Library at Visconti Castle
In 1487, Leonardo da Vinci was determined to prove himself as an architect by designing a lantern tower, otherwise known as a tiburio, for the Milan Cathedral. As he perfected his designs, he fostered friendships with two other architects, Donato Bramante and Francesco di Giorgio.
During this period of designing Milan Cathedral’s tiburio, da Vinci and di Giorgio travelled to Pavia to consult with the architects designing and constructing a new cathedral there. It was during this trip that they discovered an Italian translated “copy of an architectural treatise by Vitruvius, a Roman military officer and engineer from the first century BC,” (Isaacson 148) in the Visconti Library in the Castle of Pavia. di Giorgio was able to use this treatise as inspiration for his own architectural treatise that he had been revising.
The architects’ collaboration on the Milan Cathedral led to one of da Vinci’s most famous works, the Vitruvian Man, a sketch which “came to symbolize the harmonious relationship between man and the universe,” (Isaacson 141).
Source: Isaacson, Walter. “Chapter 8 Vitruvian Man.” Leonardo Da Vinci: The Biography, Simon & Schuster, 2018.
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Coordinates
Longitude: 9.025774000000