This document summarizes an early 1544 edition of Dante's Divine Comedy with commentary by Alessandro Vellutello. It was the first new commentary written in the 16th century, aiming to clarify historical allusions and correct earlier commentaries. The edition also contained remarkable illustrations, including woodcuts mapping the circles of Hell from above. The copy described was from the library of Samuel Sandars and has an Italian binding from the 19th century.
This document summarizes an early 1544 edition of Dante's Divine Comedy with commentary by Alessandro Vellutello. It was the first new commentary written in the 16th century, aiming to clarify historical allusions and correct earlier commentaries. The edition also contained remarkable illustrations, including woodcuts mapping the circles of Hell from above. The copy described was from the library of Samuel Sandars and has an Italian binding from the 19th century.
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Vellutello y Manetti, La comedia di Dante Aligieri .docx
This document summarizes an early 1544 edition of Dante's Divine Comedy with commentary by Alessandro Vellutello. It was the first new commentary written in the 16th century, aiming to clarify historical allusions and correct earlier commentaries. The edition also contained remarkable illustrations, including woodcuts mapping the circles of Hell from above. The copy described was from the library of Samuel Sandars and has an Italian binding from the 19th century.
This document summarizes an early 1544 edition of Dante's Divine Comedy with commentary by Alessandro Vellutello. It was the first new commentary written in the 16th century, aiming to clarify historical allusions and correct earlier commentaries. The edition also contained remarkable illustrations, including woodcuts mapping the circles of Hell from above. The copy described was from the library of Samuel Sandars and has an Italian binding from the 19th century.
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La comedia di Dante Aligieri con la nova espositione di Alessandro Vellutello
Venice: Francesco Marcolini, 1544. SSS.56.5
The fourth circle of Hell. Click for full page. The souls ascend to the Empyrean. Dante looks down to see how far he has travelled. Paradiso XXVII Dante and Beatrice with the wise and the learned in the sphere of the sun. Paradiso X. Click for larger image.
Dante's Commedia was first printed in Foligno in 1472. The fifteenth century saw a total of fifteen editions, most of them with a commentary on the text; Alessandro Vellutello's commentary of 1544 was the first new one to be written in the sixteenth century. Vellutello was particularly interested in clarifying the poem's historical allusions, and aimed to correct the famous commentary of the Florentine humanist Cristoforo Landino (first printed in 1481) on a number of points, as well as criticizing the edition of Dante by Pietro Bembo, printed by Aldus Manutius (Venice, 1502). The commentary was reprinted alongside that of Landino in the editions of 1564, 1578, and 1596 printed by the Sessa family in Venice. It was also reissued in 1564 by Francesco Rampazetto, who presented unsold copies of the 1544 edition as if they were new. The edition contains a remarkable sequence of illustrations - the first entirely new cycle for a number of years. The woodcuts for the Inferno are highly original, showing the circles of Hell as seen from above. As well as appearing throughout the poem, they are used in the preface alongside Vellutello's dicussion of the geography of Hell, with the depths and dimensions of the various circles indicated. The vogue for measuring and mapping out Hell began with the Florentine mathematician and architect Antonio Manetti (1423-1497). Manetti's calculations were never published; they were discussed in the preface to Landino's commentary of 1481, and here Vellutello takes issue with some of Manetti's claims. The woodcuts for Vellutello's edition contrast with earlier attempts to convey the whole action and narrative of each canto in a single illustration. In the ones from the Paradiso shown here, for example, only Dante, Beatrice, and the souls in Paradise are depicted in strikingly simple designs, against an intensely realised background of light or stars. The illustrations, like the commentary, were printed again in the Sessa editions of 1564, 1578, and 1596. Our copy is from is from the library of Samuel Sandars (1837-1894), bequeathed to the Library in 1894, and is in an Italian binding, with the edges gauffered and painted. It was rebacked and inlaid in the nineteenth century by Morotti of Bologna. Sandars, a member of Trinity College, had donated a number of printed books and manuscripts during his lifetime and was one of the Library's greatest benefactors. He made his first gift in 1870, and used to send Francis Jenkinson, the University Librarian, a cheque for 50 on the first day of the year. His bequest numbered nearly 1600 books, including nearly one hundred manuscripts and over one hundred incunables. His collection is strong in liturgies, incunables, early English printing, books printed on vellum (of which he compiled a list of those in Cambridge collections), and fine bindings (such as this book and the Dante printed in Lyons by Jean de Tournes, 1547, in a contemporary Lyonnese binding). The bequest also included the edition of Dante printed in Venice in 1491 by Petrus de Plasiis, and the one printed in 1487 at Brescia, with beautiful full page woodcuts for each canto of the Inferno and the Purgatorio, but only one for the Paradiso. The Sandars Readership in Bibliography, begun in 1895, continues today as the annual Sandars Lectures. In addition to the numerous editions of Dante scattered throughout its holdings, the Library has a special Dante collection at classmark CCA-CCE.1, formed primarily from the books of Arthur John Butler (1844-1910), Dante scholar and mountaineer, which were presented by Butler's widow in 1910. This book was displayed in the exhibition Visible language: Dante in text & image, Cambridge University Library, 17 January-1 July 2006.
References and further reading: Brian Richardson, 'Editing Dante's Commedia: 1472-1629', in Theodore J. Cachey (Ed.), Dante now: current trends in Dante studies (pp. 237-262) (Notre Dame & London: University of Notre Dame Press, 1995). 742:2.c.95.168 Renaissance Dante in print (1472-1629), http://www.italnet.nd.edu/Dante/ John Kleiner, Mismapping the Underworld: daring and error in Dante's 'Comedy' (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1994). 742:45.c.95.134 Samuel Sandars, An annotated list of books printed on vellum to be found in the university and college libraries at Cambridge: with an appendix containing a list of works referring to the bibliography of Cambridge libraries, Cambridge Antiquarian Society Octavo Publications, 15 (Cambridge: Printed for the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, sold by Deighton, Bell and Co., 1878). SSS.49.11; A460.3.10; B171.1; Cam.c.21.3.1 Return to Featured book archive