Andrea da Barberino

Andrea da Barberino: <em>Guerrin meschino</em>Guerrino on the banks of the Nile, illustration by Giuseppe Berta from an 1841 edition of Andrea da Barberino's Guerrin meschino (“Wretched Guerrino”).

Andrea da Barberino (born c. 1370, Barberino di Val d’Elsa, near Florence [Italy]—died c. 1432, Florence) was a ballad singer, prose writer, and compiler of epic tales.

The material for Andrea’s prose compilation of Charlemagne legends, I reali di Francia (1491; “The Royalty of France,” modern edition by G. Vandelli, 1892–1900), was drawn for the most part from earlier Italian versions, though the author added much pseudohistorical material and invented many exciting amplifications. His epic tale Guerrin meschino (1473; “Wretched Guerrino”), although told also by other writers, is largely of Andrea’s own creation. It follows the fortunes of the slave-born hero Guerrino, who emerges strong and unshaken from a multitude of fantastic adventures and dangers to discover his royal parentage, secure his parents’ release from prison, marry a Persian princess, and live happily until his death.

Andrea also compiled (and himself recited) such romances as Storie narbonesi (published 1873–82; “Stories of Narbonne”), Aspramonte, La storia di Ugone (1882; “The Story of Ugone”), and La discesa di Guerrino all’inferno (1882; “The Descent of Guerrino to Hell”).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.