Dante's Inferno
The 9 Circles of Hell
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Inferno (Dante)
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inferno_(Dante)
https://www.historydefined.net/what-are-the-9-circles-of-hell-in-dantes-inferno/
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Inferno (Italian: [iɱˈfɛrno]; Italian for 'Hell') is the first part of Italian writer Dante Alighieri's 14th-century narrative poem The Divine Comedy, followed by Purgatorio and Paradiso. The Inferno describes the journey of a fictionalized version of Dante himself through Hell, guided by the ancient Roman poet Virgil.
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In the poem, Hell is depicted as nine concentric circles of torment located within the Earth; it is the "realm [...] of those who have rejected spiritual values by yielding to bestial appetites or violence, or by perverting their human intellect to fraud or malice against their fellowmen". As an allegory, the Divine Comedy represents the journey of the soul toward God, with the Inferno describing the recognition and rejection of sin.
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What Are the 9 Circles of Hell in Dante’s Inferno?
Hell has different meanings in different cultures, but in Dante’s Inferno, it is a place of punishment for sinners. Each circle of Hell represents a place where sinners receive punishment for eternity for crimes in an area that reflects their sin.
The nine circles of Hell are:
Limbo
Lust
Gluttony
Greed
Wrath
Heresy
Violence
Fraud
Treachery
Dante is accompanied by the Roman poet Virgil, who represents human reason. As they travel through Hell, Dante and Virgil encounter different sinners who are being punished for their crimes. Each circle represents a different kind of sin, and the punishments reflect the severity of the crimes.
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The nine circles of Hell form a concentric shape, and each level down into another circle indicates a gradual increase in the severity of the crimes.
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Limbo
The first circle of Hell is Limbo, where the virtuous pagans reside. Dante and Virgil had to cross the river Acheron on a boat to get there. These people lived exemplary lives but did not accept Christ into their hearts. No matter how good of a life they lived, they were never baptized and didn’t have the faith to enter the Kingdom of Heaven.
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However, these people weren’t sinful and didn’t deserve to be in Hell. So, they were allowed to stay in a neutral place called Limbo, which essentially is the edge or boundary of Hell. According to the poem, many well-known and influential public figures like Aristotle, Julius Caesar, Hippocrates, Cicero, Socrates, and Homer reside here.
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However, there is sadness and melancholy even though people are not subjected to torture. The souls of the dead in Limbo are unhappy. They won’t be able to go to heaven even if it is nearby.
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Lust
Following Limbo comes Lust. As the second circle of hell, people driven by their lustful desires were tormented here. Dante alludes to strong winds blowing in the Second Circle of Hell in the poem. These harsh winds beat against the rocks and mountains, dragging along any souls unfortunate enough to be caught in its path.
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This symbolizes how lustful desires overpower people and drive them to satisfy their cravings endlessly. Many adulterous individuals appear in the poem, such as Cleopatra, Dido, Helen of Troy, Tristan, Semiramis, and many more. However, Dante considers lust a lesser offense because it involves mutual enjoyment rather than self-centeredness.
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This might be why Lust is the Second Circle of Hell, not a more severe one.
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Gluttony
The Third Circle of Hell is reserved for the Gluttons and completely contrasts with the Second Circle. In the Third Circle, the souls of those who indulged in voracious feasting and appetite are tortured. In the Third Circle of Hell, Dante and Virgil find the souls of gluttons overseen by a worm-monster Cerberus. In addition, sinners in this circle are punished by being forced to lie in an unpleasant slush produced by never-ending icy rain.
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The repulsive slush sign represents the degradation of a person who overindulges in food, drink, and other worldly pleasures. The gluttons’ selfishness and callousness symbolize their lack of compassion for others. Dante is talking to Ciacco. The latter predicts that the Guelphs, a faction supporting the Pope, will defeat and drive out the Ghibellines, the coalition supporting the Emperor, to which Dante belonged from Florence.
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Greed
In the fourth circle of hell, the punished person is not the one who stole but accumulated without giving. The sinners in this circle are forced to roll enormous weights around and around for eternity. The constant pushing and pulling of these weights symbolize the endless pursuit of earthly riches and possessions.
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The Circle comprises two groups: those who spent lavishly and hoarded the vast imperial wealth, which means nothing in the end. Plutus, God of Wealth, protects the inner circle of avarice. It consists of Cardinals, priests, and popes that amassed riches and wasteful extravagance and foolishly misused others’ money for their benefit.
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To reference it, this circle of Hell exists for people carrying a massive weight on their chest. They choose to suffer to attain higher possession. The parties’ greed and overindulgence have led them to believe they are owed something, which drives them to continue being greedy. They hoard and squander resources until there is mutual animosity between the two groups.
