BOCCACCIO, GIOVANNI

jōvänˈnē, 1313–75, Italian poet and storyteller, author of the Decameron. Born in Paris, the illegitimate son of a Tuscan merchant and a French woman, he was educated at Certaldo and Naples by his father, who wanted him to take up commerce and law. In Naples he met (1336) the woman (dubiously identified as Maria d'Aquino, illegitimate daughter of King Robert) whom he was to immortalize in prose and verse as Fiammetta. She is reputed to have introduced him at court and to have urged him to write (c.1340) his early Filocolo, a long vernacular prose romance. Other early works include the poem Filostrato, which infused the legendary story of Troilus and Cressida with the atmosphere of Neapolitan court life; the Teseide, a poem in the style of the Aeneid; the psychological romance La Fiammetta (written c.1344); the pastoral Ninfale d'Ameto; and the allegorical Amorosa visione, imitative of Dante.

Boccaccio was recalled to Florence in 1341, and there he met (1350) the great poet Petrarch, who became a lifelong friend. Emulating Petrarch, he became a Latin and Greek scholar and worked vigorously to reintroduce Greek works. In his middle years Boccaccio wrote (1348–53) his great secular classic, the Decameron, a collection of 100 witty and occasionally licentious tales set against the somber background of the Black Death. The tales treat a wide variety of characters and events and brilliantly reveal humanity as sensual, tender, cruel, weak, self-seeking, and ludicrous. With the Decameron the courtly themes of medieval literature began to give way to the voice and mores of early modern society. Boccaccio achieved stylistic mastery in the Decameron, which became a model for later efforts toward a distinctively Italian style. After completing the tales, Boccaccio experienced a severe emotional crisis, during which he wrote the satire Corbaccio, a savage attack on the female sex.

In the next years there followed several works in Latin, the language of high culture. These included Bucolicum carmen [pastoral songs], the huge De casibus virorem illustrium and De mulieribus claris (the first biographies of famous men, the second of famous women), the mythological treatise De genealogiis, and the geographical dictionary De montibus. Boccaccio's old age was troubled by poverty and ill health, but his activity continued. He was commissioned (1371) by the commune of Certaldo to read daily from his beloved Dante, and in 1373 in Florence he began the lectures which became his famous Commento on the Inferno. There are several translations of the Decameron and also many anthologies and collections of particular stories in translation.

See biography by T. C. Chubb (1969); studies by V. Branca (1976), T. G. Bergin (1981), and J. Sauli (1982).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Boccaccio Giovanni  - 1142 results

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...and it is for this reason that Boccaccio alludes to him in writing to Acciaiuoli...cit., p. 149. Among them were Giovanni di Torre, Lorenzo di Ravello, Giovanni...Studi sulle Opere Latine di Gio. Boccaccio etc. Trieste, 1979 , p. 399...
...discussing the variety of meanings employed by Boccaccio, Hollander concludes Unlike Dante, he Boccaccio does, not wish to make us live or pray...selfishness: Giotto, Cavalcanti, and Giovanni Boccaccio himself. p. 321 . My position is less...
...ISBN 0 333 97008 X 1. Chaucer, Geoffrey, d. 1400 Knowledge Literature. 2. Boccaccio, Giovanni, 1313 1375 Appreciation England. 3. Boccaccio, Giovanni, 1313-1375 Influence. 4. Chaucer, Geoffrey, d. 1400 Sources. 5. English...
Boccaccio, Giovanni, Genealogia deorum gentilium libri , edited by V. Romano. 2 vols. Bari, 1951...The University of Chicago Manuscript of the Genealogia deorum gentilium of Boccaccio. Chicago, 1927.
...to accept -- it is the only chivalrous option -- and a refusal would ____________________ 8 Giovanni Boccaccio, The Decameron , trans. J. M. Rigg London, 1963 , 133.
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journal articles on: Boccaccio Giovanni  - 137 results

