the designation of a wit and painter who lived at Florence about the end of the thirteenth century. His real name was Buonamico di Cristofano, but his witticisms are recorded under the other name in the Decameron of Boccaccio and the Norelle di Sacchetto. His best pictures have perished, but specimens of his works remain in the Campo Santo of Pisa and at Arezzo. In those his style is mean, and without the grace of Giotto; but there is vigour in some of his conceptions, as in the Crucifixion. Lanzi says he was alive in 1351, though Vasari says he died in poverty in 1340.