The quick-tempered poet and soldier was banished, permanently exiled from his beloved Florence, forever forced to spend his life, as he put it, “going down and up another’s stairs.”
No wonder that Dante imagined traveling through nine circles of hell, discovering demons, the cursed, and a few people he didn’t like. Who knew that his frightening narrative poem Inferno, part of his epic Divine Comedy, would endure for seven centuries? Did Dante (shown above with hell and purgatory behind him) ever find paradise?
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ILLUSTRATION BY SANTI PÉREZ
Those circles of hell: To Dante, they are the abode of the damned, who are assigned to eternal punishment for their sins. In the illustration above, Dante, accompanied by the poet Virgil, stands at the precipice of this scary underworld. Read more.
Where is this boat-shaped mall? Hint: It was built in what used to be a working dock in this seaport—and the image was taken from a helicopter with its doors off. Can you guess the city? Click here to find the answer!
TOP: PHOTOGRAPH BY MARIO TAMA, GETTY IMAGES; BOTTOM: PHOTOGRAPH BY GREG KAHN, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
Before and after: Since Superstorm Sandy made landfall 10 years ago, cities like New York have taken new steps to protect themselves from the ocean. Changes include retractable sea walls, man-made dunes, raised houses, and extra green spaces, Nat Geo reports. These two images above illustrate the changes. (Top: The amusement park at Casino Pier in Seaside Heights, New Jersey, in 2012 two days after the storm made landfall. Bottom: Today’s pier was shortened to withstand future storms. A new roller coaster replaced the one Sandy destroyed.)
We couldn’t resist: On this frightful Friday, what’s up with the serial-killing countess? Or was Hungary’s Elizabeth Báthory set up and imprisoned by rivals? Biographer Tony Thorne says you can’t whitewash the crimes of a woman he calls Countess Dracula. “There are plenty of male representations of spectacular evil. But few very well-known evil females,” Thorne tells us. “Báthory fills a gap in the iconography of horror.” Read more.
We asked, you answered: A story yesterday about the things that ancient Egyptians carried with them in their tombs struck a chord with readers. Wrote Peggy Cafferty: “The only thing that I wish I could have in my Afterlife are memories.” Sue Crane wants to be buried in her Jack Lambert Steelers jersey and have a passing-on party that ends with Led Zeppelin’s “Stairway to Heaven.” Aletheia Kallos asks: “How will you deliver your daily newsletter to my afterlife?” Awwww!
This newsletter has been curated and edited by David Beard, Sydney Combs, Jen Tse, and Heather Kim. Have a suggestion? Let us know at david.beard@natgeo.com. And thanks for reading!
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