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Enrico Cerulli (1898-1988)
Cerulli
came of age during the beginnings
of Italian colonialization in Africa and, as an adult, became
politically
active during Mussolini’s further pursuit of colonial glory in His
most interesting work to me is in the field of Islamic studies, if that
is the
proper term for his 1949 book entitled Il 'Libro della Scala' e la
questione
delle fonti arabospagnole della Divina Commedia. (The Book of the
Scale and
the Question of Arab-Spanish Sources of the Divine Comedy.) Perhaps
“Islamic-Christian studies” or something similar would be a better term. Briefly,
the book deals with the possibility of a Muslim source for Dante’s
masterpiece, The Divine Comedy. That source—at
least, as an inspiration—might have been the Kitab
al Miraj (Book
of the Miraj, the Arabic word for Muhammad’s
miraculous night ride from Cerulli
was not the first person to come up with the idea of Muslim influence
on Dante.
That honor goes to the Spanish scholar Don Miguel Asín Palacios,
whose 1919
work, La escatología muselmana en la
Divina Comedia started a never-ending discussion about the
possibility that
Dante used a Muslim source for inspiration. Also in 1949, besides
Cerulli’s
book, another work on the same subject appeared in Spanish: La
escala de Mahoma by José Muñoz
Sendino. One
hears that Cerulli and others claim that Dante used the Muslim work as
a
source. That is overstated. All they say is that it is plausible; after
all,
one of Dante’s teachers, Brunetto Latini, happened to be in When
Cerulli was awarded an honorary degree in 1963 in Rome, his one-time
mentor, Giorgio
Levi della Vida, spoke of him as a “prodigy” who at the age of 16 was
already
studying the languages and culture of east Africa; he was always up at
the
military hospital in Naples, interviewing soldiers returned from
Africa,
getting their impressions and whatever tid-bits of language and local
culture
they happened to have brought back with them. Cerulli was the born
scholar. His
association with and participation in Italian colonialism in Reference: Untitled review by A.R. Nykl of Il 'Libro della Scala' e la questione delle fonti arabospagnole della Divina Commedia by Enrico Cerulli, in Speculum, Vol. 26. No. 2 (Apr., 1951), pp. 376-80.
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