Author:Leonardo da Vinci

Works

 * Codex Atlanticus: Leonardo Da Vinci (Atlantic Codex or Codice Atlantico) ; a bound set of drawings and writings (in Italian) (1478-1519), assembled by Pompeo Leoni. It is now in the Biblioteca Ambrosiana in Milan.


 * Codex Windsor: Leonardo Da Vinci (Royal Collection or Codice Windsor) ; a bound set of drawings and writings (in Italian) (1478-1518). It is now in the Royal Collection of King Charles III in Castle of Windsor (Berkshire).


 * Codex Arundel: Leonardo Da Vinci; a bound set of drawings and writings (in Italian) (1478-1519). It is now in the British Library (London)


 * Codex Ashburnham (Manuscrit de l’Institut or Manoscritti di Francia): Leonardo Da Vinci; a bound set of drawings and writings (in Italian) (1452-1519). It is now in the Institut de France (Paris). Stolen in 1796 in the Biblioteca Ambrosiana in Milan, by Napoleone Bonaparte in Italy they were never returnered.


 * Codex Leicester (or Codex Hammer or Codice Hammer): Leonardo Da Vinci; a bound set of drawings and writings (in Italian) (1506-1510). It is now owned by (Bill Gates)


 * A Treatise on Painting (1802), translated by John Francis Rigaud
 * The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci (1888), translated by Jean Paul Richter
 * Masters In Art: Leonardo Da Vinci; a series of illustrated monographs (1901)

Works about Leonardo

 * "Leonardo da Vinci: a Psychosexual Study of an Infantile Reminiscence" by Sigmund Freud (1916)
 * "The Boyhood of a Painter" Lang, L. B. The strange story book. London: Longman. 1913.
 * "Mona Lisa and the Wheelbarrow" by Floyd Dell in The Masses (1914)
 * The Origins of Statics, chaps. 2-4 by Pierre Duhem (1906) discussing Leonardo da Vinci's contributions to statics, the mechanical science that deals with forces in equilibrium.
 * "Mona Lisa and the Wheelbarrow" by Floyd Dell in The Masses (1914)
 * The Origins of Statics, chaps. 2-4 by Pierre Duhem (1906) discussing Leonardo da Vinci's contributions to statics, the mechanical science that deals with forces in equilibrium.
 * The Origins of Statics, chaps. 2-4 by Pierre Duhem (1906) discussing Leonardo da Vinci's contributions to statics, the mechanical science that deals with forces in equilibrium.