The Bovo-Bukh ("Bovo Bukh," Yiddish: בָּבָא-בּוּך, בּאָבאָ-בּוּך; German transliteration: Baba Buch), also known as Buovo d'Antona (בָּבָא דְאַנְטוֹנָא)[spelling?
"[1] The Bovo-Bukh gained prominence in the late 18th century under the name Bovo-mayse (literally "Bovo's tale").
[1] The narrative begins with Bovo's young mother plotting to have her elderly husband, the king, killed during a hunt.
The couple attempts to poison Bovo, fearing he will seek revenge, but he escapes to Flanders, where he becomes a stable boy for a king.
[2] A heathen sultan of Babylonia then arrives with an army of ten thousand warriors, demanding Druzane’s hand in marriage for his ugly son, Lucifer.