposed papal interference in secular affairs of city governance so he, as a Guelph, sided with the Whites against the Blacks. In 1301, Charles of Valois came to Florence under the pretense of helping make peace between the Whites and the Blacks. He was, however, an ally of the Blacks. Charles' party took over the city and exiled Dante and other White partisans. Although he tried, Dante was never to return to Florence again. Dante spent the rest of his life writing poems, often critical of current leaders, and remaining active in politics in various cities including Verona and Ravenna, where he died in 1321 at age 56.
|
---|
Divine Comedy: Biography: Dante Alighieri
Novel Author(s)
Our Networks