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Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci, The
VOLUME II   VOLUME II - SECTION XVII. TOPOGRAPHICAL NOTES
Leonardo da Vinci
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       VOLUME II - SECTION XVII. TOPOGRAPHICAL NOTES
       A large part of the texts published in this section might perhaps
       have found their proper place in connection with the foregoing
       chapters on Physical Geography. But these observations on Physical
       Geography, of whatever kind they may be, as soon as they are
       localised acquire a special interest and importance and particularly
       as bearing on the question whether Leonardo himself made the
       observations recorded at the places mentioned or merely noted the
       statements from hearsay. In a few instances he himself tells us that
       he writes at second hand. In some cases again, although the style
       and expressions used make it seem highly probable that he has
       derived his information from others-- though, as it seems to me,
       these cases are not very numerous--we find, on the other hand, among
       these topographical notes a great number of observations, about
       which it is extremely difficult to form a decided opinion. Of what
       the Master's life and travels may have been throughout his
       sixty-seven years of life we know comparatively little; for a long
       course of time, and particularly from about 1482 to 1486, we do not
       even know with certainty that he was living in Italy. Thus, from a
       biographical point of view a very great interest attaches to some of
       the topographical notes, and for this reason it seemed that it would
       add to their value to arrange them in a group by themselves.
       Leonardo's intimate knowledge with places, some of which were
       certainly remote from his native home, are of importance as
       contributing to decide the still open question as to the extent of
       Leonardo's travels. We shall find in these notes a confirmation of
       the view, that the MSS. in which the Topographical Notes occur are
       in only a very few instances such diaries as may have been in use
       during a journey. These notes are mostly found in the MSS. books of
       his later and quieter years, and it is certainly remarkable that
       Leonardo is very reticent as to the authorities from whom he quotes
       his facts and observations: For instance, as to the Straits of
       Gibraltar, the Nile, the Taurus Mountains and the Tigris and
       Euphrates. Is it likely that he, who declared that in all scientific
       research, his own experience should be the foundation of his
       statements (see XIX Philosophy No. 987--991,) should here have made
       an exception to this rule without mentioning it?_
       _As for instance in the discussion as to the equilibrium of the mass
       of water in the Mediterranean Sea--a subject which, it may be
       observed, had at that time attracted the interest and study of
       hardly any other observer. The acute remarks, in Nos. 985--993, on
       the presence of shells at the tops of mountains, suffice to
       prove--as it seems to me--that it was not in his nature to allow
       himself to be betrayed into wide generalisations, extending beyond
       the limits of his own investigations, even by such brilliant results
       of personal study._
       _Most of these Topographical Notes, though suggesting very careful
       and thorough research, do not however, as has been said, afford
       necessarily indisputable evidence that that research was Leonardo's
       own. But it must be granted that in more than one instance
       probability is in favour of this idea._
       _Among the passages which treat somewhat fully of the topography of
       Eastern places by far the most interesting is a description of the
       Taurus Mountains; but as this text is written in the style of a
       formal report and, in the original, is associated with certain
       letters which give us the history of its origin, I have thought it
       best not to sever it from that connection. It will be found under
       No. XXI (Letters)._
       _That Florence, and its neighbourhood, where Leonardo spent his
       early years, should be nowhere mentioned except in connection with
       the projects for canals, which occupied his attention for some short
       time during the first ten years of the XVIth century, need not
       surprise us. The various passages relating to the construction of
       canals in Tuscany, which are put together at the beginning, are
       immediately followed by those which deal with schemes for canals in
       Lombardy; and after these come notes on the city and vicinity of
       Milan as well as on the lakes of North Italy._
       _The notes on some towns of Central Italy which Leonardo visited in
       1502, when in the service of Cesare Borgia, are reproduced here in
       the same order as in the note book used during these travels (MS.
       L., Institut de France). These notes have but little interest in
       themselves excepting as suggesting his itinerary. The maps of the
       districts drawn by Leonardo at the time are more valuable (see No.
       1054 note). The names on these maps are not written from right to
       left, but in the usual manner, and we are permitted to infer that
       they were made in obedience to some command, possibly for the use of
       Cesare Borgia himself; the fact that they remained nevertheless in
       Leonardo's hands is not surprising when we remember the sudden
       political changes and warlike events of the period. There can be no
       doubt that these maps, which are here published for the first time,
       are original in the strictest sense of the word, that is to say
       drawn from observations of the places themselves; this is proved by
       the fact--among others--that we find among his manuscripts not only
       the finished maps themselves but the rough sketches and studies for
       them. And it would perhaps be difficult to point out among the
       abundant contributions to geographical knowledge published during
       the XVIth century, any maps at all approaching these in accuracy and
       finish._
       _The interesting map of the world, so far as it was then known,
       which is among the Leonardo MSS. at Windsor (published in the_
       'Archaeologia' _Vol. XI) cannot be attributed to the Master, as the
       Marchese Girolamo d'Adda has sufficiently proved; it has not
       therefore been reproduced here._
       _Such of Leonardo's observations on places in Italy as were made
       before or after his official travels as military engineer to Cesare
       Borgia, have been arranged in alphabetical order, under Nos.
       1034-1054. The most interesting are those which relate to the Alps
       and the Appenines, Nos. 1057-1068._
       _Most of the passages in which France is mentioned have hitherto
       remained unknown, as well as those which treat of the countries
       bordering on the Mediterranean, which come at the end of this
       section. Though these may be regarded as of a more questionable
       importance in their bearing on the biography of the Master than
       those which mention places in France, it must be allowed that they
       are interesting as showing the prominent place which the countries
       of the East held in his geographical studies. He never once alludes
       to the discovery of America._
       I. ITALY.
       Canals in connection with the Arno (1001-1008)
       1001.
       CANAL OF FLORENCE.
       Sluices should be made in the valley of la Chiana at Arezzo, so that
       when, in the summer, the Arno lacks water, the canal may not remain
       dry: and let this canal be 20 braccia wide at the bottom, and at the
       top 30, and 2 braccia deep, or 4, so that two of these braccia may
       flow to the mills and the meadows, which will benefit the country;
       and Prato, Pistoia and Pisa, as well as Florence, will gain two
       hundred thousand ducats a year, and will lend a hand and money to
       this useful work; and the Lucchese the same, for the lake of Sesto
       will be navigable; I shall direct it to Prato and Pistoia, and cut
       through Serravalle and make an issue into the lake; for there will
       be no need of locks or supports, which are not lasting and so will
       always be giving trouble in working at them and keeping them up.
       And know that in digging this canal where it is 4 braccia deep, it
       will cost 4 dinari the square braccio; for twice the depth 6 dinari,
       if you are making 4 braccia [Footnote: This passage is illustrated
       by a slightly sketched map, on which these places are indicated from
       West to East: Pisa, Luccha, Lago, Seravalle, Pistoja, Prato,
       Firenze.] and there are but 2 banks; that is to say one from the
       bottom of the trench to the surface of the edges of it, and the
       other from these edges to the top of the ridge of earth which will
       be raised on the margin of the bank. And if this bank were of double
       the depth only the first bank will be increased, that is 4 braccia
       increased by half the first cost; that is to say that if at first 4
       dinari were paid for 2 banks, for 3 it would come to 6, at 2 dinari
       the bank, if the trench measured 16 braccia at the bottom; again, if
       the trench were 16 braccia wide and 4 deep, coming to 4 lire for the
       work, 4 Milan dinari the square braccio; a trench which was 32
       braccia at the bottom would come to 8 dinari the square braccio.
       1002.
       From the wall of the Arno at [the gate of] la Giustizia to the bank
       of the Arno at Sardigna where the walls are, to the mills, is 7400
       braccia, that is 2 miles and 1400 braccia and beyond the Arno is
       5500 braccia.
       [Footnote: 2. _Giustizia_. By this the Porta della Giustizia seems
       to be meant; from the XVth to the XVIth centuries it was also
       commonly known as Porta Guelfa, Porta San Francesco del Renaio,
       Porta Nuova, and Porta Reale. It was close to the Arno opposite to
       the Porta San Niccolo, which still exists.]
       1003.
       By guiding the Arno above and below a treasure will be found in each
       acre of ground by whomsoever will.
       1004.
       The wall of the old houses runs towards the gate of San Nicolo.
       [Footnote: By the side of this text there is an indistinct sketch,
       resembling that given under No.973. On the bank is written the word
       _Casace_. There then follows in the original a passage of 12 lines
       in which the consequences of the windings of the river are
       discussed. A larger but equally hasty diagram on the same page
       represents the shores of the Arno inside Florence as in two parallel
       lines. Four horizontal lines indicate the bridges. By the side these
       measures are stated in figures: I. (at the Ponte alla Carraja):
       _230--largho br. 12 e 2 di spoda e 14 di pile e a 4 pilastri;_ 2.
       (at the Ponte S. Trinita); _l88--largho br. 15 e 2 di spode he 28
       di pilastri for delle spode e pilastri so 2;_ 3. (at the Ponte
       vecchio); _pote lung br. 152 e largo;_ 4. (at the Ponte alle
       Grazie): _290 ellargo 12 e 2 di spode e 6 di pili._
       There is, in MS. W. L. 2l2b, a sketched plan of Florence, with the
       following names of gates:
       _Nicholo--Saminiato--Giorgo--Ghanolini--Porta San Fredian
       --Prato--Faenza--Ghallo--Pinti--Giustitia_.]
       1005.
       The ruined wall is 640 braccia; 130 is the wall remaining with the
       mill; 300 braccia were broken in 4 years by Bisarno.
       1006.
       They do not know why the Arno will never remain in a channel. It is
       because the rivers which flow into it deposit earth where they
       enter, and wear it away on the opposite side, bending the river in
       that direction. The Arno flows for 6 miles between la Caprona and
       Leghorn; and for 12 through the marshes, which extend 32 miles, and
       16 from La Caprona up the river, which makes 48; by the Arno from
       Florence beyond 16 miles; to Vico 16 miles, and the canal is 5; from
       Florence to Fucechio it is 40 miles by the river Arno.
       56 miles by the Arno from Florence to Vico; by the Pistoia canal it
       is 44 miles. Thus it is 12 miles shorter by the canal than by the
       Arno.
       [Footnote: This passage is written by the side of a map washed in
       Indian ink, of the course of the Arno; it is evidently a sketch for
       a completer map.
