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Paintings of Dante’s Inferno: 12 Fraud and inciting division

By: hoakley
13 October 2025 at 19:30

After they have talked with the notorious thief Vanni Fucci, Dante and Virgil move on and meet a centaur, identified by Virgil as Cacus, who had been killed by Hercules. Dante’s classical reference here is a little strange in that he gives an account of the killing of Cacus according to Livy, rather than Virgil’s version in his Aeneid.

flaxmancentaur
John Flaxman (1755–1826), And I Saw a Centaur (Divine Comedy) (1793), engraving by Tommaso Piroli from original drawing, media and dimensions not known, Cornell University Library, Ithaca, NY. Wikimedia Commons.
blakecentaurcacus
William Blake (1757–1827), The Centaur Cacus Threatens Vanni Fucci (Dante’s Inferno) (1824-27), watercolour, 52.5 x 37 cm, The Tate Gallery, London. Wikimedia Commons.

The centaur flees, leaving the pair to meet three more tormented souls. A lizard-like creature then attaches itself to one of them named Agnello, a member of a prominent Florentine Ghibelline family, and their two bodies become one. Another is pierced by a serpent through his navel, and Dante witnesses other horrific reptilian transformations.

stradanocanto25
Jan van der Straet, alias Giovanni Stradano (1523-1605), Canto 25 (1587), further details not known. Wikimedia Commons.
doreagnelloserpent
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), Agnello changing into a Serpent (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Image by Karl Hahn, via Wikimedia Commons.

Having found five citizens of Florence in this rottenpocket of Hell, Virgil leads Dante through shattered rock to the eighth, where each of the souls is burning with fire in the pit in return for their fraudulent lives.

doreflamingspirits
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), The Flaming Spirits of the Evil Counsellors (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Image by Karl Hahn, via Wikimedia Commons.

Virgil explains that among them are Ulysses and Diomedes, who are united in a single flame, telling an invented story of their final and fateful voyage. Dante didn’t have direct access to Homeric accounts of the adventures of Odysseus, so based this on Virgil’s contrasting retelling of the deception of the Trojan horse.

blakeulysses
William Blake (1757–1827), Ulysses, Canto 26 (Dante’s Inferno) (1824-27), pen and ink and watercolour over pencil, 52.5 x 37 cm, The Tate Gallery, London. Wikimedia Commons.

After that, another flame identifies itself as Guido da Montefeltro, and relates some of its life as a sly Ghibelline military leader who later repented and became a Franciscan friar.

Virgil takes Dante on to the ninth rottenpocket, where those who used fraud to incite division are suffering for their crimes. The gruesome sight awaiting them here is of gross mutilations, bodies chopped up and torn apart so that their organs spill out. They meet a succession of dismembered and dissected spirits, including Mosca de’ Lamberti, both of whose hands have been cut off. He had been responsible for creating the rift between Guelphs and Ghibellines that scarred Florentine history for so long. Another body passes by carrying its severed head like a lantern from one of its hands. The head tells them that he is Bertran de Born, a Provençal troubadour who sowed discord between King Henry II of England and his son Prince Henry.

flaxmanheadbertrand
John Flaxman (1755–1826), Bertrand de Born (Divine Comedy) (1793), engraving by Tommaso Piroli from original drawing, media and dimensions not known, Cornell University Library, Ithaca, NY. Wikimedia Commons.
dorebertranddeborn
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), The Severed Head of Bertrand de Born Speaks (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Image by Karl Hahn, via Wikimedia Commons.

Dante is so astonished by this display of butchery that he stands and stares at the bodies, but Virgil reminds him that they must move on.

dorevirgilreprovesdante
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), Virgil Reproves Dante’s Curiosity (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Image by Karl Hahn, via Wikimedia Commons.

The pair then reach a viewpoint over the last of the rottenpockets, from which arises a foul smell. The souls there are all covered with festering sores and scabs, and can only crawl over one another.

blakepitdiseasefalsifiers
William Blake (1757–1827), The Pit of Disease: The Falsifiers (Dante’s Inferno) (c 1824), ink and watercolour on paper, 37.2 x 52.7 cm, The Tate Gallery, London. Wikimedia Commons.

