Title of article
A palace for astronomy in Buenos Aires
Author/Authors
Alejandro Gangui، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
8
From page
346
To page
353
Abstract
In no other epoch ofWestern 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.
Keywords
Medieval astronomy , Dante’s cosmology , Eclectic architecture
Journal title
Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union
Record number
667556
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