The «Proemium in Historia Apollonii»: a possible source for the «Decameron»?

Main Article Content

William Robins

Abstract

The Proemium in Historia Apollonii is a short introduction to the Historia Apollonii regis Tyri extant in two manuscripts from fourteenth-century Italy. It constitutes an unusual instance of medieval theorizing about the narrative structure of the genre of ancient romance. In this article I present the text of the Proemium, evaluate the evidence it provides about the circulation and reception of the Historia Apollonii, and raise the possibility that this text might lie behind Boccaccio’s description of the narrative structure of the stories recounted in Day Two of the Decameron.

Article Details

Section
Saggi
Author Biography

William Robins, University of Toronto

William Robins is Associate Professor of English and Medieval Studies at the University of Toronto. In 2015 he was named President of Victoria University in the University of Toronto. His research focuses on intersections of Latin, Italian and English literary traditions in the Middle Ages. Publications include the critical edition of Antonio Pucci’s Cantari della Reina d’Oriente (2007, with Attilio Motta), and the edited collections Sacred and Profane in Chaucer and Medieval Literature (2010, with Robert Epstein) and Textual Cultures of Medieval Italy (2011).