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  • 00:00

    Leonardo da Vinci was the quintessential renaissance man. Best known for his achievement in the

  • 00:04

    art world, da Vinci made significant contributions to architecture, botany, engineering, mathematics,

  • 00:09

    music, history, cartography, geology, invention, and more--including animal rights and ethical

  • 00:15

    vegetarianism, or what we today call veganism. Of course this final point isn’t one you’ll

  • 00:20

    find very often discussed in the annals of historical literature.

  • 00:24

    Could it be that Dan Brown got it all wrong? Is the real conspiracy that

  • 00:28

    da Vinci was vegan?

  • 00:34

    Hi it's Emily from Bite Size Vegan and welcome to another vegan nugget. So far in my series

  • 00:40

    on The History of Veganism, we’ve covered the development of veganism all the way from

  • 00:44

    over 9,000 year ago in ancient times, through the Middle Ages and into the Renaissance.

  • 00:50

    Each of those episodes are linked below an in the playlist in the sidebar and they have

  • 00:54

    chapter markers in their respective video descriptions for ease of navigation.

  • 00:59

    With parts one, two and three of The History of Veganism series each being the length and

  • 01:03

    depth of a full television episode, I wanted to create a spotlight series of shorter videos

  • 01:08

    focusing on individuals key to veganism’s history. Cause who knows, you may just be

  • 01:13

    so amazed and enthralled that you jump on over and watch the full series!

  • 01:19

    [don’t crush my dreams]

  • 01:25

    A quick tech note: the blog post for this video, as with all of my videos, has thorough

  • 01:29

    citations to every quote and account I’ll be relating today.

  • 01:35

    While da Vinci himself never seems to have stated explicitly that he was vegetarian -- which,

  • 01:40

    in those days usually meant vegan as the term “vegan” wasn’t coined until the 1940’s,

  • 01:45

    but we’ll get to that soon in the main series -- those who knew him described da Vinci as

  • 01:50

    both caring for and not consuming animals.

  • 01:53

    Upon encountering vegetarians in India, Italian explorer Andrea Corsali wrote to his and da

  • 01:58

    Vinci’s mutual patron Giuliano de’ Medici that they “do not feed upon anything that

  • 02:03

    contains blood, or do they permit among them any injury be done to any living thing, like

  • 02:09

    our Leonardo da Vinci.”

  • 02:11

    And Giorgio Vasari in 1550, spoke of da Vinci’s compassion and perhaps even establishes him

  • 02:16

    as a liberator of animals.

  • 02:18

    “In all the other animals… he managed with the greatest love and patience; and this

  • 02:22

    he showed when often passing by the places where birds were sold, for, taking them with

  • 02:27

    his own hand out of their cages and having paid for them what was asked, he let them

  • 02:31

    fly away into the air, restoring them to their lost liberty.”

  • 02:35

    Indicating his own dietary inclinations, Da Vinci did write that he would not let his

  • 02:40

    body be a “tomb for other animals, an inn of the dead … a container of corruption.”

  • 02:46

    Further writings belie the fact that da Vinci wasn’t speaking purely from a health standpoint.

  • 02:51

    He wrote powerfully against the perceived entitlement of humans and their treatment

  • 02:55

    of animals for their own gain:

  • 02:57

    "King of the animals–– as thou hast described him–– I should rather say king of the

  • 03:01

    beasts, thou being the greatest––because thou doest only help them, in order that they

  • 03:05

    give thee their children for the benefit of the gullet,[meaning killing animals for your

  • 03:10

    stomach] of which thou hast attempted to make a sepulcher [meaning: grave/tomb] for all

  • 03:15

    animals; and I would say still more, if I were allowed to speak the entire truth.”

  • 03:19

    Da Vinci even addressed the gap between human and non-human animals, turning our supposed

  • 03:24

    superiority on its head, “Man has great power of speech, but the greater part thereof

  • 03:29

    is empty and deceitful. The animals have little, but that little is useful and true; and better

  • 03:33

    is a small and certain thing than a great falsehood.”