       These investigations may possibly be connected with the following
       documents. _Francesco Guiducci alla Balia di Firenze. Dal Campo
       contro Pisa_ 24 _Luglio_ 1503 (_Archivio di Stato, Firenze, Lettere
       alla Balia_; published by J. GAYE, _Carteggio inedito d'Artisti,
       Firenze_ 1840, _Tom. II_, p. 62): _Ex Castris, Franciscus
       Ghuiduccius,_ 24. _Jul._ 1503. _Appresso fu qui hieri con una di V.
       Signoria Alexandro degli Albizi insieme con Leonardo da Vinci et
       certi altri, et veduto el disegno insieme con el ghovernatore, doppo
       molte discussioni et dubii conclusesi che l'opera fussi molto al
       proposito, o si veramente Arno volgersi qui, o restarvi con un
       canale, che almeno vieterebbe che le colline da nemici non
       potrebbono essere offese; come tucto referiranno loro a bocha V. S._
       And, _Archivio di Stato, Firenze, Libro d'Entrata e Uscita di cassa
       de' Magnifici Signori di luglio e agosto_
       1503 _a_ 51 _T.: Andata di Leonardo al Campo sotto Pisa. Spese
       extraordinarie dieno dare a di XXVI di luglio L. LVI sol. XII per
       loro a Giovanni Piffero; e sono per tanti, asegnia avere spexi in
       vetture di sei chavalli a spese di vitto per andare chon Lionardo da
       Vinci a livellare Arno in quello di Pisa per levallo del lilo suo._
       (Published by MILANESI, _Archivio Storico Italiano, Serie III, Tom.
       XVI._} VASARI asserts: _(Leonardo) fu il primo ancora, che
       giovanetto discorresse sopra il fiume d'Arno per metterlo in canale
       da Pisa a Fiorenza_ (ed. SANSONI, IV, 20).
       The passage above is in some degree illustrated by the map on Pl.
       CXII, where the course of the Arno westward from Empoli is shown.]
       1007.
       The eddy made by the Mensola, when the Arno is low and the Mensola
       full.
       [Footnote: _Mensola_ is a mountain stream which falls into the Arno
       about a mile and a half above Florence.
       A=Arno, I=Isola, M=Mvgone, P=Pesa, N=Mesola.]
       1008.
       That the river which is to be turned from one place to another must
       be coaxed and not treated roughly or with violence; and to do this a
       sort of floodgate should be made in the river, and then lower down
       one in front of it and in like manner a third, fourth and fifth, so
       that the river may discharge itself into the channel given to it, or
       that by this means it may be diverted from the place it has damaged,
       as was done in Flanders--as I was told by Niccolo di Forsore.
       How to protect and repair the banks washed by the water, as below
       the island of Cocomeri.
       Ponte Rubaconte (Fig. 1); below [the palaces] Bisticci and Canigiani
       (Fig. 2). Above the flood gate of la Giustizia (Fig. 3); _a b_ is a
       sand bank opposite the end of the island of the Cocomeri in the
       middle of the Arno (Fig. 4). [Footnote: The course of the river Arno
       is also discussed in Nos. 987 and 988.]
       Canals in the Milanese (1009-1013)
       1009.
       The canal of San Cristofano at Milan made May 3rd 1509. [Footnote:
       This observation is written above a washed pen and ink drawing which
       has been published as Tav. VI in the _,,Saggio."_ The editors of
       that work explain the drawing as _"uno Studio di bocche per
       estrazione d'acqua."_]
       1010.
       OF THE CANAL OF MARTESANA.
       By making the canal of Martesana the water of the Adda is greatly
       diminished by its distribution over many districts for the
       irrigation of the fields. A remedy for this would be to make several
       little channels, since the water drunk up by the earth is of no more
       use to any one, nor mischief neither, because it is taken from no
       one; and by making these channels the water which before was lost
       returns again and is once more serviceable and useful to men.
       [Footnote: _"el navilio di Martagano"_ is also mentioned in a note
       written in red chalk, MS. H2 17a Leonardo has, as it seems, little
       to do with Lodovico il Moro's scheme to render this canal navigable.
       The canal had been made in 1460 by Bertonino da Novara. Il Moro
       issued his degree in 1493, but Leonardo's notes about this canal
       were, with the exception of one (No. 1343), written about sixteen
       years later.]
       1011.
       No canal which is fed by a river can be permanent if the river
       whence it originates is not wholly closed up, like the canal of
       Martesana which is fed by the Ticino.
       1012.
       From the beginning of the canal to the mill.
       From the beginning of the canal of Brivio to the mill of Travaglia
       is 2794 trabochi, that is 11176 braccia, which is more than 3 miles
       and two thirds; and here the canal is 57 braccia higher than the
       surface of the water of the Adda, giving a fall of two inches in
       every hundred trabochi; and at that spot we propose to take the
       opening of our canal.
       [Footnote: The following are written on the sketches: At the place
       marked _N: navilio da dacquiue_ (canal of running water); at _M:
       molin del Travaglia_ (Mill of Travaglia); at _R: rochetta ssanta
       maria_ (small rock of Santa Maria); at _A: Adda;_ at _L: Lagho di
       Lecho ringorgato alli 3 corni in Adda,--Concha perpetua_ (lake of
       Lecco overflowing at Tre Corni, in Adda,-- a permanent sluice). Near
       the second sketch, referring to the sluice near _Q: qui la chatena
       ttalie d'u peso_ (here the chain is in one piece). At _M_ in the
       lower sketch: _mol del travaglia, nel cavare la concha il tereno
       ara chotrapero co cassa d'acqua._ (Mill of Travaglia, in digging
       out the sluice the soil will have as a counterpoise a vessel of
       water).]
       1013.
       If it be not reported there that this is to be a public canal, it
       will be necessary to pay for the land; [Footnote 3: _il re_. Louis
       XII or Francis I of France. It is hardly possible to doubt that the
       canals here spoken of were intended to be in the Milanese. Compare
       with this passage the rough copy of a letter by Leonardo, to the
       _"Presidente dell' Ufficio regolatore dell' acqua"_ on No. 1350. See
       also the note to No. 745, 1. 12.] and the king will pay it by
       remitting the taxes for a year.
       Estimates and preparatory studies for canals (1014-1015)
       1014.
       CANAL.
       The canal which may be 16 braccia wide at the bottom and 20 at the
       top, we may say is on the average 18 braccia wide, and if it is 4
       braccia deep, at 4 dinari the square braccia; it will only cost 900
       ducats, to excavate by the mile, if the square braccio is calculated
       in ordinary braccia; but if the braccia are those used in measuring
       land, of which every 4 are equal to 4 1/2 and if by the mile we
       understand three thousand ordinary braccia; turned into land
       braccia, these 3000 braccia will lack 1/4; there remain 2250
       braccia, which at 4 dinari the braccio will amount to 675 ducats a
       mile. At 3 dinari the square braccio, the mile will amount to 506
       1/4 ducats so that the excavation of 30 miles of the canal will
       amount to 15187 1/2 ducats.
       1015.
       To make the great canal, first make the smaller one and conduct into
       it the waters which by a wheel will help to fill the great one.
       Notes on buildings in Milan (1016-1019)
       1016.
       Indicate the centre of Milan.
       Moforte--porta resa--porta nova--strada nova--navilio--porta
       cumana--barco--porta giovia--porta vercellina--porta sco
       Anbrogio--porta Tesinese--torre dell' Imperatore-- porta
       Lodovica--acqua.
       [Footnote: See Pl. CIX. The original sketch is here reduced to about
       half its size. The gates of the town are here named, beginning at
       the right hand and following the curved line. In the bird's eye view
       of Milan below, the cathedral is plainly recognisable in the middle;
       to the right is the tower of San Gottardo. The square, above the
       number 9147, is the Lazzaretto, which was begun in 1488. On the left
       the group of buildings of the _'Castello'_ will be noticed. On the
       sketched Plan of Florence (see No. 1004 note) Leonardo has written
       on the margin the following names of gates of Milan: Vercellina
       --Ticinese--Ludovica--Romana--Orientale--
       Nova--Beatrice--Cumana--Compare too No. 1448, 11. 5, 12.]
       1017.
       The moat of Milan.
       Canal 2 braccia wide.
       The castle with the moats full.
       The filling of the moats of the Castle of Milan.
       1018.
       THE BATH.
       To heat the water for the stove of the Duchess take four parts of
       cold water to three parts of hot water.
       [Footnote: _Duchessa di Milano_, Beatrice d'Este, wife of Ludovico
       il Moro to whom she was married, in 1491. She died in June 1497.]
       1019.
       In the Cathedral at the pulley of the nail of the cross.
       Item.
       To place the mass _v r_ in the...
       [Footnote: On this passage AMORETTI remarks _(Memorie Storiche_
       chap. IX): _Nell'anno stesso lo veggiamo formare un congegno di
       carucole e di corde, con cui trasportare in piu venerabile e piu
       sicuro luogo, cioe nell'ultima arcata della nave di mezzo della
       metropolitana, la sacra reliquia del Santo Chiodo, che ivi ancor si
       venera. Al fol. 15 del codice segnato Q. R. in 16, egli ci ha
       lasciata di tal congegno una doppia figura, cioe una di quattro
       carucole, e una di tre colle rispettive corde, soggiugnandovi: in
       Domo alla carucola del Chiodo della Croce._
       AMORETTI'S views as to the mark on the MS, and the date when it was
       written are, it may be observed, wholly unfounded. The MS. L, in
       which it occurs, is of the year 1502, and it is very unlikely that
       Leonardo was in Milan at that time; this however would not prevent
       the remark, which is somewhat obscure, from applying to the
       Cathedral at Milan.]
       1020.
       OF THE FORCE OF THE VACUUM FORMED IN A MOMENT.
       I saw, at Milan, a thunderbolt fall on the tower della Credenza on
       its Northern side, and it descended with a slow motion down that
       side, and then at once parted from that tower and carried with it
       and tore away from that wall a space of 3 braccia wide and two deep;
       and this wall was 4 braccia thick and was built of thin and small
       old bricks; and this was dragged out by the vacuum which the flame
       of the thunderbolt had caused, &c.
