Inferno, Canto 5: Minos judges the transgressions and dispatches the souls (illustration from The Divine Comedy) by Gustave after Dore

Inferno, Canto 5: Minos judges the transgressions and dispatches the souls (illustration from The Divine Comedy)

(Inferno, Canto 5 : Minos judges the transgressions and dispatches the souls, illustration from The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri, 1885 (digitally coloured engraving))


Gustave after Dore

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1885  ·  digitally coloured engraving  ·  Picture ID: 647994

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Inferno, Canto 5: Minos judges the transgressions and dispatches the souls (illustration from The Divine Comedy) by Gustave after Dore. Available as an art print on canvas, photo paper, watercolor board, uncoated paper or Japanese paper.
14th 14th xivth century · medieval · enfer · snake · moyen age · reptile · crown · 14th · 14th · 14th century · reptile · italy · medieval period · hell · italie italien italiens italiennes · poetry · 13th · 13th xiii century · moyen-age · animal · judge · gravure · serpent · middle age · engraving · literature · thirteenth century · littérature · 13 13th xiii xiiio · engraving · literature · crown · poetry · hell · animal · fourteenth century · judge · three hundred · middle ages) · snake · juge · italy · two hundred · couronne · 1265-1321 · Private Collection / Bridgeman Images
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Keilrahmen
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Minos: from The Inferno by Dante Alighieri Minos, King of Crete, illustration from The Divine Comedy, Inferno, Canto 5: Minos judges the transgressions and dispatches the souls - by Dante Alighieri - Illustration by Gustave Dore There Minos Stands, 1862 Inferno, Canto 31: Nimrod of the giants (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Yet in the abyss, that Lucifer with Judas low ingulfs, lightly he placed us Inferno, Canto 25: Agnello transforming into a serpent (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 24: The Thieves Tormented by Serpents, Illustration from "The Divine Comedy" by Dante Alighieri The Other Two Looked On, Exclaiming, Ah! How Dost Thou Change, Agnello! The Divine Comedy, Inferno, Canto 24: The Thieves Tormented by Serpents - by Dante Alighieri, Illustration by Gustave Dore The Pythia, from History of Magic by Paul Christian, published late 19th century Nebuchadnezzar Recovering His Reason The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri Illustrated by Gustave Dore Cursed Wolf! Thy Fury Inward on Thyself Prey, and Consume Thee! The Giant Antaeus, from The Divine Comedy The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri The Divine Comedy, Inferno, Canto 31: Nimrod of the giants (Illustration by Gustave Dore) Gilliatt struggles with the giant octopus, illustration from Inferno, Canto 7: Virgil rebukes Plutus at the entrance to the fourth circle (illustration from The Divine Comedy) The Divine Comedy, Inferno, Canto 31: The Giant Antaeus Lowers Dante and Virgil into the Last Circle - by Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) - Illustration by Gustave Dore (1832-1883) Inferno, Canto 30: The torment of the forgers in the ninth bolgia (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Allegory of torment. Her head surrounded by thorns means torments of the mind. The snake says that the fear of the peril makes it more formidable. A vulture eats his heart. Engraving in Illustration by Gustave Doré for Milton O senseless spirit! let thy horn for thee interpret Allegory of Envy in the Form of a Very Ugly Old Woman. In Rage, She Bites Her Fist and a Snake Tries to Bite Her Heart. She Sisyphus Pushing His Stone up a Mountain Dante and Virgil meet the giant Anteas (Illustration for the Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri by Gustave Doré)
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The Knight Inferno, Canto 26: The flaming spirits of Ulysses and Diomedes (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 13: The suicides in the forest (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 11: The souls of the prideful, bearing heavy stones (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 8: Phlegyas ferries Dante and Virgil across the Styx (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 22: Ciampolo escapes the demon Alichino in the fifth bolgia (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 29: The falsifiers and forgers tormented with itching (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 13: The Harpies in the forest of suicides (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 4: The innocent souls in Limbo (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 9: The angel opens the gates (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 8: The soul of the Florentine Philippo Argenti accosts the poets on the Styx (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 32: The traitors frozen in the ice of Cocytus (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 4: Homer, the poets, and heroes in Limbo (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 8: Virgil and Dante disembark at the citadel of Dis (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 5: The souls of Paolo and Francesca (illustration from The Divine Comedy)
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Other art prints by Gustave after Dore

The Knight Inferno, Canto 26: The flaming spirits of Ulysses and Diomedes (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 13: The suicides in the forest (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Purgatorio, Canto 11: The souls of the prideful, bearing heavy stones (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 8: Phlegyas ferries Dante and Virgil across the Styx (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 22: Ciampolo escapes the demon Alichino in the fifth bolgia (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 29: The falsifiers and forgers tormented with itching (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 13: The Harpies in the forest of suicides (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 4: The innocent souls in Limbo (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 9: The angel opens the gates (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 8: The soul of the Florentine Philippo Argenti accosts the poets on the Styx (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 32: The traitors frozen in the ice of Cocytus (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 4: Homer, the poets, and heroes in Limbo (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 8: Virgil and Dante disembark at the citadel of Dis (illustration from The Divine Comedy) Inferno, Canto 5: The souls of Paolo and Francesca (illustration from The Divine Comedy)
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