There they hear the story of Capocchio, an alchemist who falsely claimed to be able to transform base metals into gold.

The artists

William Blake (1757–1827) was a British visionary painter and illustrator whose last and incomplete work was an illustrated edition of the Divine Comedy for the painter John Linnell. Most of his works shown in this series were created for that, although he did draw and paint scenes during his earlier career. I have a major series on his work here.

Gustave Doré (1832–1883) was the leading French illustrator of the nineteenth century, whose paintings are still relatively unknown. Early in his career, he produced a complete set of seventy illustrations for translations of the Inferno, first published in 1857 and still being used. These were followed in 1867 by more illustrations for Purgatorio and Paradiso. This article looks at his paintings.

John Flaxman (1755–1826) was a British sculptor and draughtsman who occasionally painted too. When he was in Rome between 1787-91, he produced drawings for book illustrations, including a set of 111 for an edition of The Divine Comedy. In 1810, he was appointed the Professor of Sculpture to the Royal Academy in London, and in 1817 made drawings to illustrate Hesiod, which were engraved by William Blake.

Jan van der Straet, also commonly known by his Italianised name of Giovanni Stradano (1523-1605), was a painter who started his career in Bruges and Antwerp in Belgium, but moved to Florence in 1550, where he worked for the remainder of his life. Mannerist in style, he worked with printmakers in Antwerp to produce collections of prints, including an extensive set for The Divine Comedy.

References

Wikipedia
Danteworlds

Robin Kirkpatrick (trans) (2012) Dante, The Divine Comedy, Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso, Penguin Classics. ISBN 978 0 141 19749 4.
Richard Lansing (ed) (2000) The Dante Encyclopedia, Routledge. ISBN 978 0 415 87611 7.
Guy P Raffa (2009) The Complete Danteworlds, A Reader’s Guide to the Divine Comedy, Chicago UP. ISBN 978 0 2267 0270 4.
Prue Shaw (2014) Reading Dante, From Here to Eternity, Liveright. ISBN 978 1 63149 006 4.

Paintings of Dante’s Inferno: 11 Bribery, hypocrisy, theft

By: hoakley
6 October 2025 at 19:30

When a group of devils armed with long hooks threatens Dante, Virgil hurries him along towards the next rottenpocket in Hell. They work their way around some of the damage wrought by Christ’s harrowing of Hell following his crucifixion. With those devils still hanging around, they then reach a pit of boiling tar, in which the spirits of barrators are trapped. These had traded in public office and bought influence in courts of law.

The devils pull out one of the souls for Dante and Virgil to talk to, but quickly return to hacking with their hooks.

flaxmanc22
John Flaxman (1755–1826), Canto 22 (Divine Comedy) (1793), engraving by Tommaso Piroli from original drawing, media and dimensions not known, Cornell University Library, Ithaca, NY. Wikimedia Commons.
dore23v52
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), Inferno Canto 23 verses 52-54 (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Wikimedia Commons.

Unlike others, he springs free and escapes their lunges as he plunges back into the pitch.

dore22v137
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), Inferno Canto 22 verses 137-139 (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Wikimedia Commons.
doreciampoloalichino
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), Ciampolo Escaping from the Demon Alichino (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Image by Karl Hahn, via Wikimedia Commons.

Dante and Virgil leave the devils attacking other barrators, and walk on in silence. Dante reflects on one of Aesop’s fables about the frog, the rat and the hawk. He blames himself for the tormenting of the devils behind them, but as he looks back he sees them on the wing again heading towards them. As they cross into the next rottenpocket, they realise the pack of devils can’t pursue them beyond that point.

Next are hypocrites, who are dressed up in hooded habits like monks. Although those are coloured bright gold, they’re weighted with lead, forcing the hypocrites into eternal labour against the mass of their clothes.

dorehypocritesdante
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), The Hypocrites Address Dante (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Image by Karl Hahn, via Wikimedia Commons.