       [Footnote: With reference to buildings at Milan see also Nos. 751
       and 756, and Pl. XCV, No. 2 (explained on p. 52), Pl. C (explained
       on pages 60-62). See also pages 25, 39 and 40.]
       Remarks on natural phenomena in and near Milan (1021-1022)
       1021.
       I have already been to see a great variety (of atmospheric effects).
       And lately over Milan towards Lago Maggiore I saw a cloud in the
       form of an immense mountain full of rifts of glowing light, because
       the rays of the sun, which was already close to the horizon and red,
       tinged the cloud with its own hue. And this cloud attracted to it
       all the little clouds that were near while the large one did not
       move from its place; thus it retained on its summit the reflection
       of the sunlight till an hour and a half after sunset, so immensely
       large was it; and about two hours after sunset such a violent wind
       arose, that it was really tremendous and unheard of.
       [Footnote: _di arie_ is wanting in the original but may safely be
       inserted in the context, as the formation of clouds is under
       discussion before this text.]
       1022.
       On the 10th day of December at 9 o'clock a. m. fire was set to the
       place.
       On the l8th day of December 1511 at 9 o'clock a. m. this second fire
       was kindled by the Swiss at Milan at the place called DCXC.
       [Footnote: With these two texts, (l. 1--2 and l. 3--5 are in the
       original side by side) there are sketches of smoke wreaths in red
       chalk.]
       Note on Pavia (1023)
       1023.
       The chimneys of the castle of Pavia have 6 rows of openings and from
       each to the other is one braccio.
       [Footnote: Other notes relating to Pavia occur on p. 43 and p. 53
       (Pl. XCVIII, No. 3). Compare No. 1448, 26.]
       Notes on the Sforzesca near Vigevano (1024-1028)
       1024.
       On the 2nd day of February 1494. At Sforzesca I drew twenty five
       steps, 2/3 braccia to each, and 8 braccia wide.
       [Footnote: See Pl. CX, No. 2. The rest of the notes on this page
       refer to the motion of water. On the lower sketch we read: 4 _br._
       (four braccia) and _giara_ (for _ghiaja_, sand, gravel).]
       1025.
       The vineyards of Vigevano on the 20th day of March 1494.
       [Footnote: On one side there is an effaced sketch in red chalk.]
       1026.
       To lock up a butteris at Vigevano.
       1027.
       Again if the lowest part of the bank which lies across the current
       of the waters is made in deep and wide steps, after the manner of
       stairs, the waters which, in their course usually fall
       perpendicularly from the top of such a place to the bottom, and wear
       away the foundations of this bank can no longer descend with a blow
       of too great a force; and I find the example of this in the stairs
       down which the water falls in the fields at Sforzesca at Vigevano
       over which the running water falls for a height of 50 braccia.
       1028.
       Stair of Vigevano below La Sforzesca, 130 steps, 1/4 braccio high
       and 1/2 braccio wide, down which the water falls, so as not to wear
       away anything at the end of its fall; by these steps so much soil
       has come down that it has dried up a pool; that is to say it has
       filled it up and a pool of great depth has been turned into meadows.
       Notes on the North Italian lake (1029-1033)
       1029
       In many places there are streams of water which swell for six hours
       and ebb for six hours; and I, for my part, have seen one above the
       lake of Como called Fonte Pliniana, which increases and ebbs, as I
       have said, in such a way as to turn the stones of two mills; and
       when it fails it falls so low that it is like looking at water in a
       deep pit.
       [Footnote: The fountain is known by this name to this day: it is
       near Torno, on the Eastern shore of Como. The waters still rise and
       fall with the flow and ebb of the tide as Pliny described it (Epist.
       IV, 30; Hist. Nat. II, 206).]
       1030.
       LAKE OF COMO. VALLEY OF CHIAVENNA.
       Above the lake of Como towards Germany is the valley of Chiavenna
       where the river Mera flows into this lake. Here are barren and very
       high mountains, with huge rocks. Among these mountains are to be
       found the water-birds called gulls. Here grow fir trees, larches and
       pines. Deer, wildgoats, chamois, and terrible bears. It is
       impossible to climb them without using hands and feet. The peasants
       go there at the time of the snows with great snares to make the
       bears fall down these rocks. These mountains which very closely
       approach each other are parted by the river. They are to the right
       and left for the distance of 20 miles throughout of the same nature.
       >From mile to mile there are good inns. Above on the said river there
       are waterfalls of 400 braccia in height, which are fine to see; and
       there is good living at 4 soldi the reckoning. This river brings
       down a great deal of timber.
       VAL SASINA.
       Val Sasina runs down towards Italy; this is almost the same form and
       character. There grow here many _mappello_ and there are great ruins
       and falls of water [Footnote 14: The meaning of _mappello_ is
       unknown.].
       VALLEY OF INTROZZO.
       This valley produces a great quantity of firs, pines and larches;
       and from here Ambrogio Fereri has his timber brought down; at the
       head of the Valtellina are the mountains of Bormio, terrible and
       always covered with snow; marmots (?) are found there.
       BELLAGGIO.
       Opposite the castle Bellaggio there is the river Latte, which falls
       from a height of more than 100 braccia from the source whence it
       springs, perpendicularly, into the lake with an inconceivable roar
       and noise. This spring flows only in August and September.
       VALTELLINA.
       Valtellina, as it is called, is a valley enclosed in high and
       terrible mountains; it produces much strong wine, and there is so
       much cattle that the natives conclude that more milk than wine grows
       there. This is the valley through which the Adda passes, which first
       runs more than 40 miles through Germany; this river breeds the fish
       _temolo_ which live on silver, of which much is to be found in its
       sands. In this country every one can sell bread and wine, and the
       wine is worth at most one soldo the bottle and a pound of veal one
       soldo, and salt ten dinari and butter the same and their pound is 30
       ounces, and eggs are one soldo the lot.
       1031.
       At BORMIO.
       At Bormio are the baths;--About eight miles above Como is the
       Pliniana, which increases and ebbs every six hours, and its swell
       supplies water for two mills; and its ebbing makes the spring dry
       up; two miles higher up there is Nesso, a place where a river falls
       with great violence into a vast rift in the mountain. These
       excursions are to be made in the month of May. And the largest bare
       rocks that are to be found in this part of the country are the
       mountains of Mandello near to those of Lecco, and of Gravidona
       towards Bellinzona, 30 miles from Lecco, and those of the valley of
       Chiavenna; but the greatest of all is that of Mandello, which has at
       its base an opening towards the lake, which goes down 200 steps, and
       there at all times is ice and wind.
       IN VAL SASINA.
       In Val Sasina, between Vimognio and Introbbio, to the right hand,
       going in by the road to Lecco, is the river Troggia which falls from
       a very high rock, and as it falls it goes underground and the river
       ends there. 3 miles farther we find the buildings of the mines of
       copper and silver near a place called Pra' Santo Pietro, and mines
       of iron and curious things. La Grigna is the highest mountain there
       is in this part, and it is quite bare.
       [Footnote: 1030 and 1031. From the character of the handwriting we
       may conclude that these observations were made in Leonardo's youth;
       and I should infer from their contents, that they were notes made in
       anticipation of a visit to the places here described, and derived
       from some person (unknown to us) who had given him an account of
       them.]
       1032.
       The lake of Pusiano flows into the lake of Segrino [Footnote 3: The
       statement about the lake Segrino is incorrect; it is situated in the
       Valle Assina, above the lake of Pusiano.] and of Annone and of Sala.
       The lake of Annone is 22 braccia higher at the surface of its water
       than the surface of the water of the lake of Lecco, and the lake of
       Pusiano is 20 braccia higher than the lake of Annone, which added to
       the afore said 22 braccia make 42 braccia and this is the greatest
       height of the surface of the lake of Pusiano above the surface of
       the lake of Lecco.
       [Footnote: This text has in the original a slight sketch to
       illustrate it.]
       1033.
       At Santa Maria in the Valley of Ravagnate [Footnote 2: _Ravagnate_
       (Leonardo writes _Ravagna_) in the Brianza is between Oggiono and
       Brivio, South of the lake of Como. M. Ravaisson avails himself of
       this note to prove his hypothesis that Leonardo paid two visits to
       France. See Gazette des Beaux Arts, 1881 pag. 528:
       _Au recto du meme feuillet, on lit encore une note relative a une
       vallee "nemonti brigatia"; il me semble qu'il s'agit bien des monts
       de Briancon, le Brigantio des anciens. Briancon est sur la route de
       Lyon en Italie. Ce fut par le mont Viso que passerent, en aout 1515,
       les troupes francaises qui allaient remporter la victoire de
       Marignan.
       Leonard de Vinci, ingenieur de Francois Ier, comme il l'avait ete de
       Louis XII, aurait-il ete pour quelque chose dans le plan du celebre
       passage des Alpes, qui eut lieu en aout 1515, et a la suite duquel
       on le vit accompagner partout le chevaleresque vainqueur? Auraitil
       ete appele par le jeune roi, de Rome ou l'artiste etait alors, des
       son avenement au trone?_] in the mountains of Brianza are the rods
       of chestnuts of 9 braccia and one out of an average of 100 will be
       14 braccia.
       At Varallo di Ponbia near to Sesto on the Ticino the quinces are
       white, large and hard.
       [Footnote 5: Varallo di Ponbia, about ten miles South of Arona is
       distinct from Varallo the chief town in the Val di Sesia.]
       Notes on places in Central Italy, visited in 1502 (1034-1054)
       1034.
       Pigeon-house at Urbino, the 30th day of July 1502. [Footnote: An
       indistinct sketch is introduced with this text, in the original, in
       which the word _Scolatoro_ (conduit) is written.]
       1035.
       Made by the sea at Piombino. [Footnote: Below the sketch there are
       eleven lines of text referring to the motion of waves.]
       1036.
       Acquapendente is near Orvieto. [Footnote: _Acquapendente_ is about
       10 miles West of Orvieto, and is to the right in the map on Pl.
       CXIII, near the lake of Bolsena.]
       1037.
       The rock of Cesena. [Footnote: See Pl. XCIV No. 1, the lower sketch.
       The explanation of the upper sketch is given on p. 29.]
       1038.
       Siena, _a b_ 4 braccia, _a c_ 10 braccia. Steps at [the castle of]
       Urbino. [Footnote: See Pl. CX No. 3; compare also No. 765.]
