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         Boccaccio Giovanni:     more books (54)
  1. The Decameron / Giovanni Boccaccio ; translated by G. H. McWilliam by Giovanni (1313-1375) Boccaccio, 1979-01-01
  2. Decameron / Giovanni Boccaccio ; the John Payne translation, revised and annotated by Charles S. Singleton [complete in two volumes with a 3rd supplementary volume of notes and commentary] by Giovanni (1313-1375) Boccaccio, 1982-01-01
  3. The Decameron or Ten days' Entertainment of Boccaccio by Giovanni (1313-1375) Boccaccio, 1926-01-01
  4. Stories of Boccaccio (The Decameron), tr. from the Italian into English, with eleven original etchings by Leopold Flameng by Giovanni (1313-1375) - Related names: Payne, John (1842-1916) tr; Fla Boccaccio, 1920
  5. The Decameron, Volume II by Giovanni, 1313-1375 Boccaccio, 2009-10-04
  6. Concerning famous women / translated with an introduction and notes, by Guido A.Guarino by Giovanni (1313-1375) Boccaccio, 1964-01-01
  7. Opere volgari di Giovanni Boccaccio, cor, su i testi a penna Volume 12-13 (Italian Edition) by Boccaccio Giovanni 1313-1375, Moutier Ignazio ed, 2010-10-14
  8. Opere volgari di Giovanni Boccaccio, cor, su i testi a penna Volume 16-17 (Italian Edition) by Boccaccio Giovanni 1313-1375, Moutier Ignazio ed, 2010-10-14
  9. Decameron Von Heinrich Steinhowel (German Edition) by Boccaccio Giovanni 1313-1375, 2010-10-14
  10. Le Philocope De Messire Iean Boccace Florentin: Contenant L'histoire De Fleury & Blanchefleur. (French Edition) by Boccaccio Giovanni 1313-1375, Sevin Adrien, 2010-10-15
  11. The Decameron or Ten Days Entertainment of Boccaccio (Giovanni, 1313-1375) by Boccaccio, 1905-01-01
  12. Tales from Boccaccio. by Boccaccio. Giovanni. 1313-1375., 1918-01-01
  13. Boccaccio 's Olympia. ed. with an English rendering. by Israel G by Boccaccio. Giovanni. 1313-1375., 1913-01-01
  14. Pearl : an English poem of the 14th century by Giovanni, 1313-1375 Boccaccio, 2009-10-26

1. Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-1375) Italian Writer.
(13131375) Italian writer. Giovanni Boccaccio is most famous for The Decameron (1353), which was first translated into English in 1620.
http://classiclit.about.com/od/boccacciogiovanni/Boccaccio_Giovanni.htm
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Classic Literature
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    A-to-Z Writers A-to-Z Writers B - Writers - Last Names Boccaccio, Giovanni
    Boccaccio, Giovanni
    (1313-1375) Italian writer. Giovanni Boccaccio is most famous for "The Decameron" (1353), which was first translated into English in 1620. Books About The Plague The Plague has been a subject for literary writings for centuries. Writers from Giovanni Boccaccio to Albert Camus have used plagues and other diseases for dramatic and literary effect. Here's a list of just a few books that use the subject of the Plague. Giovanni Boccaccio - Who's Who in Medieval History You probably know he wrote the masterpiece The Decameron, and that his work helped raise literature in the vernacular to the respectability of classical texts. Boccaccio: The Ultimate Survivor Was Il Decamerone the precursor to reality-based TV shows? Regarded as a masterpiece and a model for Italian classical prose, Boccaccio's influence on Renaissance literature was enormous and continues even in contemporary times.
  • 2. Giovanni Boccaccio Biography
    Giovanni Boccaccio biography and related resources.
    http://www.biographybase.com/biography/Boccaccio_Giovanni.html
    Biography Base Home Link To Us Search Biographies: Browse Biographies A B C D ... Z Giovanni Boccaccio Biography Giovanni Boccaccio (June 16, 1313 - December 21, 1375) was a Florentine author and poet, the greatest of Petrarch's disciples, an important Renaissance humanist in his own right and author of a number of notable works including On Famous Women, the Decameron and his poems in the vernacular.
    The exact details of his birth are uncertain. He was almost certainly a bastard, the son of a Florentine banker and an unknown woman. An early biographer claimed his mother was a Parisien and that the city was also the place of his birth, this has been largely depreciated as a romanticism and his place of birth is more likely to have been in Tuscany, perhaps in Certaldo, the town of his father.
    Boccaccio grew up in Florence. His father was working for the Compagnia dei Bardi and in the 1320s married Margherita del Mardoli, of an illustrious family. It is believed Boccaccio was tutored by Giovanni Mazzuoli and received from him an early introduction to the works of Dante. Around 1327 Boccaccio moved to Naples when his father was appointed to head the Neopolitan branch of his bank, Boccaccio was apprenticed to the bank and spent six years there. It was a trade for which he had no affinity and he eventually persuaded his father to let him study law at the Studium in the city. However, his father had introduced him into the Neopolitan nobility and the French-influenced court of Robert the Wise. Boccaccio had become a friend of fellow-Florentine Nicola Acciaiuoli and benefitted from his influence as lover of Catherine of Valois, later counsellor to Queen Joanna and the "Grand Seneschal".

