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Leonardo Da Vinci*

Page 7

by Kathleen Krull


  CODEX ATLANTICUS

  This notebook is the work of Pompeo Leoni, a sixteenth-century sculptor with nerve. Taking original Leonardo manuscripts from 1480 to 1518, Leoni used his own judgment in separating the scientific sketches from one, concerned with nature, anatomy, and the human figure. In this codex, made up of what he thought of as scientific materials, are some 1,119 sheets on astronomy, botany, zoology, geometry, and military engineering. Leoni titled his creation “Drawings of Machines, the Secret Arts, and Other Things by Leonardo da Vinci, collected by Pompeo Leoni.” It has since been renamed the Atlanticus, and today the Biblioteca Ambrosiana in Milan is home to its twelve leather-bound volumes. Many (but not all) of what Leoni deemed to be the more artistic pages ended up in England, in the Royal Windsor collection.

  CODEX TRIVULZIANUS

  These pages detail Leonardo’s ongoing efforts to educate himself in literature, architecture, and other areas. The name comes from the codex’s home—the Biblioteca Trivulziana at the Castello Sforzesco in Milan. At least seven out of the original sixty-two sheets are missing.

  CODEX “ON THE FLIGHT OF BIRDS”

  Held in the Biblioteca Reale of Turin, Italy, this collection from 1505 includes seventeen sheets of the original eighteen. It covers Leonardo’s studies of birds, the mechanics of flight, air resistance, winds, and currents.

  CODEX ASHBURNHAM

  General Napoleon Bonaparte, in his expansion of French rule, made a point of amassing as much of Leonardo’s work as he could; he later returned some of it to the original owners, but not this collection. Dating from about 1489-1492, these assorted drawings, bound in cardboard, remain in the Institut de France, in Paris.

  CODICES OF THE INSTITUT DE FRANCE

  Also at the Institut de France in Paris, these papers are bound together in various ways—by parchment, leather, or cardboard. Each of the twelve manuscripts is called by a letter of the alphabet, from A to M. The topics relate to Leonardo’s usual interests—the flight of birds, hydraulics, optics, geometry, and military matters.

  CODEX FORSTER

  The Victoria and Albert Museum in London houses these manuscripts, bound in parchment, which focus on geometry and hydraulic machines.

  CODEX LEICESTER

  This codex was lost until 1690, when it was discovered in a sculptor’s trunk. The Earl of Leicester bought it, and eventually it was purchased—for $30 million—by Bill Gates of Microsoft, at a 1995 auction. Its seventy-two linen sheets, bound in leather, detail all aspects of water and its movement; included is an illustration of what looks like a toilet. More information and pages to view are at http://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/codex/.

  ROYAL WINDSOR FOLIOS

  This notebook lives on in the Royal Collection of England’s Windsor Castle. It includes the artistic drawings pulled by Italian sculptor Pompeo Leoni—some six hundred studies in human anatomy, horse anatomy, geography, and many other topics.

  THE MADRID CODICES

  These are the most recent discovery. At some point after their creation between 1503 and 1505, they were in the possession of Pompeo Leoni, and were then lost. Only in 1966 were they found once more, in the National Library of Madrid, Spain. The two manuscripts, bound in red leather, were named Madrid I (mostly on mechanics) and Madrid II (geometry).

  A POSTSCRIPT

  To better explain Leonardo da Vinci’s contributions to science, this book has left out many details of his fabulous career as an artist. Visit your library for other books about him and his place in art history.

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  BOOKS

  (* books especially for young readers)

  Bambach, Carmen C., ed . Leonardo da Vinci: Master Draftsman. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2003.

  Bortolon, Liana. The Life, Times, and Art of Leonardo. New York: Crescent, 1965.

  Bramly, Serge. Leonardo: The Artist and the Man. New York: Penguin, 1994. [For an assortment of reasons, writers have put a lot of imagination into telling the story of Leonardo da Vinci. I believe the most reliable facts are reported here.]

  Brucker, Gene. Florence, the Golden Age, 1138-1737. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998.

  *Byrd, Robert. Leonardo: Beautiful Dreamer. New York: Dutton, 2003.

  Desmond, Michael, and Carlo Pedretti. Leonardo da Vinci: The Codex Leicester—Notebook of a Genius. Sydney, Australia: Powerhouse Publishing, 2000.

  Fairbrother, Trevor, and Chiyo Ishikawa. Leonardo Lives: The Codex Leicester and Leonardo da Vinci’s Legacy of Art and Science. Seattle: Seattle Art Museum, 1997.

  Freud, Sigmund, Leonardo da Vinci: A Study in Psychosexuality. New York: Random House, 1947.

