St. Paul College of Ilocos Sur
St. Paul College of Ilocos Sur
St. Paul College of Ilocos Sur
Midterm Examination/Output/Requirement
LIT 102 – World Civilization and Literature
First Semester, AY 2020-2021
Instructor: Ms. Hannah Marie Suzanne S. Callejo
I. TRUE/FALSE
Recall your knowledge about the Medieval Period specifically the customs, traditions and
themes that transpired during this time.
False 1. Middle Age is the time after the Classical Age of Ancient Greece and Rome
and before the Renaissance.
True 2. The Medieval Period is also known as the Dark Ages of Religion.
True 3. The Middle Ages is only about knights in shining armors, lavish banquets,
and glorious pageantry.
True 4. In the Medieval Feudal System, peasant worked the land for the nobles and
knights who in turn offered them protection.
True 5. During the Middle Ages nearly all the lands of Europe converted to
Christianity.
True 6. The Black Death killed nearly half the people of Europe.
True 7. The wars between the Holy Roman Empire and the Muslims were called
The Crusades.
True 8. Feudalism is a system of rights and values.
True 9. The lord gave large portions of his land to the church.
False 10. Religion in terms of civilization is about more equality between the social
classes.
II. Literary Pieces and Genres during the Medieval Period
You have encountered these literary pieces in your readings and activities. Given the titles, distinguish
its author or its country of origin.
LITERARY PIECES
11. The Divine Comedy Long Italian narrative poem by Dante Alighieri,
begun c. 1308 and completed in 1320.
12. The Song of Roland La Chanson de Roland, the earliest surviving
masterpiece of French literature.
13. El Cid Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar was a Castilian knight
and warlord in medieval Spain.
14. Beowulf The author of Beowulf is unknown. It is possible
that the poem was composed by and transmitted
between several different poets before it was
preserved in a single manuscript that dates to
about 1000.
15. The Canterbury Tales A collection of 24 stories that runs to over 17,000
lines written in Middle English by Geoffrey
Chaucer between 1387 and 1400.
16. Summa Theologica Roman Catholicism, a systematic compendium
of theology written by Thomas Aquinas between
about 1265 and 1273.
THE DIVINE COMEDY BY DANTE
Dante A thirty-five-year-old man, spiritually lost and wandering away from the True Way — the
path of righteousness and of God.
Virgil A "shade" residing in the Limbo section of Hell, also known as the first circle.
Beatrice (2). The inspiration for Dante's work. She entreats Virgil to save Dante.
Bocca (32) Traitor of Florence. On one occasion he betrayed the Guelphs and caused
their defeat.
Caiaphas (23) The high priest who influenced the Hebrew Council to crucify Jesus.
Capaneus (14) One of the seven against Thebes. Defied Zeus and was killed by him.
Calvacanti, Cavalcante dei (10) Father of the poet Guido who is Dante's friend.
Celestine V, Pope (3) Resigned the papal throne, thus making way for Pope Boniface
VIII.
Cerberus (6) The three headed hound: guards one of the gates of Hell.
Donati family (28) A politically powerful family who caused the split in the political
parties.
Farinata (10) A prominent leader of the Ghibelline party who defeated Dante's party.
Francesca da Rimini (5) Lover of Paolo whose brother slew them in the act of adultery.
Jason (28) Leader of the Argonauts in their quest for the Golden Fleece.
Malabranche (21) Demons who punish the barrators. The name means "evil-claws."
Medusa (9) One of the Gorgons. The sight of her head filled with snakes turned men to
stone.
Satan (34) Also called Lucifer, Dis, and Beelzebub, he is the "Emperor of Hell."
The Divine Comedy is composed of 14,233 lines that are divided into three cantiche
(singular cantica) – Inferno (Hell),
Purgatorio (Purgatory)
Paradiso (Paradise) – each consisting of 33 cantos (Italian plural canti).
The three beasts are allegories of three different sins: the leopard represents lust, the lion pride,
and the wolf represents avarice. Collectively, these three beasts share a symbolic meaning in
that they represent all of man's sins. Individually, the leopard represents fraud, the
lion represents violence, and the she-wolf represents incontinence.
INFERNO (HELL)
CIRCLE 1 - LIMBO the Atheist and the unbaptized
They are not exactly sinful but they did not accept Christ.
CIRCLE 3 Gluttony: Where those who overindulge exist. Dante encounters ordinary people here,
not characters from epic poems or gods from mythology. The author Boccaccio took one of these
characters, Ciacco, and incorporated him into his 14th-century collection of tales called "The
Decameron."
CIRCLE 4 Avarice & Prodigality. The miserly and spendthrift push great heavy weights
together, crashing them time and time again. Plutus guards them.
CIRCLE 5 Wrath & Sullenness. The wrathful fight each other on the surface of
the Styx while the sullen gurgle beneath it. Fillippo Argenti is here.
Question: Based from the story, what is the difference between the Purgatorio and
Inferno in terms of structures?
Purgatory in the poem is depicted as a mountain in the Southern Hemisphere, consisting of a bottom section (Ante-
Purgatory), seven levels of suffering and spiritual growth (associated with the seven deadly sins), and finally the Earthly
Paradise at the top. Allegorically, the Purgatorio represents the penitent Christian life. In describing the climb Dante
discusses the nature of sin, examples of vice and virtue, as well as moral issues in politics and in the Church. The poem
outlines a theory that all sins arise from love – either perverted love directed towards others' harm, or deficient love, or the
disordered or excessive love of good things.
The Inferno describes Dante's journey through Hell, guided by the ancient Roman poet Virgil. In the poem, Hell is
depicted as nine concentric circles of torment located within the Earth; it is the "realm ... of those who have rejected spiritual
values by yielding to bestial appetites or violence, or by perverting their human intellect to fraud or malice against their
fellowmen". As an allegory, the Divine Comedy represents the journey of the soul toward God, with the Inferno describing
the recognition and rejection of sin.
PURGATORIO (Purgatory)
Punishments
1st Terrace: LUSTFUL
Purified through fire.
ANTE-PURGATORIO: LATE-REPENTANT
These sinners stay in purgatory until the prayers of their loved ones shorten their stay there.
2nd Heaven: Sphere of the Mercury those here are those who gave service in life, but whose service was somewhat
marred by ambition.
3rd Heaven: Sphere of the Venus Site of those who were lovers, but whose love was marred by wantonness
Sphere of the Sun: The Wise. The Fourth Sphere of Heaven is for those wise and intellectual people, who sought to
educate the hearts and minds of others.
Sphere of Mars: The Warriors of Faith. This Sphere is of the warriors who souls are holding up a cross, and these souls
have fought and given up their lives for the faith, including many heroes from the crusades.
Sphere of Jupiter: The Just Rulers. In the sixth Sphere or the sixth Dantesque circle, the souls of the rulers
just in their ruling make up the shape of an eagle, telling Dante the importance of justice.
Sphere of Saturn: The Contemplatives. The Seventh Sphere, the Sphere of Saturn, is a habitation for those souls who
are an embodiment of the cardinal value, temperance. This Sphere is a congregation of those who lived their lives in abstinence
and sound-mindedness.
The Fixed Stars. The Eighth Sphere or the Sphere of the Fixed Stars is perched upon the Gemini constellation, which
coincidentally is the same star sign as that of Dante.
9th Heaven: Primum Mobile The spirits here are the Three Spheres of the Angels / Nine Choirs of Angels and the souls
of those who were baptized before reaching the age of reason.
Dante will be examined by the Apostles who stand at the threshold to the Primum
Mobile, concerning his understanding of the theological virtues. Summarize Dante’s
Viewpoints about the three virtues.