Leonardo da Vinci''s Codex Leicester: A New Edition: Volume I: The Codex
★★★★★
★★★★★
English
Leonardo's greatest work of science beautifully reproduced for the 500th anniversary of his death. This edition offers a high-quality facsimile reproduction of Leonardo Da Vinci's Codex Leicester, a collection of his scientific writings. Named after Thomas Coke (later Earl of Leicester) who purchased it in 1719, Codex Leicester holds the record as the most expensive book ever when it was bought by Bill Gates in 1994. Consisting of 72 pages, it was handwritten in Italian by Leonardo using his characteristic mirror writing, and is supported by drawings and diagrams. The Codex Leicester is an extraordinary mixture of Leonardo's observations and theories. Topics include his explanation of why fossils can be found on mountains; the flow of water in rivers; and the luminosity of the moon which Leonardo attributed to its surface being covered by water which reflects light from the sun. The facsimile reproduction is complemented by three further volumes that include a new transcription and translation, accompanied by a paraphrase in modern language, a page-by-page commentary, and a series of interpretative essays. These four volumes together introduce important new research into the interpretation of the texts and images, on the setting of Leonardo's ideas in the context of ancient and medieval theories, and above all into the notable fortunes of the Codex within the sciences of astronomy, water, and the history of the earth, opening a new field of research into the impact of Leonardo as a scientist after his death.
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€32.85
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Product Details
Weight: 874g
Dimensions: 249 x 348mm
Publication Date: 01 Jul 2019
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780198832874
About
Domenico Laurenza is a science and art historian. He is an expert on Leonardo da Vinci on the relationship between art anatomy and technology in the Renaissance and on the history of geological illustrations. He is a scientific consultant for Museo Galileo (Florence) Schroeder Arts (New York) and the University of RomaTre and has taught or been a fellow of several scientific institutions including McGill University (Montreal) the Warburg Institute (London) the Italian Academy at Columbia University the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York) and Trinity College Dublin. Martin Kemp is Emeritus Research Professor in the History of Art at Oxford University. He has written and broadcast extensively on imagery in art and science from the Renaissance to the present. He speaks on issues of visualisation and lateral thinking. His most recent book is Mona Lisa: The People and the Painting with Giuseppe Pallanti (2017).