Tindaro serves as ’s servant, and assigns him to also help and when their servants— and Sirisco—are attending to their communal duties as steward and treasurer. His name derives from classical Roman plays and indicates his servile status as well as the timelessness of The Decameron. At the beginning of Day VI, he gets into an argument with when he states his belief that his friend Sirisco’s wife was a virgin on her wedding night. He thus serves as an example of the overly credulous man, along with many of the tales’ husbands, but especially .