Francesco Petrarca known by his anglicized name Petrarch, was known to be the father of humanism as well as the Renaissance. His nickname was originated because of his set of beliefs that initiated humanism and was one of the first notable figures known to live during the Renaissance. Somewhat similar figure to Petrarch was Giovanni Boccaccio; he was born during the start of the Renaissance, and without a doubt one of the most important Renaissance humanist. Boccaccio was an Italian know for his writing of books and poems. Giovanni Boccaccio wrote the first piece of prose in the history of Italian Renaissance. His greatest work would conclude to be The Decameron, a novel about seven women and three men who decide to flee to seek shelter and escape from the plague in a villa outside of the city of Florence. The plague was the foundation of the black death which occurred in 1347, that led to an estimated death of 75 million. From the year 1337 till midst 1400, the hundred years’ war took place, a conflict for control on the last-mentioned kingdom. In 1450, Florence became center of Renaissance arts and learning under the