![DeMatha High School Class, Mountain of Purgatory in Minecraft (2020)](https://www.dantetoday.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Minecraft-Purgatorio-DeMatha-High-School-Students-Homer-Twigg-In-Exitu-Israel-768x407-1.jpg)
DeMatha High School Class, Mountain of Purgatory in Minecraft (2020)
In 2019, Juniors Jack Batton and Connor Smith of DeMatha High School (Hyattsville, MD) designed a playable Minecraft version of the Mountain of Purgatory as their final project for DeMatha theology instructor Homer Twigg’s unit on the Purgatorio. The mountain is organized by terrace, each labeled with corresponding cantos. The terraces depict figures of the penitents engaged in their purgations; pictured at left is the wall of fire on the terrace of Lust. The project was presented at the Academic Symposium at Catholic University in Spring 2019, and a video walkthrough of the world is accessible on YouTube (last accessed December 26, 2024).
In early 2020, Jonas Long, Chris Allen, Thomas Mesafint, Gray Griffin, Seth Barnes (DeMatha HS) took the original concept developed by Batton and Smith and greatly expanded on it in terms of size, detail and complexity. They also have made their map publicly accessible for other teachers and students of Dante to explore and contribute to in the future. Screenshots (right; below) are of the server, and instructions to access the server can be found here (link broken as of December 26, 2024).
We thank the designers and Homer Twigg for their permission to share the documents.
Sighting Citation:
“DeMatha High School Class, Mountain of Purgatory in Minecraft (2020).” Dante Today: Citings and Sightings of Dante’s Works in Contemporary Culture. Elizabeth Coggeshall and Arielle Saiber, eds. April 24, 2020. https://www.dantetoday.org/sightings/dematha-high-school-class-mountain-of-purgatory-in-minecraft-2020/.