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Giovanni Boccaccio: Theseid of the Nuptials of Emilia...and often unrelated to, those by Boccaccio himself, and are full of unresolved...of expression is sometimes wanting (Boccaccio was certainly awed by the presence of...
The Ghost of Boccaccio: Writings on Famous Women...Kolsky. The Ghost of Boccaccio: Writings on Famous Women...52190-8. The Ghost of Boccaccio originated with Stephen...court (7, 118-19). Giovanni Sabadino degli Arienti...
...Barolini, Teodolinda. "Giovanni Boccaccio" in: European Writers...Ragionare nel giardino: Boccaccio e i cicli pittorici...Turnhout. Boccaccia, Giovanni. 1992. Decameron...Branca, Virrore. 1981. Boccaccio medievale e nuovi studi...
...Branca, in Tutte le opere di Giovanni Boccaccio, 10 vols (Milan: Mondadori...of Il Ninfale fiesolano by Giovanni Boccaccio, and Newes and Strange Newes...giornate del Decamerone di M. Giovanni Boccaccio, ed. by Christina Roaf...
...York: St. Martins, 1998), 61-83. (10) Giovanni Boccaccio, Decameron, ed. Vittore Branca (Turin: Einaudi...translations from G. H. McWilliam, trans., Giovanni Boccaccio, The Decameron (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1972...
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...the Florentine survivors was Giovanni Boccaccio, author of the Decameron and...introduction to the Decameron, Boccaccio announces that the aim of his...fields left to rot. According to Boccaccio, between March and July a hundred...
...remarkable letter by the Florentine man of letters Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-75). Boccaccio, though not himself present, conveys the...handsome and well-mannered--more so, Boccaccio insists, than many Europeans. He was impressed...
...a work by the Italian author Giovanni Boccaccio (boh-KAH-chee-oh) (1313...at the bottom right approach Boccaccio at his lectern in the lower left...Questions about Meaning 1) Why might Boccaccio have decided to place the story...
...destruction of human life. The Renaissance humanist Giovanni Boccaccio describes the indiscriminate and pervasive devastation...plague may have killed up to half the population. Boccaccio goes into great detail about human relations breaking...
...written account of having a culinary importance (Giovanni Boccaccio wrote in his Decameron of the mid-fourteenth century...Christmas and on other special occasions. A century after Boccaccio, a Parma cheese was mentioned in an important cookbook...
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Boccaccio Anthology Features De Sica, Fellini...of the milestone 1962 Italian anthology Boccaccio 70 ($29.95). Its our ... DVD pick...quartet of tales from 14th-century author Giovanni Boccaccios "The Decameron." Tops is...
...to the work of Italian writer Giovanni Boccaccio who witnessed the horrifying...Decameron, set in Florence in 1348. Boccaccio and other chroniclers described...and attacked mainly children. Boccaccio and other late-medieval writers...
...control pioneer 79. Catherine the Great of Russia 80. Giovanni Boccaccio, C14th writer 81. Sir Edmund Hillary, explorer 82...Stirling Moss, British motor racing driver 599. Giovanni Bellini, painter 600. James Stewart, US film actor...
...Series - 6 p.m. "The Decameron" is based on the original collection of stories written by 14th century author Giovanni Boccaccio. Room 100, Willamette Hall. Free. 346-5027. WEDNESDAY Lecture - 6 p.m. Artists featured in the exhibit...
...give up. No use being a fool about it." - W.C. Fields. "Do as we say, not as we do." - Italian writer Giovanni Boccaccio. "Im not young enough to know everything." - Author James Barrie in The Admirable Crichton. "Players and spectators...
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encyclopedia articles on: Boccaccio Giovanni  - 9 results

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BOCCACCIO, GIOVANNI jovan ne, 1313 75, Italian poet and...Amorosa visione, imitative of Dante. Boccaccio was recalled to Florence in 1341...reintroduce Greek works. In his middle years Boccaccio wrote (1348 53) his great secular...
BOCCACCINO, BOCCACCIO bok-kat cho bok-katche no, c.1465 1525. Italian artist, b...with Saints derive from Venetian models, particularly from those of Giovanni Bellini. His most impressive work is the fresco cycle of the Life...
DECAMERON see Boccaccio, Giovanni . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...The Merchant of Venice 1596 1600 Giovanni Fiorentino, Il Pecarone (1558...Mariana Comedy Othello 1604 1622 Giovanni Battista Giraldi ("Cinthio...Holinshed, Chronicles (1587); Giovanni Boccaccio, Decameron (1348 53) Cymbeline...
...classical figures (e.g., Cicero and Ovid). Giovanni Boccaccio , a follower of Petrarch, wrote works that include...of melodies, successfully within a composition. Giovanni Pierluigi Palestrina also composed mainly religious...
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