Tag Archives: ugolino
Justified Punishment
Dante at this point, now fully understands why these sins are punished and how essential it is for the punishment to match the severity of their sins. What I want to find out is why is Lucifer isn’t active throughout Inferno? It would make sense for the king of Hell to apply his might against the dammed throughout Dante and Virgil’s pilgrimage. To help us understand the very nature around Hell and Lucifer let us examine Canto 33 . Here in this Canto, Dante and Virgil are in the ninth circle and they come across a sinner named Count Ugonilo who chews the neck of his killer and betrayer, Archbishop Ruggieri. Both of these men are betrayers, but what’s important to note is how Ugonilo acts for his sins: “That sinner raised his mouth from his fierce meal, / then used the head that he had ripped apart / in back; he wiped his lips upon it’s hair.” (Alighieri 1-3). Ugonilo attacks the man who betrayed with anger and disgust. There is hate in those bites. It’s evident here that wrath has made Ugonilo go insane with rage.
Examining Canto 34, Virgil and Dante are in the City of Dis. They meet the king of Hell who stands in the middle showing no emotions(I will discuss about Lucifer nature later). Lucifer has three heads to which each mouth contains a sinner: Judas, who betrayed Jesus Christ, Brutus and Cassius both of whom betrayed Julius Caesar. All three men are chewed and shredded, never dying: “Within each mouth he used it like a grinder/ with gnashing teeth he tore to bits a sinner, / so that he bought much pain to three at once.(Alighieri 55-57). According to this, these sinners are forever in a state of perpetual agony. Notice that these sinners are expressing emotion unlike Lucifer himself. With these examples in mind, I believe Dante meant to show the readers that although the sinners are touched by evil. They still remain human. Pure evil has no traces of humanity, which would make sense since Lucifer is evil incarnate.
There is an interesting note about Purgatory that further explains the presence of sins around humans and perhaps Dante’s intentions about the sinner’s circumstances. In Canto 1 of Purgatory, Dante and Virgil meet Cato, a Roman Politician who is famous for his defiance of Julius Caesar. What fascinating about this sinner Cato is the fact he killed himself as a form of freedom from Julius Caesar as explain by Virgil, “You know it who, in Utica, found death/ for freedom was not bitter, when you left/ the garb that will be bright on the great day.”(Alighieri 73-75). Since we’ve come to know that suicide is a crime against God, it’s problematic to see Cato’s role in this realm. To understand why Cato is in Purgatory instead of Hell we must remember that Dante based his morality on Aristotle’s schema. According to Aristotle, death by suicide is a crime against one’s society, but in Cato’s case his society was conquer by Julius Caesar. Rather than being in part of the new society by the conqueror, he decided to free himself by suicide. This is why there is a special case for Cato Presence, for his actions is proof his incorruptible nature.
Count Ugolino’s Cannibalism Chews Away at His Soul (And Ruggieri’s)

Count Ugolino Gnawing on Archbishop Ruggieri’s Head, Title: Ugolino & Ruggieri, Illustration by Suloni Robertson, Source: Danteworlds (UTexas)
Cannibalism is a predominant theme in canto 33 that rears its ugly head in the form of desperation found in a grieving father and grandfather faced with the death of his beloved children and grandchildren. The powerful imagery of the canto is used to support the recurring motifs of canines and teeth. In the second round of the ninth circle of Hell known as Antenora in which betrayers of one’s nation, party or city are punished, Dante’s first encounter with the wealthy Ghibelline Count Ugolini is a gruesome and disgusting image of him gnawing on the head of another soul with the ferocity of a dog. This other unfortunate soul is Archbishop Ruggieri, leader of the Pisan Ghibellines, who perfidiously convinces Ugolino, a former Ghibelline turned Guelph to come to the city of Pisa. As a consequence of Ugolino’s conniving actions against the Ghibellines and Pisa, Ruggieri decides to imprison him along with his two sons and two grandsons in a hopelessly dark tower with no way out for eight months. When their mealtimes are suddenly halted, starvation slowly begins to eat the five wretched beings alive, especially the children. Slowly but surely, each of their young lives are taken away one by one. Two days following the final death of the last innocent youth, Ugolino’s famine becomes unbearable and he begins voraciously feeding on the decomposing bodies of the children. This pitiful story reflects the contrapasso of the punishments of both Count Ugolini and Archbishop Ruggieri. Since the latter is to blame for the deaths of the guiltless children, he must endure the deplorable and harsh effects of it: just as the bodies of the children become Ugolino’s meals so does Archbishop Ruggieri. At the conclusion of Ugolino’s story, Dante observes, “When he had said that, with eyes askance he took/ the wretched skull in his teeth again, which were strong against the bone, like a dog’s,” (76-8, 519). The metaphor of this vivid phrase compares Ugolino to a canine, invoking the image of a rabid dog who is overcome with rage. The depraved look in Ugolino’s eyes imply that his sanity has vanished and his only objective is to seek blind revenge on Ruggieri with the ferocity and harshness of a dog who has been wronged by an abusive owner, or in this case, a powerful political leader. The presence of the words ‘teeth’ and ‘bone’ further emphasize Ugolino’s canine-like actions because it resembles a dog struggling to chomp on a bone whose rough exterior highlights the hardness of Ruggieri’s human flesh as well as the indifference and cruelty of the soul, itself.