Dante meets two Bolognese friars, Catalano de’ Malavolti and Loderingo degli Andalò, who formed a fake religious order. They point out a figure staked out naked on the ground, who is Caiaphas, the High Priest of Jerusalem who advised scribes and pharisees that Christ’s death would be a good solution.

stradanohypocrites22
Jan van der Straet, alias Giovanni Stradano (1523-1605), Hypocrites, Canto 22 (1588), further details not known. Image by Sailko, via Wikimedia Commons.
dore23v117
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), Inferno Canto 23 verses 117-120 (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Wikimedia Commons.

Virgil moves Dante on towards the damaged crossing to the next rottenpocket for thieves. After negotiating their descent, Dante sees its pit full of snakes, binding the hands of the souls there and covering their naked bodies.

pinellithievessnakes
Bartolomeo Pinelli (1781-1835), Thieves Being Tortured by Snakes in the Eighth Circle of Hell, Watched by Dante and Virgil (date not known), media and dimensions not known, The Wellcome Trust, London. Image © and courtesy of The Wellcome Trust, via Wikimedia Commons.
The Punishment of the Thieves 1824-7 by William Blake 1757-1827
William Blake (1757–1827), The Punishment of the Thieves, from Illustrations to Dante’s ‘Divine Comedy’ (1824–7), chalk, ink and watercolour on paper, 37.2 x 52.7 cm, The Tate Gallery (Purchased with the assistance of a special grant from the National Gallery and donations 1919), London. © The Tate Gallery and Photographic Rights © Tate (2016), CC-BY-NC-ND 3.0 (Unported), http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/blake-the-punishment-of-the-thieves-n03364
dorethievesserpents
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), Thieves Tortured by Serpents (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Image by Karl Hahn, via Wikimedia Commons.

A snake strikes one of the sinners at the back of the neck, causing the ghost to burst into flames then turn into ash, which falls onto the ground and reconstitutes itself.

flaxmanserpents
John Flaxman (1755–1826), Thieves Tortured by Serpents (Divine Comedy) (1793), engraving by Tommaso Piroli from original drawing, media and dimensions not known, Cornell University Library, Ithaca, NY. Wikimedia Commons.
kochthieves
Joseph Anton Koch (1768-1839), Thieves (1825-28), fresco, dimensions not known, Casa Massimo, Rome, Italy. Image by Sailko, via Wikimedia Commons.

There they talk with one of the thieves by the name of Vanni Fucci, a black Guelph from Pistoia near Florence who had stolen holy objects from a chapel and betrayed an accomplice for execution in his place. The snakes then take charge of him, winding their coils around his neck and body, and putting him into a reptile straightjacket.

Dante and Virgil move on and meet a centaur.

The artists

William Blake (1757–1827) was a British visionary painter and illustrator whose last and incomplete work was an illustrated edition of the Divine Comedy for the painter John Linnell. Most of his works shown in this series were created for that, although he did draw and paint scenes during his earlier career. I have a major series on his work here.

Gustave Doré (1832–1883) was the leading French illustrator of the nineteenth century, whose paintings are still relatively unknown. Early in his career, he produced a complete set of seventy illustrations for translations of the Inferno, first published in 1857 and still being used. These were followed in 1867 by more illustrations for Purgatorio and Paradiso. This article looks at his paintings.

John Flaxman (1755–1826) was a British sculptor and draughtsman who occasionally painted too. When he was in Rome between 1787-91, he produced drawings for book illustrations, including a set of 111 for an edition of The Divine Comedy. In 1810, he was appointed the Professor of Sculpture to the Royal Academy in London, and in 1817 made drawings to illustrate Hesiod, which were engraved by William Blake.

Joseph Anton Koch (1768-1839) was an Austrian landscape painter, who worked mainly in Neoclassical style. During his second stay in Rome, he was commissioned to paint frescos in the Villa Massimi on the walls of the Dante Room there, which remain one of the most florid visual accounts of Dante’s Inferno. He completed those between 1824-29. He also appears to have drawn a set of illustrations for Dante’s Inferno in about 1808.

Bartolomeo Pinelli (1781-1835) was a Roman illustrator and engraver who provided illustrations for a great many books, and specialised in the city of Rome. He made 145 prints to illustrate Dante’s Divine Comedy, most probably in the early nineteenth century.

