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Vinci, Tuscany
Leonardo was born on in April 1452, in the tiny hamlet of Anchiano, just outside the hillside town of Vinci, the place from which he took his name. This small town is all he would have known until he moved to Florence, some 50km east, at the age of 15. Click and drag the Street View slides to explore.
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The River Arno
In the mid-1460s Leonardo's family moved to Florence. He started working in the studio of Verrocchio, the leading painter of his day. By 17 Leonardo was formally made an apprentice, and would have learnt many technical skills, such as drawing, metalworking, and plaster casting.
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The Palazzo Medici
Florence was amongst the most powerful cities in Europe. Although technically a republic, it was in reality ruled by the powerful banking family, the Medici. The Medici were as cultured as they were ruthless, and the arts flourished.
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The Ponte Vecchio
Rich and powerful patrons funded a huge artistic industry. There were said to be more artists than butchers in the city. This crowded bridge, the Ponte Vecchio (Old Bridge), was the centre of the goldsmithing trade.
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The Duomo, Florence
Architecture and engineering were advanced during the era. The city's crowning glory was the enormous cathedral dome, completed by Filippo Brunelleschi only twenty years before Leonardo was born.
The Hall of the PodestàMuseo Leonardiano di Vinci
Verrocchio's Studio
In 1468, Verrocchio's studio was commissioned to make the golden sphere to adorn the top of the dome. The young Leonardo became fascinated by the cranes Bunelleschi had built, and eagerly sketched mechanical devices. This reconstruction is based on his drawings.
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Palazzo Vecchio
In January 1478 Leonardo was given his first independent commission, to paint a new altarpiece for the Chapel of St. Bernard in the Palazzo Vecchio, the town hall. Shortly after this, Leonardo moved first to Milan to work for Ludovico Sforza, and then to Venice.
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Santissima Annunziata
When Leonardo returned to Florence in 1500, he and his household stayed at the monastery of Santissima Annunziata, as the guests of the Servite monks According to the writer Giorgio Vasari, it was here that Leonardo drew The Virgin and Child with St Anne and St John the Baptist.
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Michelangelo's David, 1504
In 1504, Leonardo joined the committee deciding where to place Michelangelo's David. The sculpture had been designed for the cathedral roof, but was instead put right outside the Palazzo Vecchio. Two years later, Leonardo once again left Florence for Milan, never to return.
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Castello dei Conti Guidi, Vinci
Take in the town of Vinci and the verdant countryside beyond from this viewpoint at the top of the Castello dei Conti Guidi, home of the Leonardo Museum. Downstairs, find reconstructions of his mechanical designs and anatomical drawings.
Vitruvian Man (2007) by Luc Viatour / https://Lucnix.beSenckenberg Nature Museum Frankfurt
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