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Wrath
The Fifth Circle of Hell is where the wrathful and the sullen receive eternal punishment. The tortured souls fight continuously in the Styx River. The ones who dwell in this Circle have led their entire lives in a rage. According to the poem, Dante and Virgil encounter many wrathful people fighting each other violently on the surface of the Stygian river. They fall further into the water based on their furious actions throughout their life. It accurately depicts their life’s wrongdoings.
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Those who bottled up their lies and suppressed them live below the surface. The people struggling with deep-seated anger, driving them– those souls will fight each other for eternity. They’ll choke and prevent each from expressing themselves or being honest. The act of self-immolation represents their anger–a fit of rage that, if said, would harm other people.
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Virgil and Dante watch this scene safely from a boat controlled by Phlegyas: a wrathful figure who understands the destructive potential of uncontrolled emotions.
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Heresy
The sixth circle of Hell is where the sinners who have committed heresy receive punishment, and it also marks the beginning of the lower reaches of Hell. These sinners are entombed in flaming tombs as punishment for their disbelief and lack of understanding.
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The heretics are those who did not believe in God, or more specifically, the Catholic Church. They are confined forever within burning tombs, symbolizing their spiritual blindness and ignorance. The first group Dante meets is Epicurus and his followers. Epicurus was an ancient Greek philosopher who believed pleasure was the highest good.
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His teachings were considered heretical by the Church because they undermined its authority. The second group is Pope Anastasius II, whom Dante accuses as a heretic of his support of the Monophysite heresy. According to some modern scholars, though, Dante likely meant to condemn Byzantine Emperor Anastasius I as a heretic instead of the Pope.
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However, more significant evidence supports the idea that the antagonistic relationship between Dante and the church and his affiliation with the party trying to take power away from the Papal authority led him to include the Pope in his Inferno.
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So, it is likely that Dante’s feelings towards the Pope led him to have Pope Anastasius II as a heretic in his Divine Comedy. As the Church taught, this heresy held that Christ had only one nature instead of two. The last group is a collection of heretics from different periods and places.
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Dante then meets Farinata degli Uberti, a political leader from Florence who was excommunicated for his support of the Ghibellines. He predicts that Dante will be exiled from Florence, as he was.
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Violence
The seventh circle of Hell is where the sinners who have committed violence endure punishment, but not it isn’t simply a place for murderers and thieves, although there is a place for them here.
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This circle is also for those who have committed violence against God, nature, or art. This level has three subdivisions. The first is for murderers and other violent criminals. The second is for those who commit suicide. The third is for those who are violent against God, nature, or art. Some would say blasphemers and sodomites fall into this category.
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The first group of sinners in this circle are violent criminals. They are torn apart by wild beasts as punishment for their crimes and dipped in the river Phlegethon of sweltering blood and flames. This is a fitting punishment because they took lives without any regard for human life and served their bloodlust, so now their own lives are brutally taken from them.
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The second group consists of those who committed suicide. They are punished by being denied burial and having to spend eternity in a dark forest as trees or bushes. If their punishment isn’t bad enough, they are also fed on by Harpies. This is because they denied God’s gift of life, so now they are denied the peace of death.
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Their self-hatred turns them into dried-up trees and subjects them to constant bombardment by Harpies who cut them and leave them bleeding, indicating the self-harm tendencies of those who eventually commit suicide. The third group consists of those who were violent against God, nature, or art. They deserve punishment because they committed crimes like blasphemy, sodomy, and bestiality, and the unfair money lenders are being tortured.
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The landscape in this circle of Hell represents a field of misery and torture; a storm of flaking flames falls from the sky as the scorching hot sand burns the offenders for eternity. Dante and Virgil see the blasphemers wallowing in the sand and the sodomites running around in the background. Money lenders weep in the sand. They are all there because they took something beautiful and ruined its innocent nature.
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Fraud
Next, Dante and Virgil venture upon the eighth circle of Hell, reserved for the fraudulent sinners. They reach this part of Hell on the back of a flying creature named Geryon, who, like dishonest people, has many different natures, or in this case, is made up of many other animals.
This circle of Hell is divided into ditches or Bolgia with stony bridges between them. Each Bolgia is reserved for a different kind of fraudulent person.
Bolgia #1 – is a place for seducers and panderers.
Bolgia #2 – He and Virgil find flatterers in this ditch.
Bolgia #3 – after crossing a bridge, he comes to the next Bolgia for people who sell pardons or benefits.
Bolgia #4 – another bridge leads him to a place for sorcerers and false prophets.
