The Hundred Tales Ten Florentines Told Each Other in a Country Villa to Wait Out the Black Death
Giovanni Boccaccio's *Decameron* (composed 1348–1353) frames its hundred tales as the entertainment of ten young Florentines — seven women, three men — who flee plague-stricken Florence for a country villa and tell each other ten stories a day for ten days. The frame story is the most substantial direct literary witness to the 1348 Florentine plague.
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