Jan van der Straet, also commonly known by his Italianised name of Giovanni Stradano (1523-1605), was a painter who started his career in Bruges and Antwerp in Belgium, but moved to Florence in 1550, where he worked for the remainder of his life. Mannerist in style, he worked with printmakers in Antwerp to produce collections of prints, including an extensive set for The Divine Comedy.

References

Wikipedia
Danteworlds

Robin Kirkpatrick (trans) (2012) Dante, The Divine Comedy, Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso, Penguin Classics. ISBN 978 0 141 19749 4.
Richard Lansing (ed) (2000) The Dante Encyclopedia, Routledge. ISBN 978 0 415 87611 7.
Guy P Raffa (2009) The Complete Danteworlds, A Reader’s Guide to the Divine Comedy, Chicago UP. ISBN 978 0 2267 0270 4.
Prue Shaw (2014) Reading Dante, From Here to Eternity, Liveright. ISBN 978 1 63149 006 4.

Paintings of Dante’s Inferno: 9 Violence against God

By: hoakley
22 September 2025 at 19:30

From their tragic encounter with tormented souls in the Suicide Wood, Virgil leads Dante onto a barren and sandy plain, where groups of spirits are in different postures, naked under steady showers of flakes of fire. These fall on their flesh, and set the sand afire underneath them. They are being punished for their differing acts of violence against God: blasphemers lie flat on their backs, sodomites are moving at all times, and usurers crouch with purses strung from their necks.

doreviolentrainoffire
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), The Violent, Tortured in the Rain of Fire (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Image by Karl Hahn, via Wikimedia Commons.

The two talk with Capaneus, a huge man who was once a powerful king and waged war against the city of Thebes, and a blasphemer who was struck by a thunderbolt for his arrogance towards the (classical and pagan) gods.

dorebrunettolatini
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), Brunetto Latini accosts Dante (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Image by Karl Hahn, via Wikimedia Commons.

Among the sodomites is the prominent Guelph encyclopaedist Brunetto Latini (c 1220-94), who may well have been Dante’s mentor at one time. Also identified are Priscian a Latin grammarian, Francesco d’Accorso a legal scholar, and Andrea de’ Mozzi a bishop of Florence, together with three other Florentines.

Virgil explains some more of the topography of Hell, how waters originating from a statue on Mount Idaeus (Ida) on the island of Crete flow down to form its three principal rivers, the Acheron, Styx and Phlegethon. The statue of the Old Man of Crete has a gold head, silver arms, brass torso, and iron below, apart from a terracotta foot. This follows the mythical ‘ages of mankind’ in descent, and its tears feed the waters of Hell.

flaxmaninsidemountain
John Flaxman (1755–1826), Inside the Mountain (Divine Comedy) (1793), engraving by Tommaso Piroli from original drawing, media and dimensions not known, Cornell University Library, Ithaca, NY. Wikimedia Commons.
blakesymboliccoursehumanhistory
William Blake (1757–1827), The Symbolic Figure of the Course of Human History Described by Virgil (Dante’s Inferno) (1824-27), further details not known. Wikimedia Commons.

Dante is next led down towards a vile monster with the face of an honest man but the body of a serpent, its body seemingly tattooed with knots and whorls, and a sting at the end of its great tail: this is Geryon, in classical myth a cruel king who was killed by Hercules, and here forming an image of fraud.

Before reaching that monster, the pair see some usurers on the ground. They are identified as contemporary members of prominent Florentine and Paduan families known for their riches and usury.

dore17v7
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), Inferno Canto 17 verse 7 (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Wikimedia Commons.