       1039.
       The bell of Siena, that is the manner of its movement, and the place
       of the attachment of the clapper. [Footnote: The text is accompanied
       by an indistinct sketch.]
       1040.
       On St. Mary's day in the middle of August, at Cesena, 1502.
       [Footnote: See Pl. CX, No. 4.]
       1041.
       Stairs of the [palace of the] Count of Urbino,--rough. [Footnote:
       The text is accompanied by a slight sketch.]
       1042.
       At the fair of San Lorenzo at Cesena. 1502.
       1043.
       Windows at Cesena. [Footnote: There are four more lines of text
       which refer to a slightly sketched diagram.]
       1044.
       At Porto Cesenatico, on the 6th of September 1502 at 9 o'clock a. m.
       The way in which bastions ought to project beyond the walls of the
       towers to defend the outer talus; so that they may not be taken by
       artillery.
       [Footnote: An indistinct sketch, accompanies this passage.]
       1045.
       The rock of the harbour of Cesena is four points towards the South
       West from Cesena.
       1046.
       In Romagna, the realm of all stupidity, vehicles with four wheels
       are used, of which O the two in front are small and two high ones
       are behind; an arrangement which is very unfavourable to the motion,
       because on the fore wheels more weight is laid than on those behind,
       as I showed in the first of the 5th on "Elements".
       1047.
       Thus grapes are carried at Cesena. The number of the diggers of the
       ditches is [arranged] pyramidically. [Footnote: A sketch,
       representing a hook to which two bunches of grapes are hanging,
       refers to these first two lines. Cesena is mentioned again Fol. 82a:
       _Carro da Cesena_ (a cart from Cesena).]
       1048.
       There might be a harmony of the different falls of water as you saw
       them at the fountain of Rimini on the 8th day of August, 1502.
       1049.
       The fortress at Urbino. [Footnote: 1049. In the original the text is
       written inside the sketch in the place here marked _n_.]
       1050.
       Imola, as regards Bologna, is five points from the West, towards the
       North West, at a distance of 20 miles.
       Castel San Piero is seen from Imola at four points from the West
       towards the North West, at a distance of 7 miles.
       Faenza stands with regard to Imola between East and South East at a
       distance of ten miles. Forli stands with regard to Faenza between
       South East and East at a distance of 20 miles from Imola and ten
       from Faenza.
       Forlimpopoli lies in the same direction at 25 miles from Imola.
       Bertinoro, as regards Imola, is five points from the East to wards
       the South East, at 27 miles.
       1051.
       Imola as regards Bologna is five points from the West towards the
       North West at a distance of 20 miles.
       Castel San Pietro lies exactly North West of Imola, at a distance of
       7 miles.
       Faenza, as regards Imola lies exactly half way between the East and
       South East at a distance of 10 miles; and Forli lies in the same
       direction from Imola at a distance of 20 miles; and Forlimpopolo
       lies in the same direction from Forli at a distance of 25 miles.
       Bertinoro is seen from Imola two points from the East towards the
       South East at a distance of 27 miles.
       [Footnote: Leonardo inserted this passage on the margin of the
       circular plan, in water colour, of Imola--see Pl. CXI No. 1.--In the
       original the fields surrounding the town are light green; the moat,
       which surrounds the fortifications and the windings of the river
       Santerno, are light blue. The parts, which have come out blackish
       close to the river are yellow ochre in the original. The dark groups
       of houses inside the town are red. At the four points of the compass
       drawn in the middle of the town Leonardo has written (from right to
       left): _Mezzodi_ (South) at the top; to the left _Scirocho_ (South
       east), _levante_ (East), _Greco_ (North East), _Septantrione_
       (North), _Maesstro_ (North West), _ponente_ (West) _Libecco_ (South
       West). The arch in which the plan is drawn is, in the original, 42
       centimetres across.
       At the beginning of October 1502 Cesare Borgia was shut up in Imola
       by a sudden revolt of the Condottieri, and it was some weeks before
       he could release himself from this state of siege (see Gregorovius,
       _Geschichte der Stadt Rom im Mittelalter_, Vol. VII, Book XIII, 5, 5).
       Besides this incident Imola plays no important part in the history
       of the time. I therefore think myself fully justified in connecting
       this map, which is at Windsor, with the siege of 1502 and with
       Leonardo's engagements in the service of Cesare Borgia, because a
       comparison of these texts, Nos. 1050 and 1051, raise, I believe, the
       hypothesis to a certainty.]
       1052.
       From Bonconventi to Casa Nova are 10 miles, from Casa Nova to Chiusi
       9 miles, from Chiusi to Perugia, from, Perugia to Santa Maria degli
       Angeli, and then to Fuligno. [Footnote: Most of the places here
       described lie within the district shown in the maps on Pl. CXIII.]
       1053.
       On the first of August 1502, the library at Pesaro.
       1054.
       OF PAINTING.
       On the tops and sides of hills foreshorten the shape of the ground
       and its divisions, but give its proper shape to what is turned
       towards you. [Footnote: This passage evidently refers to the making
       of maps, such as Pl. CXII, CXIII, and CXIV. There is no mention of
       such works, it is true, excepting in this one passage of MS. L. But
       this can scarcely be taken as evidence against my view that Leonardo
       busied himself very extensively at that time in the construction of
       maps; and all the less since the foregoing chapters clearly prove
       that at a time so full of events Leonardo would only now and then
       commit his observations to paper, in the MS. L.
       By the side of this text we find, in the original, a very indistinct
       sketch, perhaps a plan of a position. Instead of this drawing I have
       here inserted a much clearer sketch of a position from the same MS.,
       L. 82b and 83a. They are the only drawings of landscape, it may be
       noted, which occur at all in that MS.]
       Alessandria in Piedmont (1055-1056)
       1055.
       At Candia in Lombardy, near Alessandria della Paglia, in making a
       well for Messer Gualtieri [Footnote 2: Messer Gualtieri, the same
       probably as is mentioned in Nos. 672 and 1344.] of Candia, the
       skeleton of a very large boat was found about 10 braccia
       underground; and as the timber was black and fine, it seemed good to
       the said Messer Gualtieri to have the mouth of the well lengthened
       in such a way as that the ends of the boat should be uncovered.
       1056.
       At Alessandria della Paglia in Lombardy there are no stones for
       making lime of, but such as are mixed up with an infinite variety of
       things native to the sea, which is now more than 200 miles away.
       The Alps (1057-1062)
       1057.
       At Monbracco, above Saluzzo,--a mile above the Certosa, at the foot
       of Monte Viso, there is a quarry of flakey stone, which is as white
       as Carrara marble, without a spot, and as hard as porphyry or even
       harder; of which my worthy gossip, Master Benedetto the sculptor,
       has promised to give me a small slab, for the colours, the second
       day of January 1511.
       [Footnote: Saluzzo at the foot of the Alps South of Turin.]
       [Footnote 9. 10.: _Maestro Benedetto scultore_; probably some native
       of Northern Italy acquainted with the place here described. Hardly
       the Florentine sculptor Benedetto da Majano. Amoretti had published
       this passage, and M. Ravaisson who gave a French translation of it
       in the _Gazette des Beaux Arts_ (1881, pag. 528), remarks as
       follows: _Le maitre sculpteur que Leonard appelle son "compare" ne
       serait-il pas Benedetto da Majano, un de ceux qui jugerent avec lui
       de la place a donner au David de Michel-Ange, et de qui le Louvre a
       acquis recemment un buste d'apres Philippe Strozzi?_ To this it may
       be objected that Benedetto da Majano had already lain in his grave
       fourteen years, in the year 1511, when he is supposed to have given
       the promise to Leonardo. The colours may have been given to the
       sculptor Benedetto and the stone may have been in payment for them.
       From the description of the stone here given we may conclude that it
       is repeated from hearsay of the sculptor's account of it. I do not
       understand how, from this observation, it is possible to conclude
       that Leonardo was on the spot.]
       1058.
       That there are springs which suddenly break forth in earthquakes or
       other convulsions and suddenly fail; and this happened in a mountain
       in Savoy where certain forests sank in and left a very deep gap, and
       about four miles from here the earth opened itself like a gulf in
       the mountain, and threw out a sudden and immense flood of water
       which scoured the whole of a little valley of the tilled soil,
       vineyards and houses, and did the greatest mischief, wherever it
       overflowed.
       1059.
       The river Arve, a quarter of a mile from Geneva in Savoy, where the
       fair is held on midsummerday in the village of Saint Gervais.
       [Footnote: An indistinct sketch is to be seen by the text.]
       1060.
       And this may be seen, as I saw it, by any one going up Monbroso
       [Footnote: I have vainly enquired of every available authority for a
       solution of the mystery as to what mountain is intended by the name
       Monboso (Comp. Vol. I Nos. 300 and 301). It seems most obvious to
       refer it to Monte Rosa. ROSA derived from the Keltic ROS which
       survives in Breton and in Gaelic, meaning, in its first sense, a
       mountain spur, but which also--like HORN--means a very high peak;
       thus Monte Rosa would mean literally the High Peak.], a peak of the
       Alps which divide France from Italy. The base of this mountain gives
       birth to the 4 rivers which flow in four different directions
       through the whole of Europe. And no mountain has its base at so
       great a height as this, which lifts itself above almost all the
       clouds; and snow seldom falls there, but only hail in the summer,
       when the clouds are highest. And this hail lies [unmelted] there, so
       that if it were not for the absorption of the rising and falling
       clouds, which does not happen more than twice in an age, an enormous
       mass of ice would be piled up there by the layers of hail, and in
       the middle of July I found it very considerable; and I saw the sky
       above me quite dark, and the sun as it fell on the mountain was far
       brighter here than in the plains below, because a smaller extent of
       atmosphere lay between the summit of the mountain and the sun.
       [Footnote 6: _in una eta._ This is perhaps a slip of the pen on
       Leonardo's part and should be read _estate_ (summer).]
       Leic. 9b]
       1061.
       In the mountains of Verona the red marble is found all mixed with
       cockle shells turned into stone; some of them have been filled at
       the mouth with the cement which is the substance of the stone; and
       in some parts they have remained separate from the mass of the rock
       which enclosed them, because the outer covering of the shell had
       interposed and had not allowed them to unite with it; while in other
       places this cement had petrified those which were old and almost
       stripped the outer skin.