Bolgia #5 – this is the ditch reserved for politicians.
Bolgia #6 – this is the ditch reserved for hypocrites
Bolgia #7-10 – There are many hypocrites, thieves, evil counselors, divisive individuals, falsifiers, alchemists, perjurers, and advisers in these ditches.
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Treachery
The ninth and final circle of Hell is the home for those who have committed treason. This is also the deepest level of Hell and is located beneath a frozen lake called Cocytus. There are four rounds within this circle, and each one is colder than the last. Dante names each of the four rounds after an individual who represents sin.
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The First Round of the Ninth Circle is called Caina, after Cain, who murdered his brother Abel. The souls of those who betrayed their family and clan are freezing for eternity here. Their necks and heads are above the ice to bow and defend themselves from the piercing cold winds. The second layer of the ninth circle is named Antenora, after a Trojan man called Antenor. He brought his city’s downfall by betraying it to the Greeks.
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The shades that occupy this space are people who have betrayed their homeland, and they’re being punished for it. Ptolomaea makes up the third round of Dante’s Hell; Ptolemy was an Egyptian king whose gluttony led him to kill his guests at dinner parties. He summoned his father-in-law and sons for a meal and killed them.
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Here, those who broke the laws of hospitality are punished. The Fourth Round of Ninth Circle is called Judecca, named after Judas Iscariot. Those guilty of betraying God are frozen into an ugly ice statue. It is eternally silent in this round.
Pictures Videos Music and Additional Reading
Dark Ambient
A one-hour-long descent through the nine circles of hell.
Dark Ambient
Jan van Eyck - Crucifixion and Last Judgement diptych {right panel detail, 1430}.
Conducting From The Grave - Dante
Lyrics
Souls divided among the rulers, they take their fill and send them to the gates.
Across the rivers of mindless cadavers, the ferryman reaches out his hand to escort the dead,
to make way to oblivion. Across the rivers of mindless cadavers, where those that swim are damned.
Nightmarish sights, that keep me haunted in mind, will be my bane in this hellish place.
Who has condemned me and sent me here, to rot inside? Was I not redeemed, intended to rise again,
forgiven of my sin? My child of the fey, there is no light or redeeming your end. You're mine to command.
Your god has abandoned you and left you to burn away. You're mine to command. Faith has deceived me, misguided
us all, designed to keep in line while evil sends plagues of greed, lust, and wrath to devour the world
and steal the souls of the pure and righteous. To devour the world. Down to the hell, to the hell that awaits you.
Down to the hell, to the hell that awaits you now.
Iced Earth - Dante's Inferno
Lyrics
Through the fiery caverns we sail
Virgil at my side my guide and master
Questing through the nine plains of hell
Infernal wisdom shall fill my soul
Slowly now the days departing
The darkened air releases me
Frightening visions of my journey
Entrance me to limbo I'm not
Free
Abandon all hope who enter here
Enter the gates, Charon awaits
Abandon all hope who enter here
For this is where all things are left behind
Every doubt and every cowardice must die
Souls of rage and anger whipping in despair
The souls that wail on this plain pray for death
Denial is the reason for their suffering
Forever being stung by wasps and demons breath
The blood and tears that fall serve the maggots need
Descention, thrusting to the second plain
Minos judges as his tail twines
Lustful thoughts and greed whip these wretched souls
A hurricane of hate mocks their helpless pleas
Drifting now down deeper, into eternal flames
Awake at the third circle, the cold and filthy rain
Punished for their gluttony, languid for all time
The earth it stinks of corpses, damned for all time
The vicious beast Cerberus, three heads, blooded eyes
Tears his talons through the air, all the sinners cry
Down, be still thy cursed wolf
The master scorns its name
Dive to the next plain
The sullen and the vain
Suffer for their greed
The prodigal they bleed
For all eternity
Plutus holds the key
Damned, the wrathful and the vain
Suffer the fifth plain
Cross the river Styx
Heed your crucifix
The muddied corpses cry
Howling to the sky
Reach the other side
Open wide the gate
Enter the sixth circle of barren land and flames
Passing through the gate of dis the furies scream her name
Belching forth in agony invoking her to rise
The spirit's rage consuming us the evil in their cries
Queen of vipers, queen of serpents
Cast their souls to stone
Spread to wealth of Gorgon's power
Medusa's inner soul
We're drawing ever closer to the seventh hell
They violate their neighbors, their god and themselves
We're sailing slowly through the boiling river of blood
Immersed in the depths below souls scream in agony
The twisted beast he laughs, he draws his arrow back
His sights on anyone exposing of their flesh
He impales their hearts with ease
And shrugs their piercing screams
Pity is they'll never die
They'll suffer here eternally
Imagine a place where every horror comes to life
Where every torture is real and time stands still
Eight fiery steps and we're closer to the end
In a cold and timeless grave buried head first in shit
Praying all the while for a quick and painless death
Scratching furiously at scabbed and oozing wounds
Lucifer ... angel of light
Cast below god of ice
Ruling hell unholy trinity
The traitors freeze for all eternity
Lucifer ... betrayer of god
Tormentor ruthless and cold
Judas' screaming here in agony
The traitors freeze for all eternity
Septicflesh - Dante's Inferno
Lyrics
[Divina Commedia/Inferno/Canto III:]
"Per mi si va ne la citta dolente,
Per me si va ne l'etterno dolore,
Per me si va tra la perduta gente."
