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Allusions In Dante's Inferno

Decent Essays

Dante's epic poem, Inferno, is obviously a deeply Christian work. One is surprised, then, to find that Inferno is full with allusions to pagan mythology and is inhabited not just by biblical figures, but also by characters of Greek and Roman antiquity. After all, the most important character besides Dante is Virgil, a renowned Roman poet but a pagan nonetheless. It is odd that Dante would give so much authority in his epic to a pagan. Even though this may seem strange to us, Dante finds a way of fitting the classical heritage of Greece and Rome he revered into his Christian culture and beliefs to forge his own Christian epic.
Many figures of Greek and Roman antiquity are in the poem, but they only appear in hell. Dante acknowledges the presence of mythological creatures and relegates them to an ungodly place. Furthermore, he sometimes turns mythological figures, who are not quite monstrous, into fully fledged demons. Minos, when King of Crete, created a system of laws so just that once he died, he became one of the three judges of the underworld. While he does keep his role in Dante's hell, he becomes a hideous monster that has a tail. By rewriting figures from classical mythology, Dante can include them in his epic scope while also incorporating them within his Christian system. …show more content…

One example of this is the physical combination of the pagan Sinon and the wife of Potiphar in Canto 30. In the text, Dante asks Adam to name the pair of sinners that are “rolled in a heap” (30.92). Sinon’s sin is that he tried to deceive the Trojans into allowing the Trojan horse into Troy and the wife of Potiphar’s sin is that she had betrayed Joseph in the Bible. As the sinners from both traditions appear in Dante's hell, both paganism and Christianity are merged together in Inferno, just as these two sinners are literally merged together into one heap of

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