The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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of sculpture which is certainly not Leonardo's work. Gian Giacomo  
Trivulzio died at Chartres in 1518, only five months before  
Leonardo, and it seems to me highly improbable that this should have  
been the date of this sketch; under these circumstances it would  
have been done under the auspices of Francis I, but the Italian  
general was certainly not in favour with the French monarch at the  
time. Gian Giacomo Trivulzio was a sworn foe to Ludovico il Moro,  
whom he strove for years to overthrow. On the 6th September 1499 he  
marched victorious into Milan at the head of a French army. In a  
short time, however, he was forced to quit Milan again when Ludovico  
il Moro bore down upon the city with a force of Swiss troops. On the  
15th of April following, after defeating Lodovico at Novara,  
Trivulzio once more entered Milan as a Conqueror, but his hopes of  
becoming Governatore of the place were soon wrecked by intrigue.  
This victory and triumph, historians tell us, were signalised by  
acts of vengeance against the dethroned Sforza, and it might have  
been particularly flattering to him that the casting and  
construction of the Sforza monument were suspended for the time.  
It must have been at this moment--as it seems to me--that he  
commissioned the artist to prepare designs for his own monument,  
which he probably intended should find a place in the Cathedral or  
in some other church. He, the husband of Margherita di Nicolino  
Colleoni, would have thought that he had a claim to the same  
distinction and public homage as his less illustrious connection had  
received at the hands of the Venetian republic. It was at this very  
527  


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