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・ Andrea Crawford
・ Andrea Crestadoro
・ Andrea Crisanti
・ Andrea Crisanti (scientist)
・ Andrea Cristiano
・ Andrea Crosariol
・ Andrea Cunningham
・ Andrea Cupi
・ Andrea Czanik
・ Andrea D'Agostino
・ Andrea D'Amico
・ Andrea D'Amico (football agent)
・ Andrea D'Amico (footballer)
・ Andrea D'Angelo
・ Andrea D'Antoni
Andrea da Barberino
・ Andrea da Bologna
・ Andrea da Firenze
・ Andrea da Formigine
・ Andrea da Grosseto
・ Andrea Dahmen
・ Andrea Dal Col
・ Andrea Dalessandro
・ Andrea Dalla Costa
・ Andrea Dallaway
・ Andrea Daly
・ Andrea Damiani
・ Andrea Dandolo
・ Andrea Dandolo (admiral)
・ Andrea Davidovich


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Andrea da Barberino : ウィキペディア英語版
Andrea da Barberino
Andrea Mangiabotti,〔Geneviève Hasenohr and Michel Zink, eds. ''Dictionnaire des lettres françaises: Le Moyen Age''. Collection: La Pochothèque. (Paris: Fayard, 1992. ISBN 2-253-05662-6), pp. 62–63.〕 called Andrea da Barberino ( 1370–1431〔''The Cambridge History of Italian Literature'', Peter Brand and Lino Pertile, eds. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), p. 168.〕) was an Italian writer and ''cantastorie'' ("storyteller")〔Ludovico Ariosto, ''Orlando Furioso'', translated with an introduction by Barbara Reynolds (London: Penguin Books, 1975), Part I, Introduction, p. 58.〕 of the Quattrocento Renaissance. He was born in Barberino Val d'Elsa, near Florence and lived in Florence.〔 He is principally known for his prose romance ''Il Guerrin Meschino'', his ''I Reali di Francia'' ("The Royal House of France"〔), a prose compilation (in the form of a chronicle〔) of the Matter of France romance material concerning Charlemagne and Roland (''Orlandino'') from various legends and chansons de geste, and for his ''Aspramonte'', a reworking of the chanson de geste ''Aspremont'', which also features the hero Ruggiero.〔 His works, which circulated at first in manuscript, were extremely successful and popular,〔 and were a key source of material for later Italian romance writers, such as Luigi Pulci (''Morgante''), Matteo Maria Boiardo (''Orlando Innamorato'') and Ludovico Ariosto (''Orlando Furioso'').
==Works==
Andrea da Barberino wrote the following works:〔
* ''I Reali di Francia'' ("The Royal House of France")
* ''Il Guerrin Meschino''
* ''Ajolfo del Barbicone'' (reworking of the French ''Aiol'')
* ''Ugone d'Alvernia'' (adaptation of the Franco-Italian ''chanson de geste'' ''Huon d'Auvergne'', with the first chapter of the final book alternating ''terza rima'' and prose in the published edition)
* ''Storie Nerbonesi'' (prose adaptation on the Old French ''chanson de geste'' ''Narbonnais'' and eight other ''chansons'' concerning Aymeri de Narbonne and Guillaume d'Orange)
* ''(Storie d' )Aspramonte'' (adaptation of the Old French ''chanson de geste'' ''Aspremont''
* ''Ansuigi'' (possibly also by Andrea)〔 Gloria Allaire, ''Andrea da Barberino and the Language of Chivalry'' (Gainesville, FL: UP of Florida, 1997).〕

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