The metaphor of canine viciousness in this cannibalistic situation is taken even further when Ugolino describes a prophetic dream he has prior to the deaths of the children. He sees a man, along with zealous and powerful dogs, hunting a male wolf and his cubs. As the family of wolves begin to grow weary of their journey, they are suddenly torn apart by the canines with the images of their fangs being emphasized in Ugolino’s memory of the dream which, once again, supports the motif of teeth. This vision symbolizes that Ruggieri is the hunter pursuing Ugolino and his children and grandchildren while the weariness of the wolves is the starvation that overcomes each of the prisoners day by day. In addition to this, Ugolino representing himself as a wolf is an attempt to separate himself from the evilness that embodies Ruggieri, the other figures who are indirectly responsible for his and the childrens’ deaths and humanity, in general. Wolves, according to the notes (28-36, 526), are considered the enemies of mankind. With this in mind, Ugolino is implying that his crime is no where near as treacherous as that of Ruggieri because, although the two figures have had their differences and skirmishes, Ugolino is the real victim of the inherently evil nature of humans, especially since he lost his loving young heirs.
Meanwhile, as Dante is witnessing the dreadful situation of the two souls, he contemplates the shameful actions of Ruggieri. His pity is combined with resentfulness and anger towards the city of Pisa, itself. He proclaims, “For if Count Ugolino was reported to have/ betrayed your fortresses, you should not have put his/sons on such a cross,” (85-7, 519). This reaction evidently portrays that he feels as if Ruggieri’s actions overshadow the crimes of Ugolini, solely because of the needless and senseless murder of the innocent children. Although Count Ugolino is supposedly guilty of treason, nonetheless, this does not signify that his children nor grandchildren must pay the price of his punishment. Children are innocent and pure by nature and cannot be held responsible for the misdeeds of their parents or relatives, whom, with age and experience, come to discover their inherently evil and greedy nature. It has always been a universally condemned crime to harm children and Dante finds it unforgivable that Ruggieri knowingly commits such horrendous murders. Therefore, in the darkest and coldest pits of Hell, Dante finds a justifiable reason to bring Archbishop Ruggieri to infamy in the living world and to allow the memory of him to be eaten away, piece by piece.
From Pitiful to Reverent
Dante the pilgrim continued to change throughout his journey through hell. Dante learns a little more about hell’s design and God’s intended justice with each encounter of different sinners. Dante’s journey through hell is successful because his response to the sinners throughout hell matures from pitiful to reverent.
To be able to recognize the change in attitude Dante has towards the sinners of Inferno one must analyze Dante’s initial attitudes at the very beginning of his journey with Virgil. In canto 5, Dante encounters the lustful sinners, Francesca and Paolo. Francesca and Paolo are adulterers who are now condemned to the circle of lust where they remain restless and stuck in the moment of their sin. Upon hearing Francesca’s story Dante is overcome with pity and grief. Dante genuinely feels sorry for the pair and this can be seen through the line, “While one spirit said this , the other was weeping so that for pity I fainted as if I were dying and I fell as a dead body falls” (Inferno 5, 139). This shows how faint-hearted Dante is at the beginning of his journey in response to the sinners. Dante is vulnerable to the emotion of pity and grief that it is too much to handle and he faints. Similarly, when Dante encounters Ciacco in the third circle of gluttony, Dante is also overcome by the emotions of pity and grief. Dante the pilgrim says, “Ciacco, your trouble weighs on me so that it calls me to weep…” (Inferno 6, 58). Dante’s reaction to Ciacco’s suffering is very similar to that of Francesca and Paolo. In these two encounters with sinners, Dante allows his emotions to dictate his judgement and attitude toward the sinners.
