The Decameron
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- | {{Template}}'''''The Decameron''''' (subtitle: ''Prencipe Galeotto'') is a collection of 100 [[novella]]s by [[Italy|Italian]] author [[Giovanni Boccaccio]], probably begun in [[1350]] and finished in [[1353]]. It is a [[Medieval allegory|medieval allegorical]] work best known for its [[bawdy]] tales of love, appearing in all its possibilities from the [[erotic]] to the [[tragic]]. Other topics such as [[wit]] and witticism, practical jokes, the [[anti-clericalism|moral degeneracy of the clergy]] and worldly initiation also form part of the mosaic. Many notable writers such as [[Shakespeare]] and [[Chaucer]] are said to have borrowed from ''The Decameron'' (See ''Literary sources and influence of the Decameron'' below). | + | {{Template}}'''''The Decameron''''' (subtitle: ''Prencipe Galeotto'') is a collection of 100 [[novella]]s by [[Italy|Italian]] author [[Giovanni Boccaccio]], probably begun in [[1350]] and finished in [[1353]]. It is a [[Medieval allegory|medieval allegorical]] work best known for its [[bawdy]] tales of [[love]], appearing in all its possibilities from the [[erotic]] to the [[tragic]]. Other topics such as [[wit]] and witticism, practical jokes, the [[anti-clericalism|moral degeneracy of the clergy]] and worldly initiation also form part of the [[mosaic]]. Many notable writers such as [[Shakespeare]] and [[Chaucer]] are said to have borrowed from ''The Decameron'' (See ''Literary sources and influence of the Decameron'' below). |
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