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    4. Boccaccio, Giovanni - Search View - MSN Encarta
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    The search seeks the exact word or phrase that you type, so if you don’t find your choice, try searching for a keyword in your topic or recheck the spelling of a word or name. Boccaccio, Giovanni Boccaccio, Giovanni (1313-1375), Italian poet and humanist, a great author of lasting importance. Boccaccio was probably born in Tuscany, either in Certaldo or Florence, the illegitimate son of a Florentine merchant and a French noblewoman. Reared in Florence, he was sent to study business in Naples about 1323. He abandoned these studies for canon law and gave that up for classical and scientific studies. He took part in the life of the court of Robert d'Anjou, king of Naples. The king is supposed to have had an illegitimate daughter, Maria de Conti d'Aquino. Although proof of her existence has not been established, she is said to have been Boccaccio's mistress and to have inspired a great deal of his work. She is, perhaps, the Fiammetta immortalized in his writings. Returning to Florence in about 1340, Boccaccio performed various diplomatic services for the city government, and in 1350 he met the celebrated poet and humanist Petrarch, with whom he maintained a close friendship until Petrarch's death in 1374. In 1362 Boccaccio was invited to Naples by a friend, who promised him the patronage of Queen Joanna of that city. A cold reception at the court of the queen led him to seek the hospitality of Petrarch, who was then in Venice (1363). Rejecting Petrarch's offer of a home, however, he returned to his estate in Certaldo (near Florence). Boccaccio's last years, in which he turned to religious meditation, were brightened by his appointment in 1373 as lecturer on Dante. His series of lectures was interrupted by his illness in 1374, and he died the next year.

    5. Giovanni Boccaccio
    Giovanni Boccaccio (1313–75) Encyclopædia Orbis Latini. Italian poet and storyteller, author of the Decameron. Born in Paris, the illegitimate son of a
    http://www.orbilat.com/Encyclopaedia/B/Boccaccio_Giovanni.html
    Giovanni Boccaccio (1313–75)
    Italian poet and storyteller, author of the Decameron. Born in Paris, the illegitimate son of a Tuscan merchant by 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 had been 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

    6. Boccaccio, Giovanni, 1313-1375: Free Web Books, Online
    Project Gutenberg Consortia Center, Classic Literature Online, a member of the World eBook Library Consortia, World s Largest eBook Collection.
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    Giovanni Boccaccio, 1313-1375
    Biographical note
    Giovanni Boccaccio (born 1313 in Paris - December 21, 1375 in Florence) was the greatest of Petrarch's disciples and an important renaissance humanist in his own right. He was a great scholar of the classics, especially Tacitus and Livy. His own works included On Famous Women, the Decameron and the Tale of Filippa (which is a celebrated story within the Decameron). Boccaccio's characters are notable for their era in that they are realistic, spirited and clever individuals who are grounded in reality (In contradiction to the characters of his contemporaries, who were more concerned with the Medieval virtues of Chivalry, Piety and Humility). His greatest legacy is, however, his poems in the vernacular. In later life he turned to Christianity and repudiated many of his earlier works. His Decameron - named because its intent was to produce 10 stories by 10 travellers - was an important influence on Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales.

