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The women who appear in Dante's 'Divine Comedy' are finally getting their due, 700 years later

By Laura Ingallinella, Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in Italian Studies and English, Wellesley College
When Dante Alighieri died 700 years ago, on Sept. 14, 1321, he had just put his final flourishes on the “Divine Comedy,” a monumental poem that would inspire readers for centuries.

The “Divine Comedy” follows the journey of a pilgrim across the three realms of the Christian afterlife – hell, purgatory and paradise. There, he encounters a variety of characters, many of whom are based on real people Dante had met or heard of during his life.

One of them is a woman named Sapia Salvani. Sapia…The Conversation


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