       1062.
       Bridge of Goertz-Wilbach (?).
       [Footnote: There is a slight sketch with this text, Leonardo seems
       to have intended to suggest, with a few pen-strokes, the course of
       the Isonzo and of the Wipbach in the vicinity of Gorizia (Goerz). He
       himself says in another place that he had been in Friuli (see No.
       1077 1. 19).]
       The Appenins (1063-1068)
       1063.
       That part of the earth which was lightest remained farthest from the
       centre of the world; and that part of the earth became the lightest
       over which the greatest quantity of water flowed. And therefore that
       part became lightest where the greatest number of rivers flow; like
       the Alps which divide Germany and France from Italy; whence issue
       the Rhone flowing Southwards, and the Rhine to the North. The Danube
       or Tanoia towards the North East, and the Po to the East, with
       innumerable rivers which join them, and which always run turbid with
       the soil carried by them to the sea.
       The shores of the sea are constantly moving towards the middle of
       the sea and displace it from its original position. The lowest
       portion of the Mediterranean will be reserved for the bed and
       current of the Nile, the largest river that flows into that sea. And
       with it are grouped all its tributaries, which at first fell into
       the sea; as may be seen with the Po and its tributaries, which first
       fell into that sea, which between the Appenines and the German Alps
       was united to the Adriatic sea.
       That the Gallic Alps are the highest part of Europe (1064)
       1064.
       And of these I found some in the rocks of the high Appenines and
       mostly at the rock of La Vernia. [Footnote 6: _Sasso della Vernia._
       The frowning rock between the sources of the Arno and the Tiber, as
       Dante describes this mountain, which is 1269 metres in height.
       This note is written by the side of that given as No. 1020; but
       their connection does not make it clear what Leonardo's purpose was
       in writing it.]
       1065.
       At Parma, at 'La Campana' on the twenty-fifth of October 1514.
       [Footnote 2: _Capano_, an Inn.]
       A note on the petrifactions, or fossils near Parma will be found
       under No. 989.]
       1066.
       A method for drying the marsh of Piombino. [Footnote: There is a
       slight sketch with this text in the original.--Piombino is also
       mentioned in Nos. 609, l. 55-58 (compare Pl. XXXV, 3, below). Also
       in No. 1035.]
       1067.
       The shepherds in the Romagna at the foot of the Apennines make
       peculiar large cavities in the mountains in the form of a horn, and
       on one side they fasten a horn. This little horn becomes one and the
       same with the said cavity and thus they produce by blowing into it a
       very loud noise. [Footnote: As to the Romagna see also No. 1046.]
       1068.
       A spring may be seen to rise in Sicily which at certain times of the
       year throws out chesnut leaves in quantities; but in Sicily chesnuts
       do not grow, hence it is evident that that spring must issue from
       some abyss in Italy and then flow beneath the sea to break forth in
       Sicily. [Footnote: The chesnut tree is very common in Sicily. In
       writing _cicilia_ Leonardo meant perhaps Cilicia.]
       II.
       FRANCE.
       

       1069.
       GERMANY. FRANCE.
       a. Austria, a. Picardy.
       b. Saxony. b. Normandy.
       c. Nuremberg. c. Dauphine.
       d. Flanders.
       SPAIN.
       a. Biscay.
       b. Castille.
       c. Galicia.
       d. Portugal.
       e. Taragona.
       f. Granada.
       

       [Footnote: Two slightly sketched maps, one of Europe the other of
       Spain, are at the side of these notes.]
       1070.
       Perpignan. Roanne. Lyons. Paris. Ghent. Bruges. Holland.
       [Footnote: _Roana_ does not seem to mean here Rouen in Normandy, but
       is probably Roanne (Rodumna) on the upper Loire, Lyonnais (Dep. du
       Loire). This town is now unimportant, but in Leonardo's time was
       still a place of some consequence.]
       1071.
       At Bordeaux in Gascony the sea rises about 40 braccia before its
       ebb, and the river there is filled with salt water for more than a
       hundred and fifty miles; and the vessels which are repaired there
       rest high and dry on a high hill above the sea at low tide.
       [Footnote 2: This is obviously an exaggeration founded on inaccurate
       information. Half of 150 miles would be nearer the mark.]
       1072.
       The Rhone issues from the lake of Geneva and flows first to the West
       and then to the South, with a course of 400 miles and pours its
       waters into the Mediterranean.
       1073.
       _c d_ is the garden at Blois; _a b_ is the conduit of Blois, made in
       France by Fra Giocondo, _b c_ is what is wanting in the height of
       that conduit, _c d_ is the height of the garden at Blois, _e f_ is
       the siphon of the conduit, _b c_, _e f_, _f g_ is where the siphon
       discharges into the river. [Footnote: The tenor of this note (see
       lines 2 and 3) seems to me to indicate that this passage was not
       written in France, but was written from oral information. We have no
       evidence as to when this note may have been written beyond the
       circumstance that Fra Giocondo the Veronese Architect left France
       not before the year 1505. The greater part of the magnificent
       Chateau of Blois has now disappeared. Whether this note was made for
       a special purpose is uncertain. The original form and extent of the
       Chateau is shown in Androvet, _Les plus excellents Bastiments de
       France, Paris MDCVII,_ and it may be observed that there is in the
       middle of the garden a Pavilion somewhat similar to that shown on
       Pl. LXXXVIII No. 7.
       See S. DE LA SAUSSAYE, _Histoire du Chateau de Blois 4eme edition
       Blois et Paris_ p. 175: _En mariant sa fille ainee a Francois, comte
       d'Angouleme, Louis XII lui avait constitue en dot les comtes de
       Blois, d'Asti, de Coucy, de Montfort, d'Etampes et de Vertus. Une
       ordonnance de Francois I. lui laissa en_ 1516 _l'administration du
       comte de Blois.
       Le roi fit commencer, dans la meme annee, les travaux de celle belle
       partie du chateau, connue sous le nom d'aile de Francois I, et dont
       nous avons donne la description au commencement de ce livre. Nous
       trouvons en effet, dans les archives du Baron de Foursanvault, une
       piece qui en fixe parfaitement la date. On y lit: "Je, Baymon
       Philippeaux, commis par le Roy a tenir le compte et fair le payement
       des bastiments, ediffices et reparacions que le dit seigneur fait
       faire en son chastu de Blois, confesse avoir eu et receu ... la
       somme de trois mille livres tournois ... le cinquieme jour de
       juillet, l'an mil cinq cent et seize._ P. 24: _Les jardins avaient
       ete decores avec beaucoup de luxe par les differents possesseurs du
       chateau. Il ne reste de tous les batiments qu'ils y eleverent que
       ceux des officiers charges de l'ad_ministration et de la culture des
       jardins, et un pavilion carre en pierre et en brique flanque de
       terrasses a chacun de ses angles. Quoique defigure par des mesures
       elevees sur les terrasses, cet edifice est tris-digne d'interet par
       l'originalite du plan, la decoration architecturale et le souvenir
       d'Anne de Bretagne qui le fit construire._ Felibien describes the
       garden as follows: _Le jardin haut etait fort bien dresse par grands
       compartimens de toutes sortes de figures, avec des allees de
       meuriers blancs et des palissades de coudriers. Deux grands berceaux
       de charpenterie separoient toute la longueur et la largeur du
       jardin, et dans les quatres angles des allees, ou ces berceaux se
       croissent, il y auoit 4 cabinets, de mesme charpenterie ... Il y a
       pas longtemps qu'il y auoit dans ce mesme jardin, a l'endroit ou se
       croissent les allees du milieu, un edifice de figure octogone, de
       plus de 7 thoises de diametre et de plus de neuf thoises de haut;
       avec 4 enfoncements en forme de niches dans les 4 angles des allies.
       Ce bastiment.... esloit de charpente mais d'un extraordinairement
       bien travaille. On y voyait particulierement la cordiliere qui
       regnati tout autour en forme de cordon. Car la Reyne affectait de la
       mettre nonseulement a ses armes et a ses chiffres mais de la faire
       representer en divers manieres dans tous les ouvrages qu'on lui
       faisait pour elle ... le bastiment estati couvert en forme de dome
       qui dans son milieu avait encore un plus petit dome, ou lanterne
       vitree au-dessus de laquelle estait une figure doree representant
       Saint Michel. Les deux domes estoient proprement couvert d'ardoise
       et de plomb dore par dehors; par dedans ils esloient lambrissez
       d'une menuiserie tres delicate. Au milieu de ce Salon il y avait un
       grand bassin octogone de marbre blanc, dont toutes les faces
       estoient enrichies de differentes sculptures, avec les armes et les
       chiffres du Roy Louis XII et de la Reine Anne, Dans ce bassin il y
       en avait un autre pose sur un piedestal lequel auoit sept piedz de
       diametre. Il estait de figure ronde a godrons, avec des masques et
       d'autres ornements tres scauamment taillez. Du milieu de ce
       deuxiesme bassin s'y levoit un autre petit piedestal qui portait un
       troisiesme bassin de trois pieds de diametre, aussy parfaitement
       bien taille; c'estoit de ce dernier bassin que jallissoit l'eau qui
       se rependoit en suitte dans les deux autres bassins. Les beaux
       ouvrages faits d'un marbre esgalement blanc et poli, furent brisez
       par la pesanteur de tout l'edifice, que les injures de l'air
       renverserent de fond en comble.]
       1074.
       The river Loire at Amboise.
       The river is higher within the bank _b d_ than outside that bank.
       The island where there is a part of Amboise.
       This is the river that passes through Amboise; it passes at _a b c
       d_, and when it has passed the bridge it turns back, against the
       original current, by the channel _d e_, _b f_ in contact with the
       bank which lies between the two contrary currents of the said river,
       _a b_, _c d_, and _d e_, _b f_. It then turns down again by the
       channel _f l_, _g h_, _n m_, and reunites with the river from which
       it was at first separated, which passes by _k n_, which makes _k m_,
       _r t_. But when the river is very full it flows all in one channel
       passing over the bank _b d_. [Footnote: See Pl. CXV. Lines 1-7 are
       above, lines 8-10 in the middle of the large island and the word
       _Isola_ is written above _d_ in the smaller island; _a_ is written
       on the margin on the bank of the river above 1. I; in the
       reproduction it is not visible. As may be seen from the last
       sentence, the observation was made after long study of the river's
       course, when Leonardo had resided for some time at, or near,
       Amboise.]
