Leonardo da Vinci’s mother was a slave, claims Italian novelist

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 of Central Asia.

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 notarised the record six months after the birth of the Renaissance genius, who went on to paint masterpieces including the Mona Lisa.

Historian Carlo Vecce with his latest novel, Caterina’s smile
Historian Carlo Vecce with his latest novel, Caterina’s Smile (Giunti Editore via AP)

“But when the evidence goes in the other direction, one must pay attention,” he said.

Vecce 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, a 15-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”.

“There have been a number of claims that Leonardo’s mother was a slave,” Prof Kemp said in a statement provided to The Associated Press.

“This fits the need to find something exceptional and exotic in Leonardo’s background, and a link to slavery fits with current obsessions.”

This picture made by historian Carlo Vecce shows what he says is the original act of liberation of the slave Caterina, who he believes is the mother of Leonardo da Vinci and notarised by Leonardo’s father Piero da Vinci
This picture made by historian Carlo Vecce shows what he says is the original act of liberation of the slave Caterina, who he believes is the mother of Leonardo da Vinci and notarised by Leonardo’s father Piero da Vinci (Carlo Vecce via AP)

It was Leonardo’s grandfather who said his mother’s name was Caterina, according to Prof Kemp.

Caterina was a common name given to slaves when they were forced to convert to Christianity, and the husband of the woman who freed the girl in Vecce’s document traded two slaves with that name in one year, Prof Kemp said.

Prof Kemp both praised Vecce’s work as a scholar and expressed surprise that the Italian professor published his findings as a fictionalised account.

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