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160:, who has refused to let the bodies of the vanquished be buried. At their entreaty, Teseo reroutes his army to Thebes (sending Ipolita on to Athens under guard) and there does battle against Creon. Teseo is victorious again. In the aftermath, Teseo's soldiers find two cousins nearly dead on the battlefield. They are Palemone and Arcita, who belong to the Theban royal family. So Teseo orders them taken with him to Athens to be imprisoned for life.
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to be leading a hunting party through that very grove. Learning who the combatants are and the cause of their dispute, he decrees that the two must fight it out formally in the lists, the victor to win the hand of Emilia. He gives the two a year to scour the world and gather a hundred of the noblest knights each.
146:. He attacks the fortress of Ipolita and sends her a message asking her either to surrender or to be ready to die. There his expedition is victorious against the warrior women. She finally surrenders with a pact whereby she becomes his queen. Teseo is also attracted by the beauty of her sister Emilia.
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Still in prison, Palemone eventually learns of Arcita's return and becomes wildly jealous. This leads him to make a daring escape and then confront Arcita in a grove where Arcita frequently goes to sigh out this love. The two commence a duel to the death but are soon interrupted by Teseo who happens
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Both men are now beside themselves with love agony: Palemone because he remains in prison where he can see Emilia but can't reach her; Arcita because he can't even see Emilia, forced as he is to stay out of Athens on pain of death. But after years pass and he has become gaunt from his love agonies,
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From out of the window of their shared prison cell, both men spy
Ipolita's younger sister, Emilia, and are instantly smitten. But neither has any hope of pursuing the object of his ardor. However, at the intercession of Peritoo, a friend of Teseo, Arcita is released from prison under the condition
331:
Critical
Edition by Edvige Agostinelli and William Coleman, Edizioni del Galluzzo, 2015; Foundazione Ezio Franceschini, Firenze, Archivio Romanzo 30, (www.sismel.it); 538 pages: Contents and Introduction (pp. V-XXIII); Editorial Criteria (pp. XXV-XXXII); Appendices 1-7
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Just before the morning of battle, the opposing lovers, as well as Emilia (who wants to remain single), pray to their respective deities. And each receives a positive sign that seems to contradict the signs received by the others. The battle is then prepared for.
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Arcita looks very different from his previous appearance. So he decides to risk all by returning to Athens under that disguise, adopting the name Penteo. There he manages to secure a position in Teseo's court and gradually gains prominence.
81:, a collaboration by William Shakespeare and John Fletcher. The exact sources of Boccaccio's knowledge about the ancient Greek world are unknown, but is likely that he gained the knowledge through his close friendship with
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The two opposing armies engage in a battle that is described in detail. But it soon comes down to a contest between the two lovers. Finally, Arcita gains the victory, doing so without killing
Palemone.
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In the end, Teseo determines that Emilia and
Palemone should marry, and this is done. Thus all the seemingly contradictory prophesies of the gods (given in Book VII) are fulfilled.
332:(pp. XXXIII-CXXVIII); Bibliography (pp. CXXIX - CXXXI); Poem and Glosses (pp. 1β392); Notes to the Text (pp. 393β405); Notes to the Glosses (pp. 407β416).
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61:(Teseo), although the majority of the epic tells the story of the rivalry of Palemone and Arcita for the love of Emilia. It is the main source of "
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c.1340β41. Running to almost 10,000 lines divided into twelve books, its notional subject is the career and rule of the ancient Greek hero
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A year later the opposing champions arrive and are described in detail, as is the arena specially built for the contest.
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Arcita is accidentally injured. But he is still able to celebrate his victory and marry Emilia.
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Returning home to Athens with
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Before the Knight's tale : imitation of classical epic in
Boccaccio's Teseida
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translated by R.M. Lumiansky. New York: Washington Square Press, 1960, pp. 18β58.
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Burrow, J. A. (2004). "The
Canterbury Tales I: romance". In Piero Boitani (ed.).
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Anderson, David. Philadelphia : University of
Pennsylvania Press, c1988.
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156:. They are the widows of nobles and heroes defeated by the new ruler there,
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Boccaccio, Giovanni, 1313β1375. New York : Medieval Text
Association,
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gained fame in the sixteenth century by writing a French verse adaption of
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Encyclopedia of women in the
Renaissance: Italy, France, and England
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He is given a hero's funeral that is described in elaborate detail.
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Arcita, Emilia, and Palamone pray to their respective deities,
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Robin, Diana Maury; Larsen, Anne R.; Levin, Carole (2007).
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Then Arcita, after much suffering, dies from his wounds.
85:, a medieval collector of ancient myths and tales.
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46:The Theseid, Concerning the Nuptials of Emily
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308:by Derek Pearsall. London: Routledge, 1985.
167:that he will leave Athens and never return.
245:(Second ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge UP.
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138:rebel against the men and elect Ipolita (
322:The Canterbury Tales of Geoffrey Chaucer
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16:Epic poem written by Giovanni Boccaccio
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519:Works based on classical mythology
243:The Cambridge Companion to Chaucer
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504:Cultural depictions of Theseus
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394:De Casibus Virorum Illustrium
256:Teseida, The Book of Theseus
40:Teseida delle Nozze dβEmilia
499:Works by Giovanni Boccaccio
443:Genealogia Deorum Gentilium
422:Elegia di Madonna Fiammetta
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26:Emilia in the rose garden
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78:The Two Noble Kinsmen
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401:De Mulieribus Claris
306:The Canterbury Tales
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489:14th-century poems
368:Giovanni Boccaccio
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457:Zibaldoni
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51:epic poem
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107:Synopsis
450:Teseida
414:summary
310:p. 118.
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144:Amazons
136:Scythia
132:Book I:
101:Teseida
92:Teseida
59:Theseus
34:Teseida
154:Thebes
123:, and
158:Creon
125:Venus
121:Diana
65:" in
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117:Mars
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