<P> Canto XXX Suddenly, two spirits--Gianni Schicchi de' Cavalcanti and Myrrha, both punished as Imposters (Falsifiers of Persons)--run rabid through the pit . Schicchi sinks his tusks into Capocchio's neck and drags him away like prey . Griffolino explains how Myrrha disguised herself to commit incest with her father King Cinyras, while Schicchi impersonated the dead Buoso Donati to dictate a will giving himself several profitable bequests . Dante then encounters Master Adam of Brescia, one of the Counterfeiters (Falsifiers of Money): for manufacturing Florentine florins of twenty - one (rather than twenty - four) carat gold, he was burned at the stake in 1281 . He is punished by a loathsome dropsy - like disease, which gives him a bloated stomach, prevents him from moving, and an eternal, unbearable thirst . Master Adam points out two sinners of the fourth class, the Perjurers (Falsifiers of Words). These are Potiphar's wife (punished for her false accusation of Joseph, Gen. 39: 7 - 19) and Sinon, the Achaean spy who lied to the Trojans to convince them to take the Trojan Horse into their city (Aeneid II, 57 - 194); Sinon is here rather than in Bolgia 8 because his advice was false as well as evil . Both suffer from a burning fever . Master Adam and Sinon exchange abuse, which Dante watches until he is rebuked by Virgil . As a result of his shame and repentance, Dante is forgiven by his guide . Sayers remarks that the descent through Malebolge "began with the sale of the sexual relationship, and went on to the sale of Church and State; now, the very money is itself corrupted, every affirmation has become perjury, and every identity a lie" so that every aspect of social interaction has been progressively destroyed . </P> <P> Canto XXXI Dante and Virgil approach the Central Well, at the bottom of which lies the Ninth and final Circle of Hell . The classical and biblical Giants--who perhaps symbolize pride and other spiritual flaws lying behind acts of treachery--stand perpetual guard inside the well - pit, their legs embedded in the banks of the Ninth Circle while their upper halves rise above the rim and can be visible from the Malebolge . Dante initially mistakes them for great towers of a city . Among the Giants, Virgil identifies Nimrod (who tried to build the Tower of Babel; he shouts out the unintelligible Raphèl mai amècche zabì almi); Ephialtes (who with his brother Otus tried to storm Olympus during the Gigantomachy; he has his arms chained up) and Briareus (who Dante claimed to have challenged the Gods); and Tityos and Typhon, who insulted Jupiter . Also here is the Giant Antaeus, who did not join in the rebellion against the Olympian Gods and therefore is not chained . At Virgil's persuasion, Antaeus takes the Poets in his large palm and lowers them gently to the final level of Hell . </P> <P> Canto XXXII At the base of the well, Dante finds himself within a large frozen lake: Cocytus, the Ninth Circle of Hell . Trapped in the ice, each according to his guilt, are punished sinners guilty of treachery against those with whom they had special relationships . The lake of ice is divided into four concentric rings (or "rounds") of traitors corresponding, in order of seriousness, to betrayal of family ties, betrayal of community ties, betrayal of guests, and betrayal of lords . This is in contrast to the popular image of Hell as fiery; as Ciardi writes, "The treacheries of these souls were denials of love (which is God) and of all human warmth . Only the remorseless dead center of the ice will serve to express their natures . As they denied God's love, so are they furthest removed from the light and warmth of His Sun . As they denied all human ties, so are they bound only by the unyielding ice ." This final, deepest level of hell is reserved for traitors, betrayers and oathbreakers (its most famous inmate is Judas Iscariot). </P> <Ul> <Li> Round 1--Caïna: this round is named after Cain, who killed his own brother in the first act of murder (Gen. 4: 8). This round houses the Traitors to their Kindred: they have their necks and heads out of the ice and allowed to bow their heads, allowing some protection from the freezing wind . Here Dante sees the brothers Alessandro and Napoleone degli Alberti, who killed each other over their inheritance and their politics some time between 1282 and 1286 . Camiscion de' Pazzi, a Ghibelline who murdered his kinsman Ubertino, identifies several other sinners: Mordred (traitorous nephew of King Arthur); Vanni de' Cancellieri, nicknamed Focaccia (a White Guelph of Pistoia who killed his cousin, Detto de' Cancellieri); and Sassol Mascheroni of the noble Toschi family of Florence (murdered a relative). Camicion is aware that, in July 1302, his relative Carlino de' Pazzi would accept a bribe to surrender the Castle of Piantravigne to the Blacks, betraying the Whites . As a traitor to his party, Carlino belongs in Antenora, the next circle down--his greater sin will make Camiscion look virtuous by comparison . </Li> </Ul>

Who is in the 9th circle of hell
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