However, some experts have thrown doubt on the
exercise, saying the hair almost certainly did not belong to the
Italian master, while credible DNA testing may prove impossible.
Da Vinci died in May 1519 and was buried at the Chateau
d'Ambroise near the French city of Tours. The castle was badly
damaged following the French Revolution of 1789 and many graves
were destroyed, including that of Leonardo.
Alessandro Vezzosi, the director of the Ideal Leonardo da Vinci
museum in Vinci, the artist's hometown in Tuscany, said the
strand of hair was collected from the site in 1863 by a man
tasked by a royal commission to try to locate Leonardo's
remains.
"In 1925, an American collector bought this relic in Paris ...
Later, before dying aged 95, he sold it on to another American
collector, who contacted us," Vezzosi said.
He said the museum planned to extract DNA from the sample and
compare it with the DNA from a group of descendants that the
museum says it identified in 2016, using genealogical records.
The testing should also be able to prove if the remains
identified in France in 1863 really belonged to da Vinci.
"What is important is not to take for granted a result before
the scientific testing is completed," said Vezzosi.
But some experts are already pouring cold water on the whole
exercise.
"It is highly improbable that this lock (of hair), which was
presented like a (religious) relic, would be in anyway related
to Leonardo da Vinci," said Eike Schmidt, the director of the
prestigious Uffizi Gallery in nearby Florence.
Finding a DNA link with living descendants will prove an added
complication, with tracing only possible via the mother and an
unbroken female line, or the father and an unbroken male line.
The identity of Leonardo's mother is unknown.
The artist himself never married and left no direct heirs, so
the DNA will be checked against that of the descendants that
Vezzosi said had been found by following the family trees of
other children born to Leonardo's father.
The chance of recreating an unbroken male line over 500 years is
extremely unlikely.
(Writing by Crispian Balmer; Editing by Giselda Vagnoni and
Gareth Jones)
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