
Boccaccio, detail of a fresco by Andrea del Castagno; in the Cenacolo di Sant'Apollonia, Florence.
(born 1313, Paris, France—died Dec. 21, 1375, Certaldo, Tuscany) Italian poet and scholar. His life was full of difficulties and occasional bouts of poverty. His early works include
The Love Afflicted (
circa 1336), a prose work in five books, and
The Book of Theseus (
circa 1340), an ambitious epic of 12 cantos. He is best known for his
Decameron, a masterpiece of classical Italian prose that had an enormous influence on literature throughout Europe. A group of 100 earthy tales united by a frame story, it was probably composed 1348–53. After this period he turned to humanist scholarship in Latin. With
Petrarch, he laid the foundations for Renaissance humanism, and through his writings in Italian he helped raise vernacular literature to the level of the classics of antiquity.
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Encyclopedia Britannica, 2008. Encyclopedia Britannica Online.