Dante Alighieri (1265–1321)

Image credit: John Rylands Research Institute and Library

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Notes

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Dante is considered to be Italy’s greatest poet, and one of the greatest European poets for his contribution to world literature. His best known work is the epic poem 'The Divine Comedy'.

A version now in the Museo di Capodimonte, Naples (no. 10516), first recorded in 1644 in the Farnese Collection, is likely to be sixteenth-century Florentine bronze work, and the earliest bronze on which all the much later Neapolitan bronzes, including this one, were based.

John Rylands Research Institute and Library

Manchester

Title

Dante Alighieri (1265–1321)

Date

1886

Medium

bronze

Measurements

Plinth: H 8 x W 47 x D 24 cm (E);
H 32 x W 42 x D 22 cm (E)

Accession number

JRL19120400

Acquisition method

bequeathed by Professor Richard Copley Christie, 1901

Work type

Bust

Inscription description

inscribed on front: Dantes

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John Rylands Research Institute and Library

150 Deansgate, Manchester, Greater Manchester M3 3EH England

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