Leonardo da Vinci's 500-year-old vineyard replanted in Milan

Mar 12, 2015

(Telegraph) - Italian experts using genetic testing in bid to produce the same crisp white wine that Leonardo da Vinci enjoyed from his Milan estate 500 years ago.

A vineyard that once belonged to Leonardo da Vinci has been recreated down to the last detail by Italian experts nearly 500 years after his death.

After a decade of research including genetic testing, they now hope to be able to produce the same crisp white wine that the Renaissance genius once enjoyed from his own estate.

Leonardo may be best known for his remarkable paintings, sculptures and scientific inventions, but true to his Tuscan roots he was also a keen lover of the grape.

He was given the vineyard in 1499 as payment for the painting of The Last Supper by Lodovico Sforza, the Duke of Milan, who commissioned the tableau.

Leonardo, who died in 1519, bequeathed the vineyard to two of his most loyal servants and it remained in existence until the Second World War, when it was razed to the ground by an Allied bombing raid in 1943.

The plot of ground now forms an immaculately tended walled garden inside a grand palazzo known as the Casa degli Atellani in central Milan.

Working with the family who own the property, researchers excavated the garden and to their surprise and delight found that a few vine roots had survived.

They subjected the roots to genetic testing at the University of Milan and were able to identify the exact type of vine that Leonardo had planted – a variety known as Malvasia di Candia, which is still grown in the hills around Piacenza, a town in the Emilia Romagna region, south of Milan. The experts have replanted Malvasia di Candia vines, recreating Leonardo's original vineyard, in the garden of the palazzo in Milan's Corso Magenta.

The vineyard will be opened to the public for the first time in May, to coincide with the start of Expo 2015, the world fair that is being hosted by Milan.

"It's a unique way of demonstrating to the world how art and wine in Italy are closely intertwined," said Gabriella Bechi from Confagricoltura, an Italian agricultural organisation that sponsored the recreation of the vineyard. "No other city in the world can boast the honour of having the remains of a vineyard once owned by one of the greatest geniuses in history.

"It is just a short distance from the Church of Santa Maria delle Grazie, where Leonardo painted The Last Supper."

The project was led by Prof Attilio Scienza, an Italian expert on the DNA of vines, Serena Imazio, a geneticist, and Luca Maroni, a renowned oenologist and an editor of wine guides.

"Our research started in 2004. We were able to identify the plot and the last surviving vines. I was amazed – to think that a treasure like this had fallen into oblivion," he told Il Fatto Quotidiano, an Italian newspaper.

Leonardo was born near the Tuscan town of Vinci, the illegitimate son of a lawyer, in 1452.

At around the age of 30 he moved to Milan to work for the ruling Sforza family as a painter, sculptor and architect.

He painted The Last Supper in the refectory of the Church of Santa Maria delle Grazie between 1495 and 1497.


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