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- Q568735 subject Q7288011.
- Q568735 subject Q8373234.
- Q568735 subject Q8448497.
- Q568735 subject Q8508207.
- Q568735 abstract "In Dante Alighieri's The Divine Comedy, the City of Dis (in Italian, la città ch'ha nome Dite, "the city whose name is Dis") encompasses the sixth through the ninth circles of Hell.In ancient Roman mythology, Dis Pater ("Father Dis") is the ruler of the underworld and is named as such in the sixth book of Virgil's "Aeneid", one of the principal influences on Dante in his depiction of Hell (the god was also known as Pluto, a name not used by Virgil in the Aeneid). The hero Aeneas enters the "desolate halls and vacant realm of Dis" with his guide, the Sibyl, who correspond in The Divine Comedy to "Dante" as the speaker of the poem and his guide, Virgil.".
- Q568735 thumbnail Stradano_Inferno_Map_Lower.jpg?width=300.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q1067.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q1218.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q122173.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q1228338.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q1398.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q152262.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q160598.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q160730.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q1638444.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q180262.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q1993310.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q205302.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q212318.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q273320.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q32815.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q40185.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q47740.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q564.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q581450.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q60220.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q641707.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q6614907.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q7288011.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q7325.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q8018.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q82732.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q8373234.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q8448497.
- Q568735 wikiPageWikiLink Q8508207.
- Q568735 comment "In Dante Alighieri's The Divine Comedy, the City of Dis (in Italian, la città ch'ha nome Dite, "the city whose name is Dis") encompasses the sixth through the ninth circles of Hell.In ancient Roman mythology, Dis Pater ("Father Dis") is the ruler of the underworld and is named as such in the sixth book of Virgil's "Aeneid", one of the principal influences on Dante in his depiction of Hell (the god was also known as Pluto, a name not used by Virgil in the Aeneid).".
- Q568735 label "Dis (Divine Comedy)".
- Q568735 depiction Stradano_Inferno_Map_Lower.jpg.