29 Giovanni Boccaccio, The Decameron, terza giornata, novella nona, ed. V. Branca (1992), available online at <http://www.brown.edu/Departments/ItalianStudies/dweb/> accessed 9 October/2004. No Gerard of Narbonne is mentioned in the standard reference work on medieval French medical practitioners (Wickersheimer, Dictionnaire), though see n. 19 above. There is also documentary evidence that a 15th-century Neapolitan woman, Costanza Calenda, the daughter of the subprior of the University of Naples, studied at the university there; see Paul Oskar Kristeller, ‘Learned Women of Early Modern Italy: Humanists and University Scholars’, in Beyond Their Sex: Learned Women of the European Past, ed. Patricia H. Labalme (New York: New York University Press, 1984), pp. 91–116, at pp. 102–3.