  Gelb, Michael J. How to Think Like Leonardo da Vinci: Seven Steps to Genius Every Day. New York: Random House, 1998.

  Grant, Edward. The Foundations of Modern Science in the Middle Ages: Their Religious, Institutional, and Intellectual Contexts. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 1996.

  *Langley, Andrew. Leonardo and His Times. New York: Dorling Kindersley, 2000.

  Leonardo da Vinci. The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci, compiled and edited from the original manuscripts by Jean Paul Richter (an unabridged edition of The Literary Works of Leonardo da Vinci, 1883), in two volumes. New York: Dover Publications, 1970.

  Leonardo da Vinci. The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci, compiled and edited by Edward MacCurdy. Old Saybrook, Connecticut: Konecky & Konecky, 1939.

  Lindberg, David C. The Beginnings of Western Science. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992.

  Lindberg, David C. Theories of Vision from Al-Kindi to Kepler. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1976.

  Manchester, William. A World Lit Only by Fire: The Medieval Mind and the Renaissance: Portrait of an Age. Boston: Little, Brown, 1993.

  Nuland, Sherwin B. Leonardo da Vinci: A Penguin Life. New York: Viking, 2000.

  Rocke, Michael. Forbidden Friendships: Homosexuality and Male Culture in Renaissance Florence. New York: Oxford University Press, 1996.

  Siraisi, Nancy G. Medieval & Early Renaissance Medicine: An Introduction to Knowledge and Practice. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990.

  White, Michael. Leonardo: The First Scientist. New York: St. Martin’s, 2000.

  WEB SITES

  (Verified May 2008)

  “Leonardo and the Engineers of the Renaissance,” Institute and Museum of the History of Science, Florence, Italy: http://brunelleschi.imss.fi.it/ingrin (includes his robots and flying machines, pages from Codex Atlanticus and several other Notebooks)

  “Leonardo da Vinci: A Man of Both Worlds”: http://library.thinkquest.org/3044/index.html (includes 42 scientific drawings)

  “Leonardo da Vinci, Master Draftsman,” exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum, New York, 2003: http://www.metmuseum.org/special/Leonardo_Master_Draftsman/draftsman_tour.htm

  “Leonardo da Vinci Notebook—Turning the Pages at the British Library”: http://www.bl.uk/collections/treasures/digitisation.html#leo (pages from Codex Arundel)

  “Leonardo da Vinci—Scientist—Inventor—Artist,” Museum of Science, Boston: http://www.mos.org/leonardo/ (has classroom activities)

  “Leonardo’s Codex Leicester: A Masterpiece of Science,” exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History, New York, 1997: http://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/codex/

  “The Leonardo Museum in Vinci”: http://www.leonet.it/comuni/vincimus/invinmus.html

  “Leonardo”: National Museum of Science and Technology, Milan: http://www.museoscienza.org/english/leonardo/ (includes one hundred drawings of inventions and machines)

  INDEX

  abacus

  Adoration of the Magi (painting)

  aerodynamics

  Alberti, Leon Battista

  alchemy

  algebra

  Alhazen

  anatomy,

  artists’ knowledge of,

  Leonardo’s study of

  see also dissection

  animals

  anonymous
accusations

  anti-Semitism

  apprentices

  Arabic numbers

  Arabic scholars

  Archimedes

  architecture

  Aristotelian logic

  Aristotle

  army, career in

  Arno River

  art, career in

  arteriosclerosis

  artistic training,

  Leonardo’s

  arthritis

  astrology

  astronomy

  autopsies

  Bacon, Roger

  Belvedere Palace

  Bible

  bicycle, invention of

  birds

  Black Death

  epidemic of

  cause

  blood

  Bonaparte, Napoleon

  book publishing

  books

  censorship and

  printed

  Borgia, Cesare

  botany

  brain structure

  Bramante, Donato

  British Museum

  bronze horse, statue

  Brunelleschi, Filippo

  bubonic plague, see Black Death

  buchi della Verità

  Cardan, Fazio

  Caterina (mother of Leonardo)

  censorship

  chemistry in artists’ studios

  China

  Church, Catholic

  circulation of the blood

  cities, conditions

  city planning

  city-states

  classical learning

  Clos Lucé

  Codex Arundel

  Codex Ashburnham

  Codex Atlanticus

  Codex Forster

  Codex Leicester

  Codex “On the Flight of Birds,”

