scholarly journals Dante Alighieri, Divina Comedia: Infierno, ed. de Rossend Arqués Corominas, Chiara Cappuccio, Carlota Cattermole Ordóñez, Raffaele Pinto, Juan Valera-Portas de Orduña y Eduard Vilella Morató, trad. de Raffaele Pinto, Madrid-Buenos Aires- Ciudad de México:

Medievalia ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joan Curbet
Author(s):  
Michelli Cristine Scapol Monteiro

Ettore Ximenes (Palermo, 1855/Roma, 1926) foi um escultor italiano de grande notoriedade internacional nas primeiras décadas do século XX. Autor do Monumento à Independência do Brasil, situado em São Paulo, sua maior obra escultórica, Ximenes construiu uma trajetória de grande relevo na América, desde que ganhou o concurso para o Monumento ao General Belgrano, em Buenos Aires, em 1898. Nos Estados Unidos, Ximenes realizou esculturas em homenagem a italianos célebres, como os monumentos a Giovanni da Verrazzano e a Dante Alighieri, encomendados por Carlo Barsotti, editor do jornal Il Progresso Italo Americano, na cidade de Nova York. Este artigo reconstitui o processo de encomenda destas duas obras e evidencia a relevância dos monumentos para os seus promotores e para a projeção da carreira de Ximenes, de modo a perceber como as ações de valorização da identidade italiana foram centrais na consagração do artista naquele país, ao mesmo tempo em que enalteciam a comunidade imigrante italiana e um de seus mais destacados líderes políticos.


2011 ◽  
Vol 15 (01) ◽  
pp. 28-56
Author(s):  
Alejandro Gangui

Cultural heritage relating to the sky in the form of sundials, old observatories and the like, are commonly found in many cities in the Old World, but rarely in the New. This paper examines astronomical heritage embodied in the Barolo Palace in Buenos Aires. While references to Dante Alighieri and his poetry are scattered in streets, buildings and monuments around the Western world, in the city of Buenos Aires, the only street carrying Dante’s name is less than three blocks long and, appropriately, is a continuation of Virgilio street. A couple of Italian immigrants—a wealthy businessman, Luis Barolo, and an imaginative architect, Mario Palanti—foresaw this situation nearly a century ago, and did not save any efforts or money with the aim of getting Dante and his cosmology an appropriate monumental recognition, in reinforced concrete. The Barolo Palace is a unique combination of both astronomy and the worldview displayed in the Divine Comedy, Dante’s poetic masterpiece. It is known that the Palace’s design was inspired by the great poet, but the details are not recorded; this paper relies on Dante’s text to consider whether it may add to our understanding of the building. Although the links of the Palace’s main architectural structure with the three realms of the Comedy have been studied in the past, its unique astronomical flavor has not been sufficiently emphasized. The word of God, as interpreted by the Fathers of the Church in Sacred Scripture, Aristotle’s physics and Ptolemy’s astronomy, all beautifully converge in Dante’s verses, and the Barolo Palace reflects this.


2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (S260) ◽  
pp. 346-353
Author(s):  
Alejandro Gangui

AbstractIn no other epoch of Western history like in the Middle Ages, cosmology was so key an element of culture and, one way or another, the motion of the heavens ended up impregnating the literature of that time. Among the most noteworthy poets we find Dante Alighieri, who became famous for his Commedia, a monumental poem written roughly between 1307 and his death in 1321, and which the critics from 16th century onwards dubbed Divina. In this and other works, Dante pictures the cosmic image for the world, summing up the current trends of Neoplatonic and Islamic traditions. The Barolo Palace in the city of Buenos Aires is a singular combination of both astronomy and the worldview displayed in Dante's poetic masterpiece. Some links of the Palace's main architectural structure with the three realms of the Comedy have been studied in the past. In this note we consider its unique astronomical flavor, an issue which has not been sufficiently emphasized yet.


1982 ◽  
Vol 99 ◽  
pp. 605-613
Author(s):  
P. S. Conti

Conti: One of the main conclusions of the Wolf-Rayet symposium in Buenos Aires was that Wolf-Rayet stars are evolutionary products of massive objects. Some questions:–Do hot helium-rich stars, that are not Wolf-Rayet stars, exist?–What about the stability of helium rich stars of large mass? We know a helium rich star of ∼40 MO. Has the stability something to do with the wind?–Ring nebulae and bubbles : this seems to be a much more common phenomenon than we thought of some years age.–What is the origin of the subtypes? This is important to find a possible matching of scenarios to subtypes.


1998 ◽  
Vol 26 (152) ◽  
pp. 576
Author(s):  
Oscar H. del Brutto Perrone ◽  
José Antonio Bueri ◽  
Antonio Culebras ◽  
Jordi Matías-Guiu Guía ◽  
Marco Tulio Medina Hernández ◽  
...  
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