Leonardo's crossbow
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Leonardo's crossbow designs are a series of shooting weapon schematics designed by Leonardo da Vinci that are in the Codex Atlanticus. One version, a self-spanning infantry weapon called the Rapid Fire Crossbow (Balestra Veloce in Italian), is found on sheets 143r, 153r, and 155r.[2] The other is the Giant Crossbow (Balestra Gigante in Italian) design intended to be a mounted siege weapon found on sheet 149a in the Codex.
![Thumb image](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/52/CAH_0153r.png/640px-CAH_0153r.png)
![Thumb image](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0e/Leonardo_da_Vinci%27s_Giant_Crossbow_-_design.jpg/640px-Leonardo_da_Vinci%27s_Giant_Crossbow_-_design.jpg)
![Thumb image](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Balestra_Veloce.jpg/640px-Balestra_Veloce.jpg)
The creation of the large design is linked to Ludovico Sforza, an Italian prince in the Renaissance era. Given the constant warfare in the Italian Peninsula at this time, he wanted to expand and advance both his military and the territory he governed in the Milan region. To do so, he wanted to update the current treatise on military engineering by Roberto Valturio. Leonardo responded by writing Sforza a letter that included a number of innovative machine designs with one of them being the Giant Crossbow. Leonardo also highlighted in the letter his expertise in engineering; most likely having known that Sforza was wanting to hire military engineers at the time.[3]
While there is no exact date for the illustrations of Leonardo's crossbows, they are generally believed to be drafted between 1483 and the early 1490s.[4] Many scholars generally agree that Leonardo completed the drawings in the manuscript in Milan, but there is debate as to why he originally went there. Some believe he came to Milan in search of work as a painter and then he got news of Sforza's military desires upon arriving. Others suggest that the initial reason he came directly to Milan was to work for Sforza.[5]