Think of the soldering with which the orb of Santa Maria del Fiore was welded.
Leonardo da Vinci
Paris Ms. G, fol. 84v. Translation: Elizabeth Hughes
In hardly any other European city of the 15th century was the level of literacy as high as
in the commercial metropolis of Florence. This meant the wider population could access
literature in the Italian vernacular (vernacolo). Literary culture centered around the“Three
Crowns of Florence”: Dante Alighieri (1265–1321), Francesco Petrarch (1304–1374), and
Giovanni Boccaccio (1313–1375). This triumvirate was naturally represented in Leonardo’s
library. For centuries their works set standards for literary style in Italy and beyond and
fostered the development of a pre-national Italian identity based on literary language. At
the same time, they reflect the encyclopedic horizon of knowledge of the time in which the
Christian theological tradition is combined with a secularist worldview. Added to this is the
ambition to compete with the ancient models. The openness to new experiences of nature
coincides with the striving for a holistic cosmic order increasingly based on scientific
knowledge. The visual arts, too, are increasingly characterized by precise observations of
nature and detailed depictions, and in their own way seek to fathom the meaning and
constitution of the world.
In the extremely versatile workshop of the sculptor,
painter, and goldsmith Andrea del Verrocchio (1435–1488), the young Leonardo has the
opportunity to acquire practical skills in a wide variety of techniques. At the same time, he
internalizes the aesthetic principles of artistic design. From his enthusiastic teacher, who
was himself in possession of a respectable library, the ambitious young artist also learns
further forms of knowledge, which flow into the conception of the works. These include
engineering knowledge and construction principles, theological-philosophical foundations, and
classical literary knowledge.
Artists' Workshop