There are also three of Dante’s own fellow-countrymen and contemporaries whose books he is most likely to have read, although he does not mention them:—Brunetto Latini the Florentine, Cecco d’ Ascoli, professor at Bologna, and Ristoro the monk of Arezzo.

Brunetto Latini is only mentioned once in Dante’s works, besides the passage in the Inferno already referred to. In the De Vulgari Eloquentia Brunetus Florentinus is mentioned with admiration as a distinguished man of letters, but blamed with other Tuscans for writing in his own local dialect.[124] Brunetto, who was born in Florence about 1210, was sent on an embassy in 1260 to Alfonso X. of Castile, the learned king under whose guidance the famous astronomical Tables had been drawn up. But on his way back to Florence he was met by the news that the Florentine Guelphs had been defeated at the disastrous battle of Montaperti,[125] and expelled from Florence; and as he belonged to this party he took refuge in France, first at Montpellier and afterwards in Paris. When the Guelphs had regained the ascendancy through their victory at Benevento in 1266 (where Manfred lost his life),[126] Brunetto returned to Florence, and his name subsequently appears in no less than thirty-five public documents as having been consulted by the government of his native city on various important matters. For the most part, moreover, it is recorded that his advice was followed. He died at a venerable old age in Florence in 1294, and was buried in the church of Santa Maria Maggiore.

It was while exiled in France that Brunetto wrote the Italian poem Il Tesoretto, in which he represents himself as a pilgrim on an allegorical journey; and from this Dante perhaps derived some suggestions for his Vision. The poem is incomplete, and breaks off at a tantalizing point, for Brunetto has just met Ptolemy on Mount Olympus, and has put a question to him: Ptolemy “rispose in questa guisa”[127]—and here the poem ends!

In France also he wrote Li Louvres dou Trésor, a great compendium of learning, in French prose. The first part treats of the Creation and Biblical history, and of the natural sciences; the second of ethics, rhetoric, and politics. In the section on astronomy which is included in the first part, Brunetto gives a very brief account of Ptolemy’s system, and the sizes and distances of the heavenly bodies as estimated by the Arabs: it seems to be based chiefly on Alfraganus. But beside the periods of the planets he adds in each case their astrological properties, as for instance:—

“Saturnus, qui est le souverain sor tous, est cruex et felons et de froide nature ... Jupiter ... ast dous et piteus et plains de biens.... Mars et chaus et bataillereus, et mauvais, et est apelez Diex de batailles.”[128]

When speaking of the two principal movements of the skies, he quotes a curious old idea which had been mentioned by Isidore of Seville, that they are in contrary directions because the tremendous speed of the diurnal motion would shake the whole universe to pieces if it were not that the seven planets go as it were to meet it, and soften its vehemence:—

“Li firmamenz court de orient en occident entre jor et nuit une fois, si roidement et si fort que sa pesanteur et so grandor la feroient tout tressaillir, se ne fussent les VII. planetes qui vont aussi comme a l’encontre dou firmament, et atemprent son cours selonc son erre.”[129]

The Acerba of Cecco d’Ascoli was another encyclopædic work, but in Italian verse. It was very much the fashion in those days to undertake a compilation of all kinds of knowledge, and this was doubtless very useful when few books could be owned by any single reader. Cecco had a considerable knowledge of natural science, and astrology was of great importance in his eyes. Though Dante never mentions him or his work, he can hardly have been ignorant of it, especially as he himself is mentioned in it.

Nor does he mention Ristoro of Arezzo, yet we find many ideas and expressions in Dante’s writings which are also in the Composizione del Mondo. Even if he did not borrow from it, the book is worth study by anyone interested in the popular astronomy of the thirteenth century. We learn from the author that he wrote his book in Arezzo, finishing it in the year 1282, that is about thirty years before Dante’s Convivio appeared. The opening words run:—

“Incominiciasi il libro della Composizione del Mondo colle sue cagioni: composto da Ristoro di Arezzo in quella nobilissima città ... etc.”[130]