Leonardo da Vinci was an Italian artist, scientist, and inventor. He was born in 1452 in the small town of Vinci, near Florence, in what is now Italy. His name means 'Leonardo from Vinci'. He was the son of a young woman named Caterina, who was probably a peasant or servant, and a wealthy notary named Ser Piero. His parents never married. Leonardo grew up in his father's family but was treated as a separate, somewhat outside figure. He showed great talent young. As a teenager he was apprenticed to the artist Andrea del Verrocchio in Florence. He learned painting, sculpture, and many practical crafts. Around the age of 30, he moved to Milan to work for the Duke, Ludovico Sforza. He stayed in Milan for nearly 20 years. He painted, designed weapons, planned buildings, and filled notebooks with ideas. When French armies invaded Milan, Leonardo moved on. He worked in Florence, Rome, and other Italian cities. He served various rulers, including Cesare Borgia and the Medici. In 1516, the king of France, Francis I, invited him to come and live in France. Leonardo accepted. He spent his last three years in a small castle near the king's palace at Amboise. He died there in 1519, aged 67. He never married and had no children. He was probably gay, though the evidence is indirect. He was vegetarian, unusual for his time. He left thousands of notebook pages full of drawings and ideas, most of which were not read for centuries.
Leonardo matters for three reasons. First, he was one of the greatest painters in history. The Mona Lisa, painted around 1503-1519, is the most famous painting in the world. The Last Supper, painted in Milan in the 1490s, is one of the most studied. Only about 15 to 20 of his finished paintings survive.
Second, he treated art and science as a single activity. He studied human anatomy by dissecting bodies. He studied water, light, plants, and birds in detail. He drew what he saw with extraordinary accuracy. He believed that painting required deep knowledge of how things actually work. His curiosity ranged across almost every field of his time.
Third, his notebooks contain designs for machines and ideas centuries ahead of his time. He sketched flying machines, parachutes, armoured vehicles, and many other inventions.
His notebooks were also written in mirror writing, from right to left, and were scattered after his death. Most were not properly studied until the 19th and 20th centuries. Leonardo became the model of the 'Renaissance man', a person who pursues many fields with passion and skill. The label has become a way of describing exceptional human curiosity. Leonardo set the standard.
For a first introduction, Walter Isaacson's Leonardo da Vinci (2017) is a clear, readable biography for general readers. Martin Kemp's Leonardo (2004) is a shorter scholarly introduction. The British Royal Collection holds many of Leonardo's anatomical drawings, with a fine online catalogue and free-to-browse high-resolution images. The Louvre's online resources on the Mona Lisa are also excellent. For children, James Mayhew's Katie and the Mona Lisa (1998) is a charming way in.
For deeper reading, Martin Kemp's Leonardo da Vinci: The Marvellous Works of Nature and Man (1981, revised 2006) is a major scholarly book that is still readable.
The Flights of the Mind (2004) is a rich biography focused on Leonardo's psychology and notebooks.
Anatomist (2012) is a fine catalogue of the anatomical work. For the historical context, Lauro Martines's Power and Imagination: City-States in Renaissance Italy (1979) is excellent.
Leonardo was mainly a painter who also dabbled in other things.
He was not. For most of his career, his main paid work was as a military engineer, court designer, and planner. Painting was important to him but often took second place. When he wrote to the Duke of Milan in 1482 listing his skills, painting was almost an afterthought near the end of the letter. Most of the letter described his engineering and military design abilities. He worked as a war engineer for Cesare Borgia. He designed weapons and fortifications. He planned canals and city projects. The painter Leonardo of popular imagination is partly a later invention. The historical Leonardo was a multi-skilled professional who saw painting as one important activity among many.
Most of Leonardo's inventions actually worked.
Most were never built, and many would not have worked as drawn. His flying machines, modelled on bird wings, would not have generated enough lift for a human. His tank could not be steered well. Several of his clever-looking devices have practical problems that he did not solve. This does not lessen his importance. He was thinking about problems centuries ahead of his time. He was sketching possibilities. Many of his ideas anticipated later working inventions, even when his specific designs were flawed. Reading Leonardo as a working engineer means accepting that his sketches were exploratory rather than ready-to-build. The myth of him as a man who 'invented everything' is a romanticisation.
The Mona Lisa was always considered the world's most famous painting.
It was not. For most of its history, the Mona Lisa was a respected but not specially famous portrait. It became globally famous after a strange event. In 1911, an Italian workman stole it from the Louvre in Paris. He kept it for two years before being caught. The newspapers covered the theft and recovery in great detail. Photographs of the painting appeared in papers around the world. The Mona Lisa became famous partly because of the theft. After it was returned, crowds came to see it. The fame grew over the 20th century. Today it is the most visited painting in the world. The story is a useful lesson. Fame often has historical accidents in its background, not just artistic merit.
Leonardo wrote in mirror writing because he wanted to keep his work secret.
This is a popular theory but probably wrong. Leonardo was left-handed. Mirror writing is easier for many left-handed writers. They can pull the pen from right to left without smudging the ink, the way right-handed writers pull from left to right. Leonardo did not seem to make any serious effort to hide his notebooks during his life. He showed them to colleagues and students. He sometimes wrote letters in normal left-to-right script when needed. The mirror writing was probably just a comfortable personal habit. The 'secret code' theory is more dramatic but does not fit the evidence. Sometimes the simple explanation is the right one.
For research-level engagement, Carlo Pedretti's many works on the notebooks, including Leonardo da Vinci: Studies for the World (multiple volumes), are essential. The journal Achademia Leonardi Vinci publishes specialist scholarship. The Florence-based Museo Leonardiano and the Codex Leicester (in the Bill Gates collection) have significant digital resources for advanced study. For the engineering side, Paolo Galluzzi's The Art of Invention: Leonardo and Renaissance Engineers (1996) is excellent. Alessandro Vezzosi and Agnese Sabato have led recent work on Leonardo's family and origins.
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