  Codex Trivulzianus

  Codices of the Institut de France

  Columbus, Christopher

  comets

  contagion

  Copernicus, Nicolaus

  da Vinci, Francesco

  da Vinci, Leonardo

  appearance

  arrested

  childhood

  collections

  curiosity of

  death of

  early biographies of

  household of

  isolation

  lack of focus

  need for privacy

  old age

  personality

  secretiveness

  sex life of

  da Vinci, Piero

  deformity, fascination with

  depression

  diet

  digestive process

  disease

  dissection

  methods of

  Divina Proportione

  doctors

  drawings

  techniques

  Earth, position of

  education

  Classical, lack of

  formal

  self-education

  encyclopedias

  energy, search for new sources of

  engineer-architect

  erosion

  Euclid

  experimentation

  Leonardo’s experiments

  explorers

  eye, structure of

  famine

  Fazio, Cardan

  Feast of Paradise

  flight, study of

  Florence

  Florentine painters’ guild

  flying machines

  fossils

  theories of

  France

  Francis I, King of France

  Freud, Sigmund

  Galen

  Galileo

  Gates, Bill

  geography

  geology

  geometry

  Giotto

  glasses

  Greece

  Gutenberg, Johannes

  Harvey, William

  health, rules for

  heart, theories of

  helicopter, invention of

  heredity, theory of

  Hippocrates

  history of science

  homosexuality

  humors, theory of

  Huygens, Christian

  hydraulics

  Icarus

  illegitimacy

  income

  indulgences

  influence of Leonardo on other scientists

  inheritance

  inventions

  Islamic scholars

  Italian, as “vulgar tongue,”

  Italy

  jokes

  knowledge, unifying theories and principles of

  Last Supper, The (painting)

  Latin

  Laws of Motion

  left-handedness

  Leo X, Pope

  Leoni, Pompeo

  lever, invention of

  libraries

  life expectancy

  light, theories of

  linear perspective

  literacy

  Literary Works of Leonardo da Vinci, The

  Louis XII, King of France

  Luther, Martin

  Lyell, Charles

  Machiavelli, Niccolò

  Madrid Codices, The

  manuscripts

  maps

  Masque of the Planets

  mathematics

  Leonardo’s limited knowledge of

  mechanical devices

  medical training

  Medici

  Medici, Lorenzo de’ (the Magnificent)

  medicine, medieval

  Renaissance

  medieval worldview

  Melzi, Francesco

  Melzi, Orazio

  Michelangelo

  Microsoft

  Middle Ages, life in

  Milan

  military engineer

  mirror-image script

  Mona Lisa (painting)

  moon

  mortality rates

  musical ability

  natural philosopher (term)

  nature, direct study of

  Newton, Isaac

  “New World,”

  Nostradamus

  notary

  notebooks, Leonardo’s

  arrangement of

  described

  fate of

  publication

  readership of

  see also under individual codex names

  observation skills

  Office of the Night

  On Floating Bodies

  On the Revolutions of Celestial Bodies

  On the Structure of the Human Body

  Opticae Thesaurus

  optics

  outer space

  Pacioli, Luca

  pageants, designs for

  painting

  Leonardo’s attitude toward

  methods

  theories on

  paintings, Leonardo’s

  number of

  see also individual paintings

  paleontology

  paper

  patronage

  peasants, living conditions

  peripheral vision

  physiognomy

  plague, see Black Death

  planets

  Plato

  Pliny

  politics, Leonardo’s disinterest in

  pranks

  Protestant Reformation

  pseudosciences

  Ptolemy

  rats

  Rayleigh, Lord

  religious beliefs, Leonardo’s

  Renaissance

  reproductive system

  robot

  Roman numerals

  Rome

  rose water perfume

  Royal Windsor Folios

  Salai

  sanitation

  Savonarola, Girolamo

  scholars

  science, state of in Renaissance

  Leonardo’s education in

  relationship to art

  scientia

  scienti
fic ideas, origins

  scientific method

  Scientific Revolution of

  scientific vocabulary

  scientist, Leonardo’s development as

  “scientist” as a term

  self-education

  Sforza, Duke Ludovico

  job application to

  overthrown

  Sistine Chapel

  sixth sense

  skeletons

  solar eclipses

  solar energy

  St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome

  steam power

  submarines

  telescope

  tides

  toilets

  Torre, Marcantonio della

  torture

  Toscanelli, Paolo

  trade

  travel

  unfinished projects

  universal theories

  universities

  University of Pavia

  Vatican

  vegetarian

  Verrocchio, Andrea del

  Vesalius, Andreas

  Vespucci, Amerigo

  Vinci (town)

  vision

  Vitruvian Man

  warfare

  water, study of

  waves, movement of

  weapons

  wings

 

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