The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


google search for The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
556 557 558 559 560

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225

accompany the sketches. It is to Dr Richter's exertions that we owe  
the collected texts on Architecture which are now published, and  
while he has undertaken to be responsible for the correct reading of  
the original texts, he has also made it his task to extract the  
whole of the materials from the various MSS. It has been my task to  
arrange and elucidate the texts under the heads which have been  
adopted in this work. MS. B. at Paris and the Codex Atlanticus at  
Milan are the chief sources of our knowledge of Leonardo as an  
architect, and I have recently subjected these to a thorough  
re-investigation expressly with a view to this work.  
A complete reproduction of all Leonardo's architectural sketches  
has not, indeed, been possible, but as far as the necessarily  
restricted limits of the work have allowed, the utmost completeness  
has been aimed at, and no efforts have been spared to include every  
thing that can contribute to a knowledge of Leonardo's style. It  
would have been very interesting, if it had been possible, to give  
some general account at least of Leonardo's work and studies in  
engineering, fortification, canal-making and the like, and it is  
only on mature reflection that we have reluctantly abandoned this  
idea. Leonardo's occupations in these departments have by no means  
so close a relation to literary work, in the strict sense of the  
word as we are fairly justified in attributing to his numerous notes  
on Architecture.  
Leonardo's architectural studies fall naturally under two heads:  
558  


Page
556 557 558 559 560

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225