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Bottega di Leonardo

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Leonardo with Ezio in his workshop

The Bottega di Leonardo was the workshop of the Renaissance polymath Leonardo da Vinci, where he would design and build his inventions, as well as decode pages of Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad's Codex at the request of his friend, the Italian Assassin Ezio Auditore. Throughout the years, Leonardo relocated his operations from Florence to Venice, then Rome, though the workshop maintained its appearance and purpose.

Locations[edit | edit source]

Florence[edit | edit source]

"Maestro Leonardo was commissioned by a Venetian noble to paint some portraits. He paid for the Maestro to move his entire workshop to Venezia. It's quite an opportunity!"
―A civilian informing Ezio of Leonardo's relocation, 1480.[src]-[m]

Shortly after completing his apprenticeship under Andrea del Verrocchio, Leonardo established his own workshop in the center of Florence.[1] There, he created commissions for the local townspeople, one of whom was Maria Auditore. Through her, Leonardo became acquainted with her son Ezio,[2] who became his good friend and would frequent his different workshops in later years.[3]

Leonardo distracting a guard

After Ezio's father Giovanni and brothers Federico and Petruccio were executed on false treason charges in 1476,[4] Leonardo once hid him in his workshop while he went to intercept a guard searching for him. Aside from painting and design, Leonardo also studied human anatomy. He stored and dissected bodies in his workshop, which the city often sent him for research. Because of this, Ezio was once able to hide a guard he had killed in Leonardo's residence.[5]

This studio was where Leonardo first received and decoded a page of Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad's Codex, with which he repaired Ezio's Hidden Blade.[5] Through other pages, he also constructed upgrades for it, including a second blade,[6] and an adaption that delivered poison.[7] Leonardo also allowed Ezio to practice with his Hidden Blade in the courtyard next to the workshop; instructing his assistant at the time, Vincenzo, to set up dummies for him to use.[6] Leonardo eventually left his workshop in Florence in 1480 and relocated to Venice after receiving a commission from a local noble.[8][9]

Venice[edit | edit source]

"And now, I present to you, your workshop, Ser da Vinci! We spared no expense in its design! You'll see it is perfect; as if you never left Firenze!"
―Alvise da Vilandino welcoming Leonardo to his new workshop, 1481.[src]-[m]

Upon his arrival and subsequent tour of the city with Alvise da Vilandino, Leonardo was introduced to his new workshop. Alvise commented that it would be "as if he never left Firenze," and indeed, the building and interior were nearly identical to his workshop in Florence.[10] Leonardo continued to decode Codex pages for Ezio in this workshop, where he built the Hidden Gun upgrade for the Hidden Blade.[11] As well as this, he also improved the design of his Flying Machine, which allowed Ezio to fly to the Palazzo Ducale di Venezia.[12]

Mario, Leonardo, Niccolò, and Ezio discussing the Apple

In 1488, after retrieving an Apple of Eden from Rodrigo Borgia, Ezio took it to Leonardo's workshop. There, he, his uncle Mario, Niccolò Machiavelli, and Leonardo attempted to discover its purpose, to no avail. Ezio and Niccolò then decided to entrust the Apple to their ally, Caterina Sforza, while Mario invited Leonardo to visit the Villa Auditore.[13] Leonardo accepted the invite and relocated to Monteriggioni, where he continued to decode Codex pages brought by Ezio.[14] Despite having abandoned his Venetian workshop, rumors later began to circulate that Leonardo used it as a secret retreat, returning to it repeatedly during his life.[9]

Rome[edit | edit source]

"I intended to accompany you to the docks, but we cannot leave my workshop without my assistant."
―Leonardo to Ezio, 1506.[src]-[m]

In 1499, after being forcibly recruited by the Papal Captain General Cesare Borgia, Leonardo began to design weapons and war machines for the Borgia. As such, by 1500, he had relocated his workshop to Rome.[15] Around 1502, Ezio's apprentice Francesco Vecellio visited the workshop and commissioned two Hidden Bolts, since Ezio denied him the right to wield a Hidden Gun. Leonardo accepted but requested a large payment upfront,[16] because the Borgia were not paying him for their war machines.[15] Leonardo remained in Rome even after Cesare's fall from power,[17] and spent the next few years studying Pythagoras and the Pythagorean Temple, as well as working on his latest painting, the Mona Lisa.[18]

In 1505, Ezio visited Leonardo while he worked on the Mona Lisa, though the latter was so engrossed in his art that he initially failed to notice his guest. Ezio had come to inform Leonardo that he had thwarted an attempt on his life by mercenaries hired by Pope Julius II, but ultimately decided against disturbing his friend's work and left without saying a word.[19]

Ezio examining one of the paintings

In 1506, Hermeticists led by Ercole Massimo kidnapped Leonardo from his workshop and ransacked the room in search of his map to the Temple of Pythagoras.[18] During the ordeal, Leonardo managed to leave a clue for Ezio to find him by writing on the floor of the workshop. During their attempts to find the artist, Ezio and Leonardo's assistant Salaì used his workshop to store the recovered da Vinci paintings and examine them for clues using Ezio's Eagle Vision.[20]

Gallery[edit | edit source]

Appearances[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

fr:Ateliers de Léonard de Vinci hu:Bottega di Leonardo