The initial change in Dante’s attitude towards sinners in hell can be found in canto 19. In the third bolgia of the eighth circle where simony is punished, Dante encounters Pope Nicholas III. Pope Nicholas III was guilty of selling indulgences and exercising overall corruption within the church. In this bolgia the former pope is face down in a hole, feet up and exposed to be burnt by flames that rain down like snow. In response to Pope Nicholas III’s story of how he ended up in hell, Dante the pilgrim says, “Therefore stay here, for you deserve your punishment; and be sure to keep your ill-gotten coin, which made you bold against Charles” (Inferno 19, 97). This line shows that Dante agrees with the punishment bestowed upon the pope and he comes to realize God’s intended justice for sinners such as Pope Nicholas III. Th reverence in Dante’s attitude toward sinners solidifies in canto 33 with the encounter of Ugolino in the ninth circle of hell. Ugolino betrayed the city of Pisa and in return he was locked in a tower with his two sons to starve. Ugolino watched his sons die of starvation and it is rumored that he also ate his sons but that part of the story is made unclear. Ugolino hopes to evoke pity from Dante when Ugolino says, “You are surely cruel if you do not already grieve… and if you are not weeping, about what do you usually weep?” (Inferno 33, 40). Dante the pilgrim does not weep for Ugolino and instead uses his tragic story to criticize the city of Pisa. In regard to the city of Pisa, Dante states, “… let Capraia and Gorgona move and make a barrier at the mouth of Arno, so that it may drown every person in you!” (Inferno 33, 82). Here we see that Dante the pilgrim has completely transformed his attitude toward sinners to be more reverent rather than pitiful. He does not weep nor pity Ugolino because he has come to realize that his punishment is just as meant by God.
Canto 33: Further Progression in Dante’s Callousness towards Sinners
In Canto 33, we find Dante and Virgil pass through the 9th circle of Hell, where traitors to their country, guests, and hosts are punished. Canto 33 is a continuation of Canto 32. Betrayal is the major theme of Canto 33 and because of how deep these sinners are placed in Hell, it is evident how deeply Dante, the author, feels towards those capable of deception.
Dante sees Count Ugolino, another historical figure, savagely eating Archbishop Ruggieri’s head, an image of cannibalism. Ugolino was a political nobleman in Pisa whose politics went wrong. Ugolino tells Dante his account of the past. Dante finds out that Ugolino was imprisoned for treason along with his sons and grandsons. Ugolino plotted to take over Pisa, an act of betrayal against his hometown. But Ruggieri betrays the betrayer, Ugolino. Ruggieri punishes Ugolino and his family and denies them food, so the sons die of starvation. Ugolino must watch his sons die for his crimes. It is not fully clear if Ugolino eats his sons or not but he states “Then hunger proved more powerful than grief”, which can indicate Ugolino actually eating his dead children. While this interpretation is certainly viable, Dante, the poet, does not necessarily place Ugolino there for eating his children, but because of the selfish betrayal of his hometown. As we have seen throughout Inferno, according to Dante, the writer, the place a person comes from is an incredibly important characteristic and makes that person who he or she is. Therefore, Dante, the writer, finds that the betrayal of one’s hometown must be severely punished.
As Dante and Virgil continue, they meet Fra Alberigo and Bronca. They live on Earth but their souls were sent to Hell, another example of duality in Inferno. Fra Alberigo invited his brother over for dinner and had his family assassinated. Branca’s sin is similar to Alberigo’s because he killed his father-in-law. These sinners are cold enough to kill family members, therefore they must eternally be frozen. They are punished by laying on freezing ice on the river Cocytus and when they cry, their tears freeze. This type of imprisonment is compelling because Hell is constantly represented with fire. The harsh freezing ice can symbolize the callousness of the sinners. Fra asks Dante to “stretch out your hand and open my eyes” but Dante gladly refuses to help him remove the frozen tears so he can cry some more. Dante, the writer, states, “I did not open them for him; and it was courtesy to treat him boorishly” (148-149), meaning being hostile towards this sinner was like a gift to Dante. Dante’s refusal to wipe away the tears mirrors the themes of betrayal and disloyalty in this Canto. Dante, the pilgrim, promises Alberigo that he will wipe away his tears when he states, “If you wish me to help you, tell me who you are” (115) but he is misleading because he readily does not fulfill those words.
It is important to pay attention to Dante’s lack of empathy in the final cantos. As he gets closer to reaching God, Dante’s comprehension of sins is stronger and he is gratified to let the sinners hurt in hell for eternity. From the start of Inferno, Dante, the pilgrim, is on a journey where his attitudes change as he progresses through Hell. He feels compassion and pity for sinners like Francesca, but as the sins grow in severity Dante, the pilgrim feels apathy and hatred towards the sinners. Dante certainly feels no empathy for sinners like Ugolino and Fra Alberigo because of the magnitude of their sins, according to Dante the poet. As Dante reaches the end of his journey in Hell, his pity lessens with each ensuing sinner he encounters. At the beginning of Inferno, empathy overcomes Dante, and he cries and literally faints for many hurting sinners, but by the end of Inferno, he does not even allow the sinners to cry for themselves.


