The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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Signoria; at any rate this little picture, and the small Flemish  
drawing in Florence are the oldest finished copies of this episode  
in the great composition of the Battle of Anghiari.  
In his Life of Raphael, Vasari tells us that Raphael copied certain  
works of Leonardo's during his stay in Florence. Raphael's first  
visit to Florence lasted from the middle of October 1504 till July  
1
505, and he revisited it in the summer of 1506. The hasty sketch,  
now in the possession of the University of Oxford and reproduced on  
page 337 also represents the Battle of the Standard and seems to  
have been made during his first stay, and therefore not from the  
fresco but from the cartoon; for, on the same sheet we also find,  
besides an old man's head drawn in Leonardo's style, some studies  
for the figure of St. John the Martyr which Raphael used in 1505 in  
his great fresco in the Church of San Severo at Perugia.  
Of Leonardo's studies for the Battle of Anghiari I must in the first  
place point to five, on three of which--Pl. LII 2, Pl. LIII, Pl.  
LVI--we find studies for the episode of the Standard. The standard  
bearer, who, in the above named copies is seen stooping, holding on  
to the staff across his shoulder, is immediately recognisable as the  
left-hand figure in Raphael's sketch, and we find it in a similar  
attitude in Leonardo's pen and ink drawing in the British  
Museum--Pl. LII, 2--the lower figure to the right. It is not  
difficult to identify the same figure in two more complicated groups  
in the pen and ink drawings, now in the Accademia at Venice--Pl.  
475  


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