Page:Catholic Encyclopedia, volume 4.djvu/706

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DANTE


628


DANTE


the Patriarch of Antioch, Anastasius (Vailh6 in Echos d'Orient, X, 90 sqq. and 139 sqq.), and its bishop Nonnus was present at the Fifth CEcumenical Council, held at Constautuiople in 553 (Lequien, Or. christ., II, 983). The see must have disappeared on accoiuit of the Arabian invasions, as no other bishop is known. It is not certain that it was still in existence in the tenth century (Vaillie in Echos d'Orient, X, 90 sqq.). The site of the city has not been identified. Its name i.s often written Dausara; such forms as Lansara, etc. are incorrect. The Latin titular see has recently been suppressed. S. Petridics.

Dante Aiighieri, Italian poet, b. at Florence, 1265; d. at Ravenna, Italy, 14 September, 1321. His own statement in the "Paradise" (xxii, 112-117) that he was born when the sun was in Gemini, fixes his birth- day between 18 May and 17 June. He was the son of Alighiero di Bellincione Aiighieri, a notary belong- ing to an ancient but decadent Guelph family, by his first wife, Bella, who was possibly a daughter of Durante di Scolaio Abati, a Ghibelline noble. A few months after the poet's birth, the victory of Charles of Anjou over King Manfred at Benevento (2G Feb., 12G6) ended the power of the empire in Italy, placed a French dynasty upon the throne of Naples, and secured the predominance of the Guelphs in Tuscany. Dante thus grew up amidst the triumphs of the Florentine democracy, in which he took some share, fighting in the front rank of the Guelph cavalry at the battle of Campaldino (11 June, 1289), when the Tuscan Ghibellines were defeated by the forces of the Guelph league, of which Florence was the head. This victoiy was followed by a reformation of the Floren- tine constitution, associated with the name of Giano della Bella, a great-hearted noble who had joined the people. By the Ordinances of Justice (1293) all nobles and magnates were more strictly excluded from the government, and subjected to severe penal- ties for offences against plebeians. To take any part in public life, it was necessary to be enrolled in one or other of the "Arts" (the guilds in whicli the burghers and artisans were banded together), and accordingly Dante matriculated in the guild of physicians and apothecaries. On 6 July, 1295, he sjioke in the Gen- eral Council of the Commune in favour of some modi- fication in the Ordinances of Justice, after which his name is frequently found recorded as speaking or voting in the various councils of the republic.

Already Dante had written his first book, the " Vita Nuova", or "New Life", an exquisite medley of lyrical verse and poetic prose, telling the story of liis love for Beatrice, whom he had first seen at the end of his ninth year. Beatrice, who was probably the daughter of Folco Portinari, and wife of Simone de' Bardi, died in June, 1290, and the "Vita Nuova" was completed about the year 1294. Dante's love for her was purely spiritual and mystical, the amor amicitice defiiied by St. Thomas Aquinas: "That which is loved in love of friendship is loved simply and for its own sake". Its resemblance to the chiv- alrous worship that tlie troubadours offered to mar- ried women is merely sujierficial. The book is dedi- cated to the Florentine poet, Guido Cavalcanti, whom Dante calls "the first of my friends", and ends with the promise of writing concerning Beatrice "what has never before been written of any woman".

At the beginning of 1300 the papal jubilee was proclaimed by Boniface VIII. It is doubtful whether Dante was among the pilgrims who flocked to Rome. Florence was in a dissistrous condition, the ruling Guelph party having s])lit into two factions, known as Bianchi and Neri, "Whites" and "Blacks", which were led by Vieri de' Cerchi and Corso Donati, re- Bpectively. Roughly speaking, the Bianchi were the constitutional ijarty, supporting the burgher govern- ment and the Ordinances of Justice; the Nvri, at once


more turbulent and more aristocratic, relied on the support of the populace, and were strengthened by the favour of the pope, who disliked and mistrusted the recent developments of the democratic pohcy of the repubhc. The discovery of a plot on the part of certain Florentines m the papal service (18 April) and a collision between the two factions, in which blood was shed (1 May), brought things to a crisis. On 7 May Dante was sent on an unimportant em- bassy to San Gemignano. Shortly after his return he was elected one of the six priors who for two months, together with the gonfaloniere, formed the Signoria, the chief magLstracy of the republic. His term of office was from 15 June to 15 August. To- gether with his colleagues, he confirmed the anti- papal measures of his predecessors, banished the leaders of both factions, and offered such opposition to the papal legate. Cardinal Matteo d'Acquasparta, that the latter returned to Rome and laid Florence under an interdict. Guido Cavalcanti had been among the exiled Bianchi; having contracted a fatal illness at Sarzana, he was allowed, together with the rest of his faction, to return to Florence, where he died at the end of August. This, however, was after Dante's term of office had ended. Enraged at this partial treatment, Corso Donati, in understanding with his adherents in Florence, appealed to the pope, who ilecided to send a French prince, Charles of Valois, with an armed force, as peacemaker. We find Dante, in 1301, prominent among the ruling Bianchi in Florence. On 19 June, in the Council of the Hun- dred, he returned his famous answer, Nihil fiat, to the proposed grant of soldiers to the pope, which the Cardinal of Acquasparta had demanded by letter. After 28 September he is lost sight of. He is said to have been sent on a mission to the pope at the begin- ning of October, but this is disputed. On 1 November, Charles of Valois entered Florence with his troops, and restored the Neri to power. Corso Donati and his friends returned in triumph, and were fully revenged on their opponents. Dante was one of the first victims. On a trumped-up charge of hostility to the Church and corrupt practices, he was sentenced (27 January, 1302), together with four others, to a heavy fine and perpetual exclusion from office. On 10 March, together with fifteen others, he was further con- demned, as contumacious, to be burned to death, should he ever come into the power of the Commune. At the beginning of April the whole of the White faction were driven out of Florence.

A few years before his exile Dante had married Gemma di Manetto Donati, a distant kinswoman of Corso, by whom he had four children. He never saw his wife again; but his sons, Pietro and Jacopo, and one of his daughters, Beatrice, joined him in later years. At first, he made common cause with his fellow-e.xiles at Siena, Arezzo, and Forli, in attempt- ing to win his way back to Florence with the aid of Ghibelline arms. Dante's name occurs in a document of 8 June, 1302, among the exiled Bianchi who at San Godenzo in the Apennines were forming an alliance with the Ubaldini to make war upon the Florentine Republic; but, in a similar agreement signed at Bologna on 18 June, 1303, he no longer appears among them. Between these two dates he had made his resolution to form a party by himself (Par., xvii, 61-68), and had sought refuge in the hospitality of Bartolommeo della Scala, the lord of Verona, where he first saw Can Grande della Scala, Bartolommeo's younger brotlicr, tlien a boy of fourteen years, who became the licni of his later days.

Dante now withdrew from all active participation in politics. In one of his odes written at this time, the "Canzone of the Three Ladies" (Canz. xx), he finds himself visiteil in his banishment by Justice and her spiritual chiklren, outcasts even as he, and de- clares that, since such are his companions in inisfor-