Ariosto spent the greater part of his life at Ferrara including many years in the service of Cardinal Ippolito d'Este and then of Duke Alfonso I. His poem Orlando Furioso is designed to exalt the Este family; in its final form it was first published in 1532. It is the greatest of the Italian romantic epics. Ariosto also wrote lyric poetry in Italian and Latin, some satires and four comedies.[1]
Minor works
La Tragedia di Tisbe (1493)
La Cassaria (1508)
I Suppositi (1509)
Il Negromante (1520)
La Lena (1528)
Studenti (1518)
References
↑Drabble, Margaret, ed. (1985) The Oxford Companion to English Literature; 5th ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press; p. 40