Historical Dictionary of Renaissance

BANDELLO, MATTEO

(1485-1561)
Italian courtier and author, born in Lombardy. He entered the Dominican order at Genoa about 1504 but eventually abandoned his monastic vows and pursued a career as court poet at the princely courts ofFerraraandMantuaand in the household of aVenetiangeneral, Cesare Fregoso. In 1537, while in France, he dedicated an Italian translation of Euripides'Hecubato the great patron of the French Renaissance,Margaret of Navarre. He became a particular favorite of thewomenof the courts he served, dedicating his many love poems (supposedly platonic) to them. He is best known, however, for a highly popular collection of racy vernacular stories, theNovelle/Tales, which were published between 1554 and 1573. These tales were modelled onGiovanni Boccaccio'sDecameron.Shakespearedrew on several of them for plots and characters in plays such asRomeo and Juliet,Much Ado About Nothing, andTwelfth Night. In 1542, following the death of Fregoso, Bandello returned to France and in 1550 became bishop of Agen.

  1. bandello, matteoBandello Matteo Writer born at Castelnuovo di Scrivia in Piedmont Italy in died Bishop of Agen France in dd Catholic Encyclopedia.Kevin Knight...Catholic encyclopedia
  2. bandello, matteoMatteo Bandello was a Dominican priest and courtier whose life and novelleem reveal the vicissitudes of the tumultuous political environment of sixteenthcentury Italy. Ba...Renaissance and Reformation 1500-1620_ A Biographical Dictionary