       1075.
       The water may be dammed up above the level of Romorantin to such a
       height, that in its fall it may be used for numerous mills.
       1075.
       The river at Villefranche may be conducted to Romorantin which may
       be done by the inhabitants; and the timber of which their houses are
       built may be carried in boats to Romorantin [Footnote: Compare No.
       744.]. The river may be dammed up at such a height that the waters
       may be brought back to Romorantin with a convenient fall.
       1076.
       As to whether it is better that the water should all be raised in a
       single turn or in two?
       The answer is that in one single turn the wheel could not support
       all the water that it can raise in two turns, because at the half
       turn of the wheel it would be raising 100 pounds and no more; and if
       it had to raise the whole, 200 pounds in one turn, it could not
       raise them unless the wheel were of double the diameter and if the
       diameter were doubled, the time of its revolution would be doubled;
       therefore it is better and a greater advantage in expense to make
       such a wheel of half the size (?) the land which it would water and
       would render the country fertile to supply food to the inhabitants,
       and would make navigable canals for mercantile purposes.
       The way in which the river in its flow should scour its own channel.
       By the ninth of the third; the more rapid it is, the more it wears
       away its channel; and, by the converse proposition, the slower the
       water the more it deposits that which renders it turbid.
       And let the sluice be movable like the one I arranged in Friuli
       [Footnote 19: This passage reveals to us the fact that Leonardo had
       visited the country of Friuli and that he had stayed there for some
       time. Nothing whatever was known of this previously.], where when
       one sluice was opened the water which passed through it dug out the
       bottom. Therefore when the rivers are flooded, the sluices of the
       mills ought to be opened in order that the whole course of the river
       may pass through falls to each mill; there should be many in order
       to give a greater impetus, and so all the river will be scoured. And
       below the site of each of the two mills there may be one of the said
       sluice falls; one of them may be placed below each mill.
       1078.
       A trabocco is four braccia, and one mile is three thousand of the
       said braccia. Each braccio is divided into 12 inches; and the water
       in the canals has a fall in every hundred trabocchi of two of these
       inches; therefore 14 inches of fall are necessary in two thousand
       eight hundred braccia of flow in these canals; it follows that 15
       inches of fall give the required momentum to the currents of the
       waters in the said canals, that is one braccio and a half in the
       mile. And from this it may be concluded that the water taken from
       the river of Ville-franche and lent to the river of Romorantin
       will..... Where one river by reason of its low level cannot flow
       into the other, it will be necessary to dam it up, so that it may
       acquire a fall into the other, which was previously the higher.
       The eve of Saint Antony I returned from Romorantin to Amboise, and
       the King went away two days before from Romorantin.
       From Romorantin as far as the bridge at Saudre it is called the
       Saudre, and from that bridge as far as Tours it is called the Cher.
       I would test the level of that channel which is to lead from the
       Loire to Romorantin, with a channel one braccio wide and one braccio
       deep.
       [Footnote: Lines 6-18 are partly reproduced in the facsimile on p.
       254, and the whole of lines 19-25.
       The following names are written along the rivers on the larger
       sketch, _era f_ (the Loire) _scier f_ (the Cher) three times. _Pote
       Sodro_ (bridge of the Soudre). _Villa francha_ (Villefranche)
       _banco_ (sandbank) _Sodro_ (Soudre). The circle below shows the
       position of Romorantin. The words '_orologio del sole_' written
       below do not belong to the map of the rivers. The following names
       are written by the side of the smaller sketch-map:--_tors_ (Tours),
       _Abosa_ (Amboise) _bres_--for Bles (Blois) _mo rica_ (Montrichard).
       _Lione_ (Lyons). This map was also published in the 'Saggio'
       (Milano, 1872) Pl. XXII, and the editors remark: _Forse la linia
       retta che va da Amboise a Romorantin segna l'andamento proposto d'un
       Canale, che poi rembra prolungarsi in giu fin dove sta scritto
       Lione._
       M. Ravaisson has enlarged on this idea in the Gazette des Beaux Arts
       (1881 p. 530): _Les traces de Leonard permettent d'entrevoir que le
       canal commencant soit aupres de Tours, soit aupres de Blois et
       passant par Romorantin, avec port d'embarquement a Villefranche,
       devait, au dela de Bourges, traverser l'Allier au-dessous des
       affluents de la Dore et de la Sioule, aller par Moulins jusqu' a
       Digoin; enfin, sur l'autre rive de la Loire, depasser les monts du
       Charolais et rejoindre la Saone aupres de Macon._ It seems to me
       rash, however, to found so elaborate an hypothesis on these sketches
       of rivers. The slight stroke going to _Lione_ is perhaps only an
       indication of the direction.--With regard to the Loire compare also
       No. 988. l. 38.]
       1079.
       THE ROAD TO ORLEANS
       At 1/4 from the South to the South East. At 1/3 from the South to
       the South East. At 1/4 from the South to the South East. At 1/5 from
       the South to the South East. Between the South West and South, to
       the East bearing to the South; from the South towards the East 1/8;
       thence to the West, between the South and South West; at the South.
       [Footnote: The meaning is obscure; a more important passage
       referring to France is to be found under No. 744]
       On the Germans (1080-1081)
       1080.
       The way in which the Germans closing up together cross and
       interweave their broad leather shields against the enemy, stooping
       down and putting one of the ends on the ground while they hold the
       rest in their hand. [Footnote: Above the text is a sketch of a few
       lines crossing each other and the words _de ponderibus_. The meaning
       of the passage is obscure.]
       1081.
       The Germans are wont to annoy a garrison with the smoke of feathers,
       sulphur and realgar, and they make this smoke last 7 or 8 hours.
       Likewise the husks of wheat make a great and lasting smoke; and also
       dry dung; but this must be mixed with olive husks, that is olives
       pressed for oil and from which the oil has been extracted.
       [Footnote: There is with this passage a sketch of a round tower
       shrouded in smoke.]
       The Danube (1082)
       1082.
       That the valleys were formerly in great part covered by lakes the
       soil of which always forms the banks of rivers,--and by seas, which
       afterwards, by the persistent wearing of the rivers, cut through the
       mountains and the wandering courses of the rivers carried away the
       other plains enclosed by the mountains; and the cutting away of the
       mountains is evident from the strata in the rocks, which correspond
       in their sections as made by the courses of the rivers [Footnote 4:
       _Emus_, the Balkan; _Dardania_, now Servia.], The Haemus mountains
       which go along Thrace and Dardania and join the Sardonius mountains
       which, going on to the westward change their name from Sardus to
       Rebi, as they come near Dalmatia; then turning to the West cross
       Illyria, now called Sclavonia, changing the name of Rebi to Albanus,
       and going on still to the West, they change to Mount Ocra in the
       North; and to the South above Istria they are named Caruancas; and
       to the West above Italy they join the Adula, where the Danube rises
       [8], which stretches to the East and has a course of 1500 miles; its
       shortest line is about l000 miles, and the same or about the same is
       that branch of the Adula mountains changed as to their name, as
       before mentioned. To the North are the Carpathians, closing in the
       breadth of the valley of the Danube, which, as I have said extends
       eastward, a length of about 1000 miles, and is sometimes 200 and in
       some places 300 miles wide; and in the midst flows the Danube, the
       principal river of Europe as to size. The said Danube runs through
       the middle of Austria and Albania and northwards through Bavaria,
       Poland, Hungary, Wallachia and Bosnia and then the Danube or Donau
       flows into the Black Sea, which formerly extended almost to Austria
       and occupied the plains through which the Danube now courses; and
       the evidence of this is in the oysters and cockle shells and
       scollops and bones of great fishes which are still to be found in
       many places on the sides of those mountains; and this sea was formed
       by the filling up of the spurs of the Adula mountains which then
       extended to the East joining the spurs of the Taurus which extend to
       the West. And near Bithynia the waters of this Black Sea poured into
       the Propontis [Marmora] falling into the Aegean Sea, that is the
       Mediterranean, where, after a long course, the spurs of the Adula
       mountains became separated from those of the Taurus. The Black Sea
       sank lower and laid bare the valley of the Danube with the above
       named countries, and the whole of Asia Minor beyond the Taurus range
       to the North, and the plains from mount Caucasus to the Black Sea to
       the West, and the plains of the Don this side--that is to say, at
       the foot of the Ural mountains. And thus the Black Sea must have
       sunk about 1000 braccia to uncover such vast plains.
       [Footnote 8: _Danubio_, in the original _Reno_; evidently a mistake
       as we may infer from _come dissi_ l. 10 &c.]
       III.
       THE COUNTRIES OF THE WESTERN END OF THE MEDITERRANEAN.
       The straits of Gibraltar (1083-1085)
       1083.
       WHY THE SEA MAKES A STRONGER CURRENT IN THE STRAITS OF SPAIN THAN
       ELSEWHERE.
       A river of equal depth runs with greater speed in a narrow space
       than in a wide one, in proportion to the difference between the
       wider and the narrower one.
       This proposition is clearly proved by reason confirmed by
       experiment. Supposing that through a channel one mile wide there
       flows one mile in length of water; where the river is five miles
       wide each of the 5 square miles will require 1/5 of itself to be
       equal to the square mile of water required in the sea, and where the
       river is 3 miles wide each of these square miles will require the
       third of its volume to make up the amount of the square mile of the
       narrow part; as is demonstrated in _f g h_ at the mile marked _n_.
       [Footnote: In the place marked A in the diagram _Mare Mediterano_
       (Mediterranean Sea) is written in the original. And at B, _stretto
       di Spugna_ (straits of Spain, _i.e._ Gibraltar). Compare No. 960.]
       1084.
       WHY THE CURRENT OF GIBRALTAR IS ALWAYS GREATER TO THE WEST THAN TO
       THE EAST.
       The reason is that if you put together the mouths of the rivers
       which discharge into the Mediterranean sea, you would find the sum
       of water to be larger than that which this sea pours through the
       straits into the ocean. You see Africa discharging its rivers that
       run northwards into this sea, and among them the Nile which runs
       through 3000 miles of Africa; there is also the Bagrada river and
       the Schelif and others. [Footnote 5: _Bagrada_ (Leonardo writes
       Bragada) in Tunis, now Medscherda; _Mavretano_, now Schelif.]
