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Captain Leale Martelli - The Odyssey in the Realms of Time
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<blockquote data-quote="LITTLE DOCTOR" data-source="post: 187946" data-attributes="member: 7165"><p>Leonardo, arrived at Stagno, hired a hunter, a "luparo" (a hunter specialized in wolf hunting) to be taken to the Sambuca. Leonardo represents and indicates the marshy area of the Stagno between Pisa and Livorno also in the map RW 12277 of Windsor: indicated as "bridge to Stagno" in the sheet 305r of the "Atlantic code" and only localized, but without toponym in in the sheets 52v-53r of the "Madrid II code". The hunter accompanied Leonardo da Vinci to his home in Nugola to offer him a hot meal. On that occasion Leonardo represents and indicates the locality of Nugola in one of his drawings and certifies it as a town in the municipality of Collesalvetti. Previously Leonardo had also depicted the city of Livorno in sheet 305r of the "Atlantic code" where he also indicates the "tower" and the "lighthouse". In map RL 12277 defines Livorno as a Pisan port. In the Codex Atlanticus Leonardo represents the sea with a hand-drawn sketch (F. 147 a - r (ex 52 r - b)) of the Atlantic Code. During the visit to Nugola, Leonardo da Vinci was informed by the hunter that in a place near a castle of Nugola there were some Etruscan tombs, but Leonardo did not want to visit them because he was anxious to reach the convent of Sambuca. These Etruscan tombs full of treasures have not yet been plundered, so its treasures are still well preserved. Exactly these Etruscan tombs are located in the Old Nugola area along the road that leads to the castle, under a recently fallen landslide and clearly visible from the road, but this is another story ... But back to Leonardo and his journey to the convent of the Sambuca. The hunter advised to pass through the river Ugione, not far from Nugola. The two went up the river from a place where there is now a military base that serves as a munitions depot for the body of paratroopers. The hunter decided to go up the river Ugione because he considered it safer as regards the attack of brigands, but Leonardo had another type of encounter: he saw a diabolical entity that frightened him so much that he made it back, but also that's another story ...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="LITTLE DOCTOR, post: 187946, member: 7165"] Leonardo, arrived at Stagno, hired a hunter, a "luparo" (a hunter specialized in wolf hunting) to be taken to the Sambuca. Leonardo represents and indicates the marshy area of the Stagno between Pisa and Livorno also in the map RW 12277 of Windsor: indicated as "bridge to Stagno" in the sheet 305r of the "Atlantic code" and only localized, but without toponym in in the sheets 52v-53r of the "Madrid II code". The hunter accompanied Leonardo da Vinci to his home in Nugola to offer him a hot meal. On that occasion Leonardo represents and indicates the locality of Nugola in one of his drawings and certifies it as a town in the municipality of Collesalvetti. Previously Leonardo had also depicted the city of Livorno in sheet 305r of the "Atlantic code" where he also indicates the "tower" and the "lighthouse". In map RL 12277 defines Livorno as a Pisan port. In the Codex Atlanticus Leonardo represents the sea with a hand-drawn sketch (F. 147 a - r (ex 52 r - b)) of the Atlantic Code. During the visit to Nugola, Leonardo da Vinci was informed by the hunter that in a place near a castle of Nugola there were some Etruscan tombs, but Leonardo did not want to visit them because he was anxious to reach the convent of Sambuca. These Etruscan tombs full of treasures have not yet been plundered, so its treasures are still well preserved. Exactly these Etruscan tombs are located in the Old Nugola area along the road that leads to the castle, under a recently fallen landslide and clearly visible from the road, but this is another story ... But back to Leonardo and his journey to the convent of the Sambuca. The hunter advised to pass through the river Ugione, not far from Nugola. The two went up the river from a place where there is now a military base that serves as a munitions depot for the body of paratroopers. The hunter decided to go up the river Ugione because he considered it safer as regards the attack of brigands, but Leonardo had another type of encounter: he saw a diabolical entity that frightened him so much that he made it back, but also that's another story ... [/QUOTE]
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