The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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of the jerkin covered with black and white stippled velvet Bernardo  
di Bandino Baroncelli; black hose.  
[Footnote: These eleven lines of text are by the side of the pen and  
ink drawing of a man hanged--Pl. LXII, No. 1. This drawing was  
exhibited in 1879 at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris and the  
compilers of the catalogue amused themselves by giving the victim's  
name as follows: "Un pendu, vetu d'une longue robe, les mains liĆ©es  
sur le dos ... Bernardo di Bendino Barontigni, marchand de  
pantalons" (see Catalogue descriptif des Dessins de Mailres  
anciens exposes a l'Ecole des Beaux Arts, Paris 1879; No. 83, pp.  
9-10). Now, the criminal represented here, is none other than  
Bernardino di Bandino Baroncelli the murderer of Giuliano de'Medici,  
whose name as a coadjutor in the conspiracy of the Pazzi has gained  
a melancholy notoriety by the tragedy of the 26th April 1478.  
Bernardo was descended from an ancient family and the son of the man  
who, under King Ferrante, was President of the High Court of Justice  
in Naples. His ruined fortunes, it would seem, induced him to join  
the Pazzi; he and Francesco Pazzi were entrusted with the task of  
murdering Giuliano de'Medici on the fixed day. Their victim not  
appearing in the cathedral at the hour when they expected him, the  
two conspirators ran to the palace of the Medici and induced him to  
accompany them. Giuliano then took his place in the chancel of the  
Cathedral, and as the officiating priest raised the Host--the sign  
agreed upon--Bernardo stabbed the unsuspecting Giuliano in the  
breast with a short sword; Giuliano stepped backwards and fell dead.  
485  


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