       Likewise Europe pours into it the Don and the Danube, the Po, the
       Rhone, the Arno, and the Tiber, so that evidently these rivers, with
       an infinite number of others of less fame, make its great breadth
       and depth and current; and the sea is not wider than 18 miles at the
       most westerly point of land where it divides Europe from Africa.
       1085.
       The gulf of the Mediterranean, as an inland sea, received the
       principal waters of Africa, Asia and Europe that flowed towards it;
       and its waters came up to the foot of the mountains that surrounded
       it and made its shores. And the summits of the Apennines stood up
       out of this sea like islands, surrounded by salt water. Africa
       again, behind its Atlas mountains did not expose uncovered to the
       sky the surface of its vast plains about 3000 miles in length, and
       Memphis [Footnote 6: _Mefi._ Leonardo can only mean here the citadel
       of Cairo on the Mokattam hills.] was on the shores of this sea, and
       above the plains of Italy, where now birds fly in flocks, fish were
       wont to wander in large shoals.
       Tunis (1086)
       1086.
       The greatest ebb made anywhere by the Mediterranean is above Tunis,
       being about two and a half braccia and at Venice it falls two
       braccia. In all the rest of the Mediterranean sea the fall is little
       or none.
       Libya (1087)
       1087.
       Describe the mountains of shifting deserts; that is to say the
       formation of waves of sand borne by the wind, and of its mountains
       and hills, such as occur in Libya. Examples may be seen on the wide
       sands of the Po and the Ticino, and other large rivers.
       Majorca (1088)
       1088.
       Circumfulgore is a naval machine. It was an invention of the men of
       Majorca. [Footnote: The machine is fully described in the MS. and
       shown in a sketch.]
       The Tyrrhene Sea (1089)
       1089.
       Some at the Tyrrhene sea employ this method; that is to say they
       fastened an anchor to one end of the yard, and to the other a cord,
       of which the lower end was fastened to an anchor; and in battle they
       flung this anchor on to the oars of the opponent's boat and by the
       use of a capstan drew it to the side; and threw soft soap and tow,
       daubed with pitch and set ablaze, on to that side where the anchor
       hung; so that in order to escape that fire, the defenders of that
       ship had to fly to the opposite side; and in doing this they aided
       to the attack, because the galley was more easily drawn to the side
       by reason of the counterpoise. [Footnote: This text is illustrated
       in the original by a pen and ink sketch.]
       IV.
       THE LEVANT.
       The Levantine Sea (1090)
       1090.
       On the shores of the Mediterranean 300 rivers flow, and 40, 200
       ports. And this sea is 3000 miles long. Many times has the increase
       of its waters, heaped up by their backward flow and the blowing of
       the West winds, caused the overflow of the Nile and of the rivers
       which flow out through the Black Sea, and have so much raised the
       seas that they have spread with vast floods over many countries. And
       these floods take place at the time when the sun melts the snows on
       the high mountains of Ethiopia that rise up into the cold regions of
       the air; and in the same way the approach of the sun acts on the
       mountains of Sarmatia in Asia and on those in Europe; so that the
       gathering together of these three things are, and always have been,
       the cause of tremendous floods: that is, the return flow of the sea
       with the West wind and the melting of the snows. So every river will
       overflow in Syria, in Samaria, in Judea between Sinai and the
       Lebanon, and in the rest of Syria between the Lebanon and the Taurus
       mountains, and in Cilicia, in the Armenian mountains, and in
       Pamphilia and in Lycia within the hills, and in Egypt as far as the
       Atlas mountains. The gulf of Persia which was formerly a vast lake
       of the Tigris and discharged into the Indian Sea, has now worn away
       the mountains which formed its banks and laid them even with the
       level of the Indian ocean. And if the Mediterranean had continued
       its flow through the gulf of Arabia, it would have done the same,
       that is to say, would have reduced the level of the Mediterranean to
       that of the Indian Sea.
       The Red Sea (1091-1092)
       1091.
       For a long time the water of the Mediterranean flowed out through
       the Red Sea, which is 100 miles wide and 1500 long, and full of
       reefs; and it has worn away the sides of Mount Sinai, a fact which
       testifies, not to an inundation from the Indian sea beating on these
       coasts, but to a deluge of water which carried with it all the
       rivers which abound round the Mediterranean, and besides this there
       is the reflux of the sea; and then, a cutting being made to the West
       3000 miles away from this place, Gibraltar was separated from Ceuta,
       which had been joined to it. And this passage was cut very low down,
       in the plains between Gibraltar and the ocean at the foot of the
       mountain, in the low part, aided by the hollowing out of some
       valleys made by certain rivers, which might have flowed here.
       Hercules [Footnote 9: Leonardo seems here to mention Hercules half
       jestingly and only in order to suggest to the reader an allusion to
       the legend of the pillars of Hercules.] came to open the sea to the
       westward and then the sea waters began to pour into the Western
       Ocean; and in consequence of this great fall, the Red Sea remained
       the higher; whence the water, abandoning its course here, ever after
       poured away through the Straits of Spain.
       The surface of the Red Sea is on a level with the ocean (1092)
       1092.
       A mountain may have fallen and closed the mouth of the Red Sea and
       prevented the outlet of the Mediterranean, and the Mediterranean Sea
       thus overfilled had for outlet the passage below the mountains of
       Gades; for, in our own times a similar thing has been seen [Footnote
       6: Compare also No. 1336, ll. 30, 35 and 36.-- Paolo Giovio, the
       celebrated historian (born at Como in 1483) reports that in 1513 at
       the foot of the Alps, above Bellinzona, on the road to Switzerland,
       a mountain fell with a very great noise, in consequence of an
       earthquake, and that the mass of rocks, which fell on the left
       (Western) side blocked the river Breno (T. I p. 218 and 345 of D.
       Sauvage's French edition, quoted in ALEXIS PERCY, _Memoire des
       tremblements de terre de la peninsule italique; Academie Royale de
       Belgique._ T. XXII).--]; a mountain fell seven miles across a valley
       and closed it up and made a lake. And thus most lakes have been made
       by mountains, as the lake of Garda, the lakes of Como and Lugano,
       and the Lago Maggiore. The Mediterranean fell but little on the
       confines of Syria, in consequence of the Gaditanean passage, but a
       great deal in this passage, because before this cutting was made the
       Mediterranean sea flowed to the South East, and then the fall had to
       be made by its run through the Straits of Gades.
       At _a_ the water of the Mediterranean fell into the ocean.
       All the plains which lie between the sea and mountains were formerly
       covered with salt water.
       Every valley has been made by its own river; and the proportion
       between valleys is the same as that between river and river.
       The greatest river in our world is the Mediterranean river, which
       moves from the sources of the Nile to the Western ocean.
       And its greatest height is in Outer Mauritania and it has a course
       of ten thousand miles before it reunites with its ocean, the father
       of the waters.
       That is 3000 miles for the Mediterranean, 3000 for the Nile, as far
       as discovered and 3000 for the Nile which flows to the East, &c.
       [Footnote: See Pl. CXI 2, a sketch of the shores of the
       Mediterranean Sea, where lines 11 to 16 may be seen. The large
       figures 158 are not in Leonardo's writing. The character of the
       writing leads us to conclude that this text was written later than
       the foregoing. A slight sketch of the Mediterranean is also to be
       found in MS. I', 47a.]
       The Nile (1093-1098)
       1093.
       Therefore we must conclude those mountains to be of the greatest
       height, above which the clouds falling in snow give rise to the
       Nile.
       1094.
       The Egyptians, the Ethiopians, and the Arabs, in crossing the Nile
       with camels, are accustomed to attach two bags on the sides of the
       camel's bodies that is skins in the form shown underneath.
       In these four meshes of the net the camels for baggage place their
       feet.
       [Footnote: Unfortunately both the sketches which accompany this
       passage are too much effaced to be reproduced. The upper represents
       the two sacks joined by ropes, as here described, the other shows
       four camels with riders swimming through a river.]
       1095.
       The Tigris passes through Asia Minor and brings with it the water of
       three lakes, one after the other of various elevations; the first
       being Munace and the middle Pallas and the lowest Triton. And the
       Nile again springs from three very high lakes in Ethiopia, and runs
       northwards towards the sea of Egypt with a course of 4000 miles, and
       by the shortest and straightest line it is 3000 miles. It is said
       that it issues from the Mountains of the Moon, and has various
       unknown sources. The said lakes are about 4000 braccia above the
       surface of the sphere of water, that is 1 mile and 1/3, giving to
       the Nile a fall of 1 braccia in every mile.
       [Footnote 5: _Incogniti principio._ The affluents of the lakes are
       probably here intended. Compare, as to the Nile, Nos. 970, 1063 and
       1084.]
       1096.
       Very many times the Nile and other very large rivers have poured out
       their whole element of water and restored it to the sea.
       1097.
       Why does the inundation of the Nile occur in the summer, coming from
       torrid countries?
       1098.
       It is not denied that the Nile is constantly muddy in entering the
       Egyptian sea and that its turbidity is caused by soil that this
       river is continually bringing from the places it passes; which soil
       never returns in the sea which receives it, unless it throws it on
       its shores. You see the sandy desert beyond Mount Atlas where
       formerly it was covered with salt water.
       Customs of Asiatic Nations (1099-1100)
       1099.
       The Assyrians and the people of Euboea accustom their horses to
       carry sacks which they can at pleasure fill with air, and which in
       case of need they carry instead of the girth of the saddle above and
       at the side, and they are well covered with plates of cuir bouilli,
       in order that they may not be perforated by flights of arrows. Thus
       they have not on their minds their security in flight, when the
       victory is uncertain; a horse thus equipped enables four or five men
       to cross over at need.
       1100.
       SMALL BOATS.
