Tales of Count Lucanor

Title page of the 1575 printing

Tales of Count Lucanor (Old Spanish: Libro de los enxiemplos del Conde Lucanor et de Patronio) is a collection of parables written in 1335 by Juan Manuel, Prince of Villena. It is one of the earliest works of prose in Castilian Spanish.

The book is divided into five parts. The first and best-known part is a series of 51 short stories (some no more than a page or two) drawn from various sources, such as Aesop and other classical writers, and Arabic folktales.

Tales of Count Lucanor was first printed in 1575 when it was published at Seville under the auspices of Argote de Molina. It was again printed at Madrid in 1642, after which it lay forgotten for nearly two centuries.[1]

  1. ^ Don Juan Manuel (1868). "Preface Count Lucanor; of the Fifty Pleasant Stories of Patronio". Translated by James York, M.D. London: Gibbings & Company, Limited.

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