D'amore: Malattia

: It was classified as a form of melancholy . Symptoms included a pale complexion, insomnia, loss of appetite (leading to emaciation), and a "disturbed pulse rate" that spiked when the beloved's name was mentioned.

: His Canzoniere is a masterclass in the "failing search for self-possession" caused by obsessive love, depicting it as a "fatal multiplicity" that obstructs the mind. Malattia d'amore

In the Middle Ages and Renaissance, physicians treated love not as a metaphor, but as a pathological condition of the "estimative faculty". : It was classified as a form of melancholy

: Boccaccio specifically dedicated this work to women suffering from the "melancholy" of love, noting that they often suffered more than men because they were confined to their homes without the distractions of business or travel. In the Middle Ages and Renaissance, physicians treated

: Historical remedies ranged from distraction and travel to more extreme measures like "sexual congress" or, in famous medical anecdotes, simply marrying the object of desire to restore balance to the humors. Lovesickness in Italian Literature