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This chapter explores the way in which Dante forges an original form of religiosity in his work by embracing Franciscan and apocalyptic ideas. It focuses on three aspects: the prophetic spirit that animates Danteās critique of the Church and his call for spiritual renewal; his emphasis on the transformative power of prayer and its role in the poetās construction of his spiritual authority; and the celebration of the female role in salvation through the figures of Lady Poverty and Beatrice. Franciscan thought on Poverty, from Joachim of Flora to radicals such as Ubertino da Casale and Peter John Olivi, informs Danteās theological (but also political and spiritual) reflections on religion. Moreover, Danteās personal exile becomes a metaphor for Christian peregrinations on earth, a figura of homo viatorās pilgrimage toward the final destination in the afterlife.