Threatening and cold
A poem for the underworld
Where shadows walk
Beyond redemption
Dante's Inferno
Dante's Inferno
Minos wraps his serpent
Tail around himself
To mark a sinner's level
His prison cell.
The famous poet Dante
Is passing through the gates
The only living being
In this accursed place.
Threatening and cold
A poem for the underworld
Where shadows walk
Beyond redemption
Dante's Inferno
Dante's Inferno
The greedy pay the price,
Their wealth is cursed
The wrathful fight each other,
Covered with slimy mud
The flames are burning heretics,
And for the violent ones,
Red blood is boiling.
As thieves will turn to vipers
And vipers will turn to thieves
Ninth, the lower plain.
Who could ever guess?
It is a frozen lake!
An angel in his past, a fallen one,
Right on the spot he crashed,
For aeons is lying down...
Sepultura - City Of Dis
Lyrics
Symptoms of life, our disbelief
Punished for severed hope
Outcast in life for having an
Opinion of our own
Sometimes things have to be said
No matter what the cost we spend
Can't force tradition
It won't come from suffering
Won't be a victim
In this bloody system
Lost soul you'll burn for your believe
Cast in the city of dis
I know the world has a way to work out on its own
Don't need the insanity
Faith must be earned
I can live, with myself
I have faith, in myself
Can't force your ways of tradition
It won't come from the suffering of victims
Can't believe in this filthy bloody system
Fires won't burn our right to have opinions
I can live, with myself
I have faith, in myself
Luca Turilli's Rhapsody - Dante's Inferno
Lyrics
She's in me
Her being, her will to live
Damned to breathe
And feel that source of sin
One pure fate
True love devoured by hate
Her last pain
Dark trace of pulsating shade
Veiled in the mist of a sad winter night
A lonely ghost in a fragment of light
Icy vibration, a whisper, a cold word
Mortal darkened deadly sorrow
Divine beloved
Or longed for
I'll cross the hell on earth
To have your soul back
Irato averno
Dante's inferno
I need your grace to be my pain
In nome
Freeze, black wind
My nights, my empty dreams
Back from lies
I'm her sacrifice
She's in me
Her being, her will to live
Damned to breathe
And feel that source of sin
One melancholic reflection of gray
A walking dead with your heart in his hands
Come and reveal all the might of your shadow
Through your gothic vivid splendor
Divine beloved
Or longed for
I'll cross the hell on earth
To have your soul back
Irato averno
Dante's inferno
I need your grace to be my pain
In nominations
Okkultist - 9th Layer Of The Abyss
Lyrics
When you fall down the rabbit hole Empty chambers will echo
Your fall will resonate
The taste of your bloody fate
The decline of the unworthy Bearer of the treachery;
Betrayer is your name
Shame smeared all over your face
Behead the snake Punish and forsake In the Frozen Lake
Eternal Hell awaits Through the 9 layers Freezing in Cocytus
The river of wailing
The final circle
Holds a place for you: In the 9th Layer
Of The Abyss
Behead the snake
For those they betrayed Punish and forsake
In the Frozen Lake
Your arrival is awaited
Before the mouth of Satan
One of the three heads
Will swallow the prominent traitor
Chained and dragged into this room You will meet your eternal doom Kneel before the golden gate
And face your fate
In the very first circle you’ll meet The weaklings in the limbo
In the second circle you’ll see
The heartless who feed on the ego
In the third circle you’ll get
The greedy guarded by Cerberus
In the fourth circle you’ll get
The thieves forever dragged by Plutus
In the fifth circle you’ll see An endless river of wrath
In the sixth circle you’ll meet Blasphemy’s aftermath
In the seventh circle you’ll feel The fire and flames of brutality
In the eighth circle you’ll see The sanctimony of humanity
In the ninth circle you’ll kneel Before your due punishment
The place where the backstabbers live In agonizing torment
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