Virgil then jumps onto Geryon’s back, and encourages Dante to have courage to join him there. Once they have both boarded, Virgil tells Geryon to fly off, and the monster carries them down through a hundred spiralling turns to the foot of a high cliff.

flaxmanaireverypart
John Flaxman (1755–1826), In the Air of Every Part (Divine Comedy) (1793), engraving by Tommaso Piroli from original drawing, media and dimensions not known, Cornell University Library, Ithaca, NY. Wikimedia Commons.
pinellivirgildantegeryon
Bartolomeo Pinelli (1781-1835), Virgil and Dante Sitting on the Back of Geryon (date not known), media and dimensions not known, The Wellcome Trust, London. Image © and courtesy of The Wellcome Trust, via Wikimedia Commons.
kochdantevirgilgeryon
Joseph Anton Koch (1768–1839), Dante and Virgil Carried by the Monster Geryon (1800-22), pencil, carbon pencil and watercolour on paper, 101.2 x 77.1 cm, Thorvaldsens Museum, Copenhagen, Denmark. Wikimedia Commons.
thorvaldsondantevirgilgeryon
Bertel Thorvaldsen (1770–1844), Dante and Virgil on the Back of Geryon (date not known), black and white chalk, 33.5 x 27.3 cm, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY. Wikimedia Commons.
scaramuzzageryon
Francesco Scaramuzza (1803–1886), Geryon (date not known), further details not known. Wikimedia Commons.
doredescentabyss
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), The Descent of the Abyss on Geryon’s Back (c 1857), engraving, dimensions and location not known. Image by Karl Hahn, via Wikimedia Commons.

Virgil and Dante have now descended to circle eight.

The artists

William Blake (1757–1827) was a British visionary painter and illustrator whose last and incomplete work was an illustrated edition of the Divine Comedy for the painter John Linnell. Most of his works shown in this series were created for that, although he did draw and paint scenes during his earlier career. I have a major series on his work here.

Gustave Doré (1832–1883) was the leading French illustrator of the nineteenth century, whose paintings are still relatively unknown. Early in his career, he produced a complete set of seventy illustrations for translations of the Inferno, first published in 1857 and still in current use. They were followed in 1867 by more illustrations for Purgatorio and Paradiso. This article looks at his paintings.

John Flaxman (1755–1826) was a British sculptor and draughtsman who occasionally painted too. When he was in Rome between 1787-91, he produced drawings for book illustrations, including a set of 111 for an edition of The Divine Comedy. In 1810, he was appointed the Professor of Sculpture to the Royal Academy in London, and in 1817 made drawings to illustrate Hesiod, which were engraved by William Blake.

Joseph Anton Koch (1768-1839) was an Austrian landscape painter, who worked mainly in Neoclassical style. During his second stay in Rome, he was commissioned to paint frescos in the Villa Massimi on the walls of the Dante Room there, which remain one of the most florid visual accounts of Dante’s Inferno. He completed those between 1824-29. He also appears to have drawn a set of illustrations for Dante’s Inferno in about 1808.

Bartolomeo Pinelli (1781-1835) was a Roman illustrator and engraver who provided illustrations for a great many books, and specialised in the city of Rome. He made 145 prints to illustrate Dante’s Divine Comedy, most probably in the early nineteenth century.

Francesco Scaramuzza (1803–1886) was an Italian painter who specialised in mythological and historical narratives. He became obsessed with Dante’s Divine Comedy, and for much of his career worked on producing paintings and drawings of its scenes. He worked mainly in Parma, in Italy.

Bertel Thorvaldsen (1770–1844) was the greatest Danish sculptor, and one of the foremost in Europe. He worked most of his life in Italy, although the Thorvaldsens Museum with much of his work is in the city of Copenhagen, in a place of honour by the Christiansborg Palace. From humble origins, he trained at the Royal Danish Academy of Art, where he was extremely successful. He arrived in Rome in 1797, and remained there until 1838, when he was welcomed as a returning hero in Copenhagen.

References

Wikipedia
Danteworlds

Robin Kirkpatrick (trans) (2012) Dante, The Divine Comedy, Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso, Penguin Classics. ISBN 978 0 141 19749 4.
Richard Lansing (ed) (2000) The Dante Encyclopedia, Routledge. ISBN 978 0 415 87611 7.
Guy P Raffa (2009) The Complete Danteworlds, A Reader’s Guide to the Divine Comedy, Chicago UP. ISBN 978 0 2267 0270 4.
Prue Shaw (2014) Reading Dante, From Here to Eternity, Liveright. ISBN 978 1 63149 006 4.

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