<p>Leonardo da Vinci, the painter of the "Mona Lisa" and a symbol of the Renaissance, was only half-Italian, his mother a slave from the Caucasus, new research revealed on Tuesday.</p>.<p>Da Vinci's mother had long been thought a Tuscan peasant, but University of Naples professor Carlo Vecce, a specialist in the Old Master, believes the truth is more complicated.</p>.<p>"Leonardo's mother was a Circassian slave... taken from her home in the Caucasus Mountains, sold and resold several times in Constantinople, then Venice, before arriving in Florence," he told AFP at the launch of a new book.</p>.<p>In the Italian city, she met a young notary, Piero (Peter) da Vinci, "and their son was called Leonardo".</p>.<p>The findings of Vecce, who has spent decades studying da Vinci and curating his works, are based on Florence city archives.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/worlds-priciest-painting-may-be-a-leonardo-after-all-973597.html" target="_blank">World's priciest painting may be a Leonardo after all</a></strong></p>.<p>They have formed the basis of a new novel -- "The Smile of Caterina, the mother of Leonardo" -- while also shedding new light on the artist himself.</p>.<p>Any new discovery about da Vinci is hotly contested by the small world of experts who study him, but Vecce insists the evidence is there.</p>.<p>Among the documents he found is one written by da Vinci's father himself, a legal document of emancipation for Caterina, "to recover her freedom and recover her human dignity".</p>.<p>This document is dated 1452, and was presented Tuesday at a press conference at the headquarters of publishing house Giunti in Florence.</p>.<p>It was written by "the man who loved Caterina when she was still a slave, who gave her this child named Leonardo and (was) also the person who helped to free her", Vecce said.</p>.<p>His assertion offers a radical change of perspective on da Vinci, who was believed to have been the product of an affair between Peter da Vinci and a different woman, young Tuscan peasant Caterina di Meo Lippi.</p>.<p>Born in 1452 in the countryside outside Florence, da Vinci spent his life travelling around Italy before dying in Amboise, France in 1519, at the court of King Francis 1.</p>.<p>Vecce believes the difficult life of his "migrant" mother had an impact on the work of her brilliant son.</p>.<p>"Caterina left Leonardo a great legacy, certainly, the spirit of freedom," he said, "which inspires all of his intellectual scientific work".</p>.<p>Da Vinci was a polymath, an artist who mastered several disciplines including sculpture, drawing, music and painting, but also engineering, anatomy, botany and architecture.</p>.<p>"He doesn't let anything stop him," Vecce said.</p>.<p>Some may consider the idea that this epitome of a "Renaissance man" was the product of such a union too good to be true.</p>.<p>But Paolo Galluzzi, a da Vinci historian and member of the prestigious Lincei scientific academy in Rome, said it is "by far the most convincing".</p>.<p>Speaking to AFP, he highlighted the quality of the documents discovered by his colleague, adding that there "must remain a minimum of doubt, because we cannot do a DNA test".</p>.<p>Galluzzi said he was also not surprised.</p>.<p>The period into which da Vinci was born marks "the beginning of modernity, the exchanges between people, cultures and civilisations which gave birth to the modern world", he said.</p>
<p>Leonardo da Vinci, the painter of the "Mona Lisa" and a symbol of the Renaissance, was only half-Italian, his mother a slave from the Caucasus, new research revealed on Tuesday.</p>.<p>Da Vinci's mother had long been thought a Tuscan peasant, but University of Naples professor Carlo Vecce, a specialist in the Old Master, believes the truth is more complicated.</p>.<p>"Leonardo's mother was a Circassian slave... taken from her home in the Caucasus Mountains, sold and resold several times in Constantinople, then Venice, before arriving in Florence," he told AFP at the launch of a new book.</p>.<p>In the Italian city, she met a young notary, Piero (Peter) da Vinci, "and their son was called Leonardo".</p>.<p>The findings of Vecce, who has spent decades studying da Vinci and curating his works, are based on Florence city archives.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/worlds-priciest-painting-may-be-a-leonardo-after-all-973597.html" target="_blank">World's priciest painting may be a Leonardo after all</a></strong></p>.<p>They have formed the basis of a new novel -- "The Smile of Caterina, the mother of Leonardo" -- while also shedding new light on the artist himself.</p>.<p>Any new discovery about da Vinci is hotly contested by the small world of experts who study him, but Vecce insists the evidence is there.</p>.<p>Among the documents he found is one written by da Vinci's father himself, a legal document of emancipation for Caterina, "to recover her freedom and recover her human dignity".</p>.<p>This document is dated 1452, and was presented Tuesday at a press conference at the headquarters of publishing house Giunti in Florence.</p>.<p>It was written by "the man who loved Caterina when she was still a slave, who gave her this child named Leonardo and (was) also the person who helped to free her", Vecce said.</p>.<p>His assertion offers a radical change of perspective on da Vinci, who was believed to have been the product of an affair between Peter da Vinci and a different woman, young Tuscan peasant Caterina di Meo Lippi.</p>.<p>Born in 1452 in the countryside outside Florence, da Vinci spent his life travelling around Italy before dying in Amboise, France in 1519, at the court of King Francis 1.</p>.<p>Vecce believes the difficult life of his "migrant" mother had an impact on the work of her brilliant son.</p>.<p>"Caterina left Leonardo a great legacy, certainly, the spirit of freedom," he said, "which inspires all of his intellectual scientific work".</p>.<p>Da Vinci was a polymath, an artist who mastered several disciplines including sculpture, drawing, music and painting, but also engineering, anatomy, botany and architecture.</p>.<p>"He doesn't let anything stop him," Vecce said.</p>.<p>Some may consider the idea that this epitome of a "Renaissance man" was the product of such a union too good to be true.</p>.<p>But Paolo Galluzzi, a da Vinci historian and member of the prestigious Lincei scientific academy in Rome, said it is "by far the most convincing".</p>.<p>Speaking to AFP, he highlighted the quality of the documents discovered by his colleague, adding that there "must remain a minimum of doubt, because we cannot do a DNA test".</p>.<p>Galluzzi said he was also not surprised.</p>.<p>The period into which da Vinci was born marks "the beginning of modernity, the exchanges between people, cultures and civilisations which gave birth to the modern world", he said.</p>