Respuesta :

Answer:

С. Count Ugolino's punishment and grief

Explanation:

In Dante's Inferno, Count Ugolino is a tragic figure who is frightening in the depth of his hatred. He and his children were starved to death by the Archbishop Ruggieri ­whose head he eats in Hell ("... Of infamy for this traitor whom I gnaw").

Dante and Virgil are still traveling through the freezing cold ninth circle of hell in Canto 33 of Dante's Inferno. Unlike some other parts of hell, where sinners are punished with flames or boiling hot substances, the sinners in the ninth circle, called Cocytus, are submerged in ice.

Dante describing here is С. Counto Ugolino's punishment and grief

What are sinners in Canto 33?

Summary: Canto XXXIII

Both men lived in Pisa, and the archbishop, a traitor himself, had imprisoned Ugolino and his sons as traitors. He denied them food, and when the sons died, Ugolino, in his hunger, was driven to eat the flesh of their corpses.

What was Count Ugolino punishment?

He is gnawing on the head of his lifelong foe, Archbishop Ruggieri, and he tells Dante and Virgil his sad story of how Archbishop Ruggieri turned on him, resulting in Count Ugolino's ultimate imprisonment and death from starvation.

To learn more about  Canto XXXIII, refer

https://brainly.com/question/20248429

#SPJ2

Otras preguntas