Sibyl's Cave | |
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Grotta della Sibilla (Italian) | |
Location | Montemonaco, Marche, Italy |
Coordinates | 42°54′00″N13°15′56″E / 42.90007°N 13.26559°E |
Elevation | 2,150 metres (7,050 ft) |
Sibyl's Cave (Italian : Grotta della Sibilla) is a cave, located at 2,150 m above sea level, carved into the rock, near the summit of Sibillini Mountains in the municipality of Montemonaco, reachable only on foot. [1]
There, above the peaks of the wild Apennines,
Between the steep cliffs a cave appears;
The sirens keep watch over that lighthouse,
The songs tremble and make one delirious.
Translated from the Italian poem Sibilla by Giulio Aristide Sartorio
The cave owes its name to the legend of the Apennine Sibyl, according to which it was the access point to the underground kingdom of Queen Sibilla. [2]
Andrea da Barberino, with his chivalric novel Il Guerrin Meschino , contributed to the popularization of the legend. [3] It tells the story of a wandering knight who went to the Sibyl to find his parents. For a year, he stayed in the cave and resisted, with all his strength, the temptations by invoking the name of Jesus of Nazareth.
According to numerous philologists, the legend of the Apennine Sibyl is believed to have significantly influenced the German legend of Tannhäuser. This theory is based on the numerous parallels observed between these two narratives and the story of Guerin Meschino. [4]
The underground complex was described, for the first time in 1420, by Antoine de la Sale who went to the cave on the orders of Duchess Agnes of Burgundy. [5] However, due to the landslides that had occurred in the early Middle Ages inside the cave, he could only draw (with rare precision) the topographical plan of the vestibule of the cave which is still preserved intact. This document is preserved in the National Library of France.
In the mid-20th century, Lippi-Boncambi provided a recent and reliable description of the cave, which largely aligns with the earlier account by de la Sale. Lippi-Boncambi was among the final visitors to the cave prior to the collapse of its entrance. This unfortunate event was precipitated by the imprudent use of explosives, intended to widen the entrance, but instead resulted in its permanent closure. [6]
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Antoine de la Sale was a French courtier, educator and writer. He participated in a number of military campaigns in his youth and he only began writing when he had reached middle age, in the late 1430s. He lived in Italy at the time, but returned to France in the 1440s, where he acted as umpire in tournaments, and he wrote a treatise on the history of the knightly tournament in 1459. He became the tutor of the sons of Louis de Luxembourg, Count of Saint-Pol, to whom he dedicated a moral work in 1451. His most successful work was Little John of Saintré, written in 1456, when he was reaching the age of seventy.
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Sibilla may refer to:
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