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Giovanni Boccaccio

Literature / Writers Datebook: June 16

 

Brief biography 14th Century Italian Renaissance writer Giovanni Boccaccio. Famous for The Decameron.


Giovanni Boccaccio was an important Renaissance writer. He is remembered in particular for his greatest work The Decameron. His prose and poetry inspired many English writers, including Geoffrey Chaucer and William Shakespeare.

The Decameron is one of the most popular books ever written and led to a revolution in Italian literature. It's been said that the book's framework for the stories most likely influenced Geoffrey Chaucer's schemes for The Canterbury Tales. 

 

Early Life of Giovanni Boccaccio

Boccaccio (1313-1375), was the son of a wealthy merchant in Florence, Italy. He studied law at Naples, but his real interest was in writing. As a young man he entered the court of King Robert of Anjou in western France. There he fell in love with a beautiful noblewoman. From then on this lady inspired his writings. She constantly appeared as the character Fiammetta.

At the age of 27, his father's business failed. Bocccaccio was recalled to Florence. At the time a bubonic plague, known as the "Black Death," spread over Europe and approached Italy. This inspired him to write the prose work for which he has been famous for, The Decameron,  which means "ten days's work."

 

Boccaccio's Masterpiece The Decameron

The Decameron is regarded as one of the earliest works of fiction. Its setting is a villa outside Florence, where a group of young people have gathered to escape the plague-stricken place for the countryside. The book consists of 100 stories told by members of the group, ten young people, over a period of ten days. The principal character is Fiammetta. These stories deal mainly with every aspect of love, from the most pure of sexuality to the most down-to-earth of bodily functions. 

 

Boccaccio the Poet

Boccaccio also wrote fine poetry. Encouraged by his friend Petrarch, Boccaccio developed his scholarly interest in the work of ancient Greek and Roman writers, and in particular, of the great Italian poet, Dante Alighieri.

 

Boccaccio the Scholar

Giovanni Boccaccio, besides being an accomplished author, was a scholar who led the Renaissance revival of classical learning. He wrote Latin treatises including On Famous Women and On the Genealogies of the Gentile Gods. He died at the age of c.62.

 

Books by Giovanni Boccaccio

Filostrato, c.1338

Fiammetta, 1343

The Nymph of Fiesole, 1345

The Decameron, 1348-1353

The Genealogy of the Gentile Gods, c.1350-1360

Concerning Mountains, c.1355-1374

Concerning Famous Women, c.1360-1374

Life of Dante, 1362

 

Image Credit:

Giovanni Boccaccio. Wikipedia Commons / Public Domain

 

Resources:

Clark, John, Ed. Illustrated Biographical Dictionary. London: Chancellor Press, 1978

Goring, Rosemary, Ed. Larousse Dictionary of Writers. New York: Larousse, 1994

Payne, Tom. The A-Z of Great Writers. London: Carlton, 1997

 

(c) June 2010. Tel. Inspired Pen Web. All rights reserved. 

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