       The small boats used by the Assyrians were made of thin laths of
       willow plaited over rods also of willow, and bent into the form of a
       boat. They were daubed with fine mud soaked with oil or with
       turpentine, and reduced to a kind of mud which resisted the water
       and because pine would split; and always remained fresh; and they
       covered this sort of boats with the skins of oxen in safely crossing
       the river Sicuris of Spain, as is reported by Lucant; [Footnote 7:
       See Lucan's Pharsalia IV, 130: _Utque habuit ripas Sicoris camposque
       reliquit, Primum cana salix madefacto vimine parvam Texitur in
       puppim, calsoque inducto juvenco Vectoris patiens tumidum supernatat
       amnem. Sic Venetus stagnante Pado, fusoque Britannus Navigat oceano,
       sic cum tenet omnia Nilus, Conseritur bibula Memphitis cymbo papyro.
       His ratibus transjecta manus festinat utrimque Succisam cavare nemus
       ]
       The Spaniards, the Scythians and the Arabs, when they want to make a
       bridge in haste, fix hurdlework made of willows on bags of ox-hide,
       and so cross in safety.
       Rhodes (1101-1102)
       1101.
       In [fourteen hundred and] eighty nine there was an earthquake in the
       sea of Atalia near Rhodes, which opened the sea--that is its
       bottom--and into this opening such a torrent of water poured that
       for more than three hours the bottom of the sea was uncovered by
       reason of the water which was lost in it, and then it closed to the
       former level.
       [Footnote: _Nello ottanto_ 9. It is scarcely likely that Leonardo
       should here mean 89 AD. Dr. H. MULLER- STRUBING writes to me as
       follows on this subject: "With reference to Rhodes Ross says (_Reise
       auf den Griechischen Inseln, III_ 70 _ff_. 1840), that ancient
       history affords instances of severe earthquakes at Rhodes, among
       others one in the second year of the 138th Olympiad=270 B. C.; a
       remarkably violent one under Antoninus Pius (A. D. 138-161) and
       again under Constantine and later. But Leonardo expressly speaks of
       an earthquake "_nel mar di Atalia presso a Rodi_", which is
       singular. The town of Attalia, founded by Attalus, which is what he
       no doubt means, was in Pamphylia and more than 150 English miles
       East of Rhodes in a straight line. Leake and most other geographers
       identify it with the present town of Adalia. Attalia is rarely
       mentioned by the ancients, indeed only by Strabo and Pliny and no
       earthquake is spoken of. I think therefore you are justified in
       assuming that Leonardo means 1489". In the elaborate catalogue of
       earthquakes in the East by Sciale Dshelal eddin Sayouthy (an
       unpublished Arabic MS. in the possession of Prof. SCHEFER, (Membre
       de l'Institut, Paris) mention is made of a terrible earthquake in
       the year 867 of the Mohamedan Era corresponding to the year 1489,
       and it is there stated that a hundred persons were killed by it in
       the fortress of Kerak. There are three places of this name. Kerak on
       the sea of Tiberias, Kerak near Tahle on the Libanon, which I
       visited in the summer of l876--but neither of these is the place
       alluded to. Possibly it may be the strongly fortified town of
       Kerak=Kir Moab, to the West of the Dead Sea. There is no notice
       about this in ALEXIS PERCY, _Memoire sur les tremblements de terres
       ressentis dans la peninsule turco- hellenique et en Syrie (Memoires
       couronnes et memoires des savants etrangers, Academie Royale de
       Belgique, Tome XXIII)._]
       1102.
       Rhodes has in it 5000 houses.
       Cyprus (1103-1104)
       1103.
       SITE FOR [A TEMPLE OF] VENUS.
       You must make steps on four sides, by which to mount to a meadow
       formed by nature at the top of a rock which may be hollowed out and
       supported in front by pilasters and open underneath in a large
       portico,
       [Footnote: See Pl. LXXXIII. Compare also p. 33 of this Vol. The
       standing male figure at the side is evidently suggested by Michael
       Angelo's David. On the same place a slight sketch of horses seems to
       have been drawn first; there is no reason for assuming that the text
       and this sketch, which have no connection with each other, are of
       the same date.
       _Sito di Venere._ By this heading Leonardo appears to mean Cyprus,
       which was always considered by the ancients to be the home and birth
       place of Aphrodite (Kirpic in Homer).]
       in which the water may fall into various vases of granite,
       porphyryand serpentine, within semi-circular recesses; and the water
       may overflow from these. And round this portico towards the North
       there should be a lake with a little island in the midst of which
       should be a thick and shady wood; the waters at the top of the
       pilasters should pour into vases at their base, from whence they
       should flow in little channels.
       Starting from the shore of Cilicia towards the South you discover
       the beauties of the island of Cyprus.
       The Caspian Sea (1105-1106)
       1104.
       From the shore of the Southern coast of Cilicia may be seen to the
       South the beautiful island of Cyprus, which was the realm of the
       goddess Venus, and many navigators being attracted by her beauty,
       had their ships and rigging broken amidst the reefs, surrounded by
       the whirling waters. Here the beauty of delightful hills tempts
       wandering mariners to refresh themselves amidst their flowery
       verdure, where the winds are tempered and fill the island and the
       surrounding seas with fragrant odours. Ah! how many a ship has here
       been sunk. Ah! how many a vessel broken on these rocks. Here might
       be seen barks without number, some wrecked and half covered by the
       sand; others showing the poop and another the prow, here a keel and
       there the ribs; and it seems like a day of judgment when there
       should be a resurrection of dead ships, so great is the number of
       them covering all the Northern shore; and while the North gale makes
       various and fearful noises there.
       1105.
       Write to Bartolomeo the Turk as to the flow and ebb of the Black
       sea, and whether he is aware if there be such a flow and ebb in the
       Hyrcanean or Caspian sea. [Footnote: The handwriting of this note
       points to a late date.]
       1106.
       WHY WATER IS FOUND AT THE TOP OF MOUNTAINS.
       From the straits of Gibraltar to the Don is 3500 miles, that is one
       mile and 1/6, giving a fall of one braccio in a mile to any water
       that moves gently. The Caspian sea is a great deal higher; and none
       of the mountains of Europe rise a mile above the surface of our
       seas; therefore it might be said that the water which is on the
       summits of our mountains might come from the height of those seas,
       and of the rivers which flow into them, and which are still higher.
       The sea of Azov (1107)
       1107.
       Hence it follows that the sea of Azov is the highest part of the
       Mediterranean sea, being at a distance of 3500 miles from the
       Straits of Gibraltar, as is shown by the map for navigation; and it
       has 3500 braccia of descent, that is, one mile and 1/6; therefore it
       is higher than any mountains which exist in the West.
       [Footnote: The passage before this, in the original, treats of the
       exit of the waters from Lakes in general.]
       The Dardanelles (1108)
       1108.
       In the Bosphorus the Black Sea flows always into the Egean sea, and
       the Egean sea never flows into it. And this is because the Caspian,
       which is 400 miles to the East, with the rivers which pour into it,
       always flows through subterranean caves into this sea of Pontus; and
       the Don does the same as well as the Danube, so that the waters of
       Pontus are always higher than those of the Egean; for the higher
       always fall towards the lower, and never the lower towards the
       higher.
       Constantinople (1109)
       1109.
       The bridge of Pera at Constantinople, 40 braccia wide, 70 braccia
       high above the water, 600 braccia long; that is 400 over the sea and
       200 on the land, thus making its own abutments.
       [Footnote: See Pl. CX No. 1. In 1453 by order of Sultan Mohamed II.
       the Golden Horn was crossed by a pontoon bridge laid on barrels (see
       Joh. Dukas' History of the Byzantine Empire XXXVIII p. 279). --The
       biographers of Michelangelo, Vasari as well as Condivi, relate that
       at the time when Michelangelo suddenly left Rome, in 1506, he
       entertained some intention of going to Constantinople, there to
       serve the Sultan, who sought to engage him, by means of certain
       Franciscan Monks, for the purpose of constructing a bridge to
       connect Constantinople with Pera. See VASARI, _Vite_ (ed. Sansoni
       VII, 168): _Michelangelo, veduto questa furia del papa, dubitando di
       lui, ebbe, secondo che si dice, voglia di andarsene in
       Gostantinopoli a servire il Turco, per mezzo di certi frati di San
       Francesco, che desiderava averlo per fare un ponte che passassi da
       Gostantinopoli a Pera._ And CONDIVI, _Vita di M. Buonaroti chap._
       30_; Michelangelo allora vedendosi condotto a questo, temendo
       dell'ira del papa, penso d'andarsene in Levante; massimamente
       essendo stato dal Turco ricercato con grandissime promesse per mezzo
       di certi frati di San Francesco, per volersene servire in fare un
       ponte da Costantinopoli a Pera ed in altri affari._ Leonardo's plan
       for this bridge was made in 1502. We may therefore conclude that at
       about that time the Sultan Bajazet II. had either announced a
       competition in this matter, or that through his agents Leonardo had
       first been called upon to carry out the scheme.]
       The Euphrates (1110)
       1110.
       If the river will turn to the rift farther on it will never return
       to its bed, as the Euphrates does, and this may do at Bologna the
       one who is disappointed for his rivers.
       Centrae Asia (1111)
       1111.
       Mounts Caucasus, Comedorum, and Paropemisidae are joined together
       between Bactria and India, and give birth to the river Oxus which
       takes its rise in these mountains and flows 500 miles towards the
       North and as many towards the West, and discharges its waters into
       the Caspian sea; and is accompanied by the Oxus, Dargados, Arthamis,
       Xariaspes, Dargamaim, Ocus and Margus, all very large rivers. From
       the opposite side towards the South rises the great river Indus
       which sends its waters for 600 miles Southwards and receives as
       tributaries in this course the rivers Xaradrus, Hyphasis, Vadris,
       Vandabal Bislaspus to the East, Suastes and Coe to the West, uniting
       with these rivers, and with their waters it flows 800 miles to the
       West; then, turning back by the Arbiti mountains makes an elbow and
       turns Southwards, where after a course of about 100 miles it finds
       the Indian Sea, in which it pours itself by seven branches. On the
       side of the same mountains rises the great Ganges, which river flows
       Southwards for 500 miles and to the Southwest a thousand ... and
       Sarabas, Diarnuna, Soas and Scilo, Condranunda are its tributaries.
       It flows into the Indian sea by many mouths.
       On the natives of hot countries (1112)
       1112.
       Men born in hot countries love the night because it refreshes them
       and have a horror of light because it burns them; and therefore they
       are of the colour of night, that is black. And in cold countries it
       is just the contrary.
       [Footnote: The sketch here inserted is in MS. H3 55b.] _