Leone Battista Alberti
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Image:301px-Leon Battista Alberti.jpgLeone Battista Alberti (Genoa, February 14, 1404 – April 25, 1472, Rome) was an Italian painter, poet, linguist, philosopher, cryptographer, musician, architect, and general Renaissance polymath . His life was described in Giorgio Vasari's Vite. In Italy, his first name is usually spelled Leon.
Alberti was born an illegitimate son in a family of Florentine merchants. His father had been forced to leave Florence for political reasons and had settled in Genoa, Alberti's city of birth. Alberti was educated in law at the University of Bologna. In his mid-twenties, he embarked on a tour of Europe. His law career curtailed by an illness which induced a partial loss of memory, he turned his abilities to science and art.
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Contributions
Alberti made a variety of contributions to several fields:
- In art, he is best known for his treatise De pictura (On painting) (1435) which contained the first scientific study of perspective. An Italian translation of De pictura (Della pittura) was published the year following the Latin version and was dedicated to Filippo Brunelleschi. He also wrote works on sculpture, De Statua.
- He was so skilled in Latin verse that a comedy he wrote in his twentieth year, entitled Philodoxius, would later deceive the younger Aldus Manutius, who edited and published it as the genuine work of Lepidus.
- He has been credited with being the actual author of the Hypnerotomachia Poliphili, a strange fantasy novel, whose typographic qualities and illustrations have made it legendary as one of the most beautiful books ever printed. There is a good deal of debate about this attribution, however.
- In music, he was reputed one of the first organists of the age. He held the appointment of canon in the metropolitan church of Florence, and thus had leisure to devote himself to his favourite art.
- In architecture he is generally regarded as one of those most devoted to restoring the formal language of classical architecture. At Rome he was employed by Pope Nicholas V in the restoration of the papal palace and of the restoration of the Roman aqueduct of Acqua Vergine, which debouched into a simple basin designed by Alberti, which was swept away later by the Baroque Trevi Fountain. At Mantua he designed the church of Sant'Andrea, and at Rimini the celebrated church of San Francesco. On a commission from the Rucellai family he designed the principal facade of the church of Santa Maria Novella in Florence, as well as the family palace in the Via della Vigna Nuova, known as the Palazzo Rucellai. He wrote an influential work on architecture, De Re Aedificatoria, which by the 18th century had been translated into Italian, French, Spanish and English. The most accurate English translation was by Giacomo Leoni in the early 18th century. In it he proposed new methods of fortification which became the standard defense for towns in the age of gunpowder, and dominated siege planning for hundreds of years.
- Apart from his treatises on the arts, Alberti also wrote: Philodoxus ("Lover of Glory", 1424), De commodis litterarum atque incommodis ("On the Advantages and Disadvantages of Literary Studies", 1429), Intercoenales ("Table Talk", ca. 1429), Della famiglia ("On the Family", begun 1432) Vita S. Potiti ("Life of St. Potitus", 1433), De iure (On Law, 1437), Theogenius ("The Origin of the Gods", ca. 1440), Profugorium ab aerumna ("Refuge from Mental Anguish", 1442-43), Momus (1450) and De Iciarchia ("On the Prince", 1468).
- Alberti was an accomplished cryptographer by the standard of his day, and invented both polyalphabetic ciphers and machine-assisted encryption using his Cipher Disk. The polyalphabetic cipher was, at least in principle, for it was not properly used for several hundred years, the most significant advance in cryptography since before Julius Caesar's time. Cryptography historian David Kahn titles him the "Father of Western Cryptography", pointing to three significant advances in the field which can be attributed to Alberti: "the earliest Western exposition of cryptanalysis, the invention of polyalphabetic substitution, and the invention of enciphered code" (The Codebreakers, 1967).
- According to Alberti himself, in a short autobiography written c. 1438 in Latin and in the third person, he was capable of "standing with his feet together, and springing over a man's head." The autobiography survives thanks to an eighteenth century transcription by Antonio Muratori. Alberti also claimed that he "excelled in all bodily exercises; could, with feet tied, leap over a standing man; could in the great cathedral, throw a coin far up to ring against the vault; amused himself by taming wild horses and climbing mountains." Needless to say, many in the Renaissance promoted themselves in various ways and Alberti's eagerness to promote his skills should be understood, to some extent, within that framework.
- He was also interested in the drawing of maps and worked with the astronomer and cartographer Paolo Toscanelli.
Trivia
Alberti is the "Renaissance man" referenced in the title of the film Renaissance Man.
See also
- List of painters
- List of Italian painters
- List of famous Italians
- List of cryptographers
- List of polymaths
- List of illegitimates
External links
- Momus, Latin text and English translation, 2003 ISBN 0-674-00754-9
- Online resources for Alberti's buildings
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Categories: 1404 births | 1472 deaths | Natives of Genoa | Pre-19th century cryptographers | Music theorists | Italian philosophers | Italian poets | Italian Renaissance authors | Italian architecture writers | Italian architects | Italian painters | Italian sculptors | Renaissance painters | Renaissance architects | Polymaths