Da Vinci and the Migrants

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DA VINCI AND THE MIGRANTS

István Orosz

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f you had to name the icons or paragons who embody the idea of European culture for you, how many names would you come up with before remembering Leonardo da Vinci? Most people would certainly include him in their top ten, possibly five, and some would quite likely think of him first. Recently I read somewhere that an Italian researcher found out Leonardo was not in fact European to the bone. Having examined the master’s fingerprint, he determined that the whorling friction ridges followed much the same pattern as those typically seen on the fingerprints of Arab individuals. I have no idea of the size of the fingerprint sample professor Luigi Capasso of the University of Chieti–Pescara used in mounting his less than convincing statistical analysis – the specific spiral pattern in question characterises no more than 60 per cent of the total population of the Middle East – but the relevant database available today is undoubtedly vast. These days, refugees flocking from the East to the borders of our continent are fingerprinted and labelled as “migrants” by Leonardo’s Europe. I suppose there is no point in entertaining a direct analogy between the registering stations set up on Hungary’s southern border and the research into the provenance of the famous Florentine painter, and from now on I will resist the temptation to dabble in that dubious enterprise. Having said that, I wish to essay a few propositions in the belief that the artist’s life and work justify an inquiry along rather similar lines. As is commonly known, Leonardo was a love-child. Unusually, however, we know more about the identity of his father than about that of his mother: he was one Ser Piero da Vinci, a gentleman who decided to accept in his own name the son born out of wedlock to his housemaid called Caterina. In those days, many women from the East found a new home in Tuscany, most of them baptised as Maria or Caterina on arrival. It is not inconceivable that Leonardo’s mother came to Ser Piero’s portal as a refugee migrant herself, possibly as a victim of the slave trade with Constantinople. We know very little if anything about her identity. It is instructive in this regard that the painter’s baptismal certificate does not deign to expressly identify the mother, when it mentions the priest and no fewer than ten witnesses by name. DA VIN CI AN D THE MIGR AN TS

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