The Convent of Bosco ai Frati is located in the comune (municipality) of Scarperia e San Piero, in the midst of Turkey oak woods. The area is in the province of Florence in the Italian region Tuscany, and is situated about 25 kilometres (16 miles) northeast of Florence.
The convent was most probably founded by the Ubaldini, a local noble family possibly of Lombard origins, in the sixth century, then became a monastery of the Basilians in the ninth century. At some point it came to be occupied by a group of hermits, until 1206, when it was donated with a large part of the wood, to Saint Francis di Assisi. The Franciscans occupied the convent in 1212. Among those who lived there was the Venerable Giovanni da Perugia (John of Perugia), known as Lo Scalzo (the Barefooted), Vicar General of the Order in the time of St Francis.
In 1349 the convent was almost completely abandoned on account of the Black Death plague and only came to flourish again in 1420 when Cosimo de' Medici (the Elder) bought it, rebuilt it, enlarged the refectory, built the bell tower (campanile), the cloister, the sacristy, the cistern and the loggia, the latter following a project of Michelozzo, who altered the church of St Bonaventure, situated within the convent, giving it a portico fitted with columns on the outer rather than the inner side, embellishing it with a single nave with vaulting in the form of [[Rib vault[rib vaulting]] and enlarged the polygonal choir. In front of the latter there is a sixteenth-century reredos in wood displaying the Medici arms in gold intarsia.