    7. Boccaccio, Giovanni : Medieval : Periods & Movements - Mega Net
    Read summaries of the Italian writer s life and work from these sources on medieval literature. Check out overviews, essays and directories about Giovanni
    http://www.mega-net.net/library/humanities/literature/periods_and_movements/medi
    Login Search Mega Net: Home Library Humanities Literature ... Medieval : Boccaccio, Giovanni Texts Harvard's Chaucer site details Boccaccio's influence on Chaucer. Read several tales from the "Decameron" that are mirrored by Chaucer's stories. http://www.courses.fas.harvard.edu/~chaucer/special/authors/boccaccio/
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    8. Giovanni Boccaccio
    Programme Name Details. Decameron By GIOVANNI BOCCACCIO, translated by Jonathan Dryden Taylor, adapted in three parts by Don Taylor.
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    Programme Name: Details: Decameron ...By GIOVANNI BOCCACCIO , translated by Jonathan Dryden Taylor, adapted in three parts by Don Taylor. 1: In 14th-century Florence, ten young aristocrats escape to the country to avoid the Black Death. To pass the time of their exile, they tell each other stories. With Roger Allam as Boccaccio, Rebecca Front as Pampinea, and John Grillo as Bernabo. Director Don Taylor. With Emilia Fox, David Threlfall and Brigit Forsyth ... Sound Stories ...Peggy Reynolds profiles GIOVANNI BOCCACCIO , author of `The Decameron', whose works influenced Chaucer, Shakespeare, Dryden and Keats. Including Gherardello da Firenze: I' vo' bene. Esther Lamandier. Suppe: Boccaccio (excerpts). Elisabeth Schwarzkopf (soprano), Philharmonia/Otto Ackermann. Bononcini: Per la gloria d'Adorarvi (Griselda). Luciano Pavarotti (tenor), Bologna Municipal Theatre Orchestra/Richard Bonynge. Vivaldi: Agitata da due venti (Griselda). Kate Eckersley (soprano), Fiori Musicali....
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    9. Boccaccio Giovanni - Search Results - MSN Encarta
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    From : Miette's Bedtime Story Podcast
    Much as I would love to read the entire Decameron, and one day maybe I will (when the sound quality is improved to the point where I no longer sound like a podcastrati and yes I am working on it!), for now, here s enough of an excerpt to give you pleasantest of dreams of romance in the time of plague. Besides, it doesn t get much more hypercritically metatextual, reading a bedtime story that is a bedtime story being read. Until the day comes when I m able to read the entire book, when you and I are all up all night tossing with the need for more words (and what a day that ll be), you can read The Decameron yourselves if you want to pay for it. Now, please go to bed. You need your rest. Sweet dreams. Don t eat fowl. ]]> Wed, 23 Mar 2005 03:13:02 -0500

    11. BizCar - English Language Books: Books: Boccaccio, Giovanni
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    Bestsellers The Decameron (Penguin Classics) The Decameron (Signet Classics) Decameron (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature) (Wordsworth World Literature) Famous Women (The I Tatti Renaissance Library) ... The Decameron (Classic Literature with Classical Music) BizCar - English Language Books: International supplier of books in the English language Boccaccio, Giovanni Sort by: Bestselling Featured Items Reviews (High to Low) Price (Low to High) Price (High to Low) Publication Date (Newer to Older) Alphabetical (A-Z) Alphabetical (Z-A) Showing items 1-10 of 70 enlarge The Decameron (Penguin Classics) Author: Giovanni Boccaccio List Price: $15.00 (35.31 RON) Buy New: $10.20 (24.01 RON) You Save: $4.80 (11.30 RON) (32%) Avg. Customer Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: Category: Book ASIN: Publication Date: April 29, 2003 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours enlarge The Decameron (Signet Classics) Author: Giovanni Boccaccio Buy New: $7.95 (18.72 RON)

    12. Boccaccio Giovanni: Art And Artist Resources For Medieval Links In The Literatur
    Boccaccio Giovanni art / artists links Medieval Periods and Movements, Literature directory. Boccaccio Giovanni resources.
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    14. Giovanni Boccaccio - AskTheBrain.com
    Detailed profile of Giovanni Boccaccio from AskTheBrain.com The world s first computer generated encyclopedia.
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    Ask the Brain! :) Ok "Brain", what's the deal with Both Vital Stats Expert Opinions
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    Giovanni Bellini Don Giovanni Giovanni Ribisi ... Boccaccio Vital Stats The Brain has inferred the following facts from reading text collected on the topic: Most admires: T S Eliot, Robert Frost Favorite artist(s): Sandro Botticelli, Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci Favorite author(s): Dante Alighieri, Machiavelli, Niccolo Favorite TV show(s): The Sopranos Favorite book(s): The Bible Favorite great thinker(s): Galileo Galilei Favorite royal(s): Mary of the Scots, Anne Boleyn, Catherine Medicis Favorite movie(s): Baraka Favorite destination(s): Italy Favorite philosopher(s): Nicolo Machiavelli Favorite quote(s): "He is one of those people who would be enormously improved by death." - H. H. Munro (Saki) (1870-1916) Expert Talk The Brain has selected interesting relevant sentences from the web. It automatically assigned them to some of our fictitious experts based on their personalities.
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    15. Boccaccio, Giovanni - Printer-friendly - Ninemsn Encarta
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    var s_account="msnportalencartaau"; Print Boccaccio, Giovanni Article View On the File menu, click Print to print the information. Boccaccio, Giovanni Boccaccio, Giovanni (1313-1375), Italian poet and humanist, a great author of lasting importance. Boccaccio was probably born in Tuscany, either in Certaldo or Florence, the illegitimate son of a Florentine merchant and a French noblewoman. Reared in Florence, he was sent to study business in Naples about 1323. He abandoned these studies for canon law and gave that up for classical and scientific studies. He took part in the life of the court of Robert d'Anjou, king of Naples. The king is supposed to have had an illegitimate daughter, Maria de Conti d'Aquino. Although proof of her existence has not been established, she is said to have been Boccaccio's mistress and to have inspired a great deal of his work. She is, perhaps, the Fiammetta immortalized in his writings. Returning to Florence in about 1340, Boccaccio performed various diplomatic services for the city government, and in 1350 he met the celebrated poet and humanist Petrarch, with whom he maintained a close friendship until Petrarch's death in 1374. In 1362 Boccaccio was invited to Naples by a friend, who promised him the patronage of Queen Joanna of that city. A cold reception at the court of the queen led him to seek the hospitality of Petrarch, who was then in Venice (1363). Rejecting Petrarch's offer of a home, however, he returned to his estate in Certaldo (near Florence). Boccaccio's last years, in which he turned to religious meditation, were brightened by his appointment in 1373 as lecturer on Dante. His series of lectures was interrupted by his illness in 1374, and he died the next year.

