Place

Dante Memorial Statue

A large statue in front of a building.
Dante Memorial Statue

NPS / Claire Hassler

Quick Facts
Location:
Meridian Hill Park
Significance:
Statue

Historical/Interpretive Information/Exhibits

Dante Aligheri was an Italian poet best known for his 1320 work, "The Divine Comedy," an allegorical representation of the afterlife according to the Catholic faith. The statue was a gift from Carlo Barsotti of New York on behalf of Italian-born Americans. An Act of Congress approved February 14, 1922 (42 Stat. 366) authorized its erection on public grounds. 

Cost: The cost was to produce the statue was $50,000. It was gifted to the United States free of charge.

Dedicated: December 1, 1921.

Sculptor: Ettore Ximenes (Rome, Italy)

Memorial Description

A bronze standing figure of Dante, renowned poet, shows him in the gown of a scholar and crowned with a laurel wreath, on a pedestal of sea-green granite.


Base, front:
DANTE

Base, back: 
DANTE ALIGHIERI / PRESENTED TO THE / CITY OF WASHINGTON / IN BEHALF OF THE / ITALIANS IN THE / UNITED STATES BY / COMM CARLO BARSOTTI

Statue base, just below the statues left foot: 
Roman Bronze Works N.Y.
 


For more information about Meridian Hill Park, visit the Meridian Hill Park Landing Page on the Rock Creek Park Website. 

Rock Creek Park

Last updated: August 19, 2025