Boccaccio returns, for family reasons, in 1341…
1346 CE
Boccaccio returns, for family reasons, in 1341 to the mercantile world of Florence, where he discovers that the city, unlike Naples, possesses a vital artistic and intellectual community that follows the style of Dante and the allegorical-didactic literary tradition.
Under this influence he begins composing his finest works: the allegorical Commedia delle ninfe fiorentine (Comedy of the Florentine Nymphs), completed in 1342; a dream vision, L'amorosa visione (The Amorous Vision), written from 1342-43; Amorous Fiametta, a psychological novel written from 1343-44; and The Nymph of Fiesole, a mythological pastoral written in 1344-46.