    16. Boccaccio Giovanni-Premio Al Decameron PDF E-Mail Martes, 23 De
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    18. American Literature Subject Directory
    Boccaccio – Biography. Biography Base. http//www.biographybase. com/biography/Boccaccio_Giovanni.html. DECAMERON – SITES. Decameron Web
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    World Literature
    By Author A - L Aeschylus Aristophanes Aristotle ... Vergil Selections from World Literature - General Resources and Individual Writers Updated 9/28/05 http://www.mala.bc.ca/~johnstoi/introser/oedipus.htm Introduction to the Oracle at Delphi http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cl135/Students/Leslie_DesMarteau/delphi.htm http://www.ozmore.com/greek/oracles.html Women and Gender in the Ancient World http://www.stoa.org/diotima/ AESCHYLUS Updated 9/14/05 http://www.gradesaver.com/ClassicNotes/Authors/about_aeschylus.html Aeschylus and his Tragedies http://www.theatrehistory.com/ancient/aeschylus001.html http://books.mirror.org/gb.aeschylus.html ARISTOPHANES Updated 9/14/05 Perseus Encyclopedia http://www.theatrehistory.com/ancient/aristophanes001.html Political and Social Satire of Aristophanes http://www.theatrehistory.com/ancient/aristophanes003.html

    19. Dryden, John - Related Items - MSN Encarta
    MSN homeMailMy MSNSign in. encartagreeting cardsmore. Envelope Hotmail im Messenger Figure of person in front of computer monitor My MSN
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    20. Italica - Rinascimento - Parole Chiave
    Translate this page Letterato nato nel 1313 probabilmente a Certaldo o a Firenze e morto a Certaldo il 21 dicembre 1375. Figlio naturale del ricco mercante Boccaccino di
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    Giovanni Boccaccio Cino da Pistoia mecenate di
    Dante
    , e venne a contatto con testimonianze conoscenti del poeta fiorentino.
    Nel 1348 assistette alla terribile peste che sconvolse Firenze, distrutta nei due terzi della popolazione, e subì la perdita di cari amici, come Giovanni Villani , Franceschino Albizzi, Francesco da Barberino, Sennuccio del Bene. Come è noto, il motivo tragico della peste venne poi inserito come cornice della più famosa opera di Boccaccio, il Decameron
    Sempre nel 1350 egli conobbe Petrarca animus petrarchesco, ricavandone una tendenza alla meditazione e ad un maggior rigore morale. Attorno al loro sodalizio, si formò un cenacolo letterario, dedito a valori già di impronta umanistica, come il recupero filologico dei classici e la loro rivalutazione.
    Nonostante gli impegni civili e politici relativi a Firenze fossero di livello elevato e di responsabilità, Boccaccio non resistette alla tentazione di tornare a Napoli: convinto da Nicola Acciaiuoli , illudendosi di avere il posto da segretario lasciato libero da Zanobi da Strada
    La crisi fiorentina del 1360 e forse una sopraggiunta stanchezza portarono Boccaccio a ritirarsi a Certaldo, in una solitudine dedita agli studi letterari, distolta solo da alcuni incarichi diplomatici. Tra gli ultimi impegni, troviamo la lettura pubblica e il commento di Dante nella chiesa di Santo Stefano di Badia, su affidamento del Comune fiorentino. Colpito dalla malattia, interruppe le letture, affidò la sua

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