Bernardo Canaccio

Bernardo Canaccio (1297, Bologna - sometime after 1357[1]) was an Italian poet.

Life

He was the son of Arpinello, known as Canaccio, who belonged to the Ghibelline Scannabecchi family. Aged two, his family was exiled and moved to Verona, where Bernardo and his brother Guglielmo met Scaligeri and probably Dante - the latter was in Verona from 1313 to 1319. From 1319 to 1320 Bernardo studied under Dante, who was then a guest of the Polenta family in Ravenna.[1] On 26 August 1356 he was in Ravenna assisting in the writing of the will of his wife Sara da Camposampiero.[1] An anonymous sonnet attributes the poem on Dante's sarcophagus to Canaccio[1] - it is also mentioned in Boccaccio's Life of Dante.[1]

gollark: They can do stuff like plan ambushes in advance. Very cool.
gollark: Fairly advanced cognition running on a brain several orders of magnitude smaller than a human's via ridiculous levels of timesharing.
gollark: Speaking of spiders, have you heard of Portia spiders? They're very cool.
gollark: One molecule of spider contains one oxygen atom and two hydrogen atoms, giving an atomic weight of 18.
gollark: You can drown in as little as 1 inch of spiders.

References

  1. (in Italian) Sergio Marconi, 'Bernardo Canaccio' in Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Roma, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia italiana, 1974


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