The Hamilton Spectator

Italian scholar claims mother of da Vinci was a slave

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MILAN An Italian scholar and novelist has provided fresh fodder for an old debate over the identity of Leonardo da Vinci’s mother, proffering a recently unearthed document as evidence that she arrived on the Italian peninsula as a slave from the Caucasus region.

Carlo Vecce, an Italian literature professor at the University of Naples L’Orientale, has revealed his theory in a new novel, “Il Sorriso di Caterina,” or “Caterina’s Smile.” He based his claim on a document discovered in the State Archives in Florence that granted freedom to a girl named Caterina.

Leonardo’s father notarized the record six months after the birth of the Renaissanc­e genius, who went on to paint masterpiec­es including the “Mona Lisa.”

Vecce said he originally was intent on proving that Leonardo’s mother was not an enslaved person, one long-held theory. “But when the evidence goes in the other direction, one must pay attention,’’ he said.

He said he chose to put his research in a novel and not in a scholarly text because he felt an urgency to share his theory with a wider public. “I could joke that no one reads a book with footnotes and a bibliograp­hy,’’ the author added.

Martin Kemp, an Oxford University art history professor emeritus, co-wrote a 2017 book that identified Leonardo’s mother as Caterina di Meo Lippi, a15-year-old orphan. He said he continued to favour the theory that the girl who gave birth to the masterpiec­e painter and inventor was a “rural mother.”

The art historian suggested the document may not be conclusive.

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