  • 03:37

    Da Vinci asks those insistent on eating animals, “Does not nature produce enough simple [meaning:

  • 03:42

    plant-based] food for thee to satisfy thyself?” This was a question often voiced by similarly

  • 03:47

    veg-inclined Renaissance thinkers.

  • 03:50

    Rather uniquely, though, da Vinci dove deeper into issues beyond diet:

  • 03:53

    “Of shoes made from leather In many parts of the country you can see men

  • 03:57

    walking about on the skins of large beasts. Of candles made of beeswax

  • 04:02

    [The bees] give light to divine service—and for this they are destroyed .

  • 04:06

    Of knives with handles made of ram’s horns Here we see the horns of certain beasts fitted

  • 04:10

    to sharp iron, which is then used to take the lives of their own kind.

  • 04:14

    Of asses Here the hardest labour is repaid by hunger

  • 04:17

    and thirst, pain and blows, goads and curses and loud abuse.

  • 04:22

    Of a fish served with its roe Endless generations of fish will be lost because

  • 04:26

    of the death of this pregnant one. Of slaughtered oxen

  • 04:29

    Behold-the lords of great estates have killed their own labourers.”

  • 04:33

    And a similar passage:

  • 04:35

    “Of asses which are beaten … I see thy children given into slavery

  • 04:39

    to others, without any sort of advantage, and instead of remuneration for the services

  • 04:44

    they have done, they are repaid by the severest suffering, and they spend their whole life

  • 04:48

    in benefiting their oppressor. Of bees

  • 04:51

    And many will be cruelly robbed of their stores and their food, and will be cruelly submerged

  • 04:56

    and drowned by folks devoid of reason. O justice of God! Why dost thou not awake to behold

  • 04:59

    thy creatures thus abused? Of sheep, cows, goats, and the like

  • 05:00

    From countless numbers will be taken away their little children and the throats of these

  • 05:04

    shall be cut, and they shall be quartered most barbarously.”

  • 05:08

    Demonstrating once again that the arguments against veganism haven’t changed over the

  • 05:12

    centuries and modern-day vegan hater comments are beyond unoriginal, is an excerpt from

  • 05:18

    da Vinci explaining why it is that plants do not feel as animals do.

  • 05:22

    "Though nature has given sensibility to pain to such living organisms as have the power

  • 05:27

    of movement, – in order thereby to preserve the members which in this movement are liable

  • 05:31

    to diminish and be destroyed, – the living organisms which have no power of movement

  • 05:35

    do not have to encounter opposing objects, and plants consequently do not need to have

  • 05:40

    a sensibility to pain, and so it comes about that if you break them they do not feel anguish

  • 05:45

    in their members as do the animals."

  • 05:47

    Oh yes. We’ve come upon what is perhaps da Vinci’s finest moment: the refutation

  • 05:53

    of the brilliant non-vegan counterpoint, “Plants, tho.”

  • 05:59

    Before we close out this historical spotlight, I thought I’d mentioned as I did in the

  • 06:03

    History of Veganism Part Three: Vegans in the Renaissance, that there is a quote often

  • 06:07

    circulated amongst vegan and vegetarians that is falsely attributed to da Vinci: “I have

  • 06:12

    from an early age abjured the use of meat, and the time will come when men such as I

  • 06:16

    will look upon the murder of animals as they now look upon the murder of men.” This was

  • 06:21

    accidentally misattributed to him in an anthology and actually comes from a fictional portrayal

  • 06:26

    of da Vinci.

  • 06:27

    Judging by his writings, however, this quote would easily fit with da Vinci’s views.

  • 06:31

    I’ll leave you with a rather engaging passage in which da Vinci hints towards habitat and

  • 06:36

    environmental destruction, the moral weight of consuming animals, and the ultimate