By nature, all good humans have a thirst for knowledge
Leonardo da Vinci
Codex Atlanticus, fol. 327v. Translation: Elizabeth Hughes
In the 15th century, scholars throughout Europe, especially in Italy, sought
to raise knowledge of and familiarity with authors from ancient Greece and Rome to a new
level. The goal of these humanists was to collect textual sources systematically from widely
diverse fields of knowledge and make them accessible through commentaries, translations, and
soon through printed editions as well. Encyclopedias such as those by the philologist and
mathematician Giorgio Valla (ca. 1447–1499) made previously rare handwritten treatises
generally available.
Florence was the first center of this movement, which was
celebrated as the rebirth (Rinascita or Rinascimento in Italian, Renaissance in French) of
ancient culture. The ideal of antiquity rapidly penetrated and inspired every cultural area,
such as literature, architecture, and the visual arts. Parallel to this, the study of ancient
traditions also promised resources for solving technical and scientific problems and tasks of
contemporary life. Ancient natural scientists such as the Greek mathematicians Archimedes
(ca. 287–212 BCE), Ptolemy (ca. 100–160 CE), and Euclid (ca. 300 BCE) were important
authorities whose extant works formed a fixed canon. Their achievements also inspired
Renaissance scholars in their own research and further observations.
Another canonical
work is the Ten Books on Architecture by the Roman architect and engineer Vitruvius (ca. 70
BCE–ca. 15 CE). Its impact can hardly be overestimated and Leonardo da Vinci naturally owned
an edition.
A contemporary counterpart are the writings of the philologist, master
builder, and art theorist Leon Battista Alberti (1404–1472). His architectural designs, like
those for the façade of Santa Maria Novella in Florence, are considered incunabula of
Renaissance architecture, while his writings on the genres of architecture, painting, and
sculpture laid down the first theoretical basis for the new forms of design. The humanist
Alberti was regarded by his contemporaries as a shining example of universal education. He
was an inspiration for Leonardo, too, not least for the latter’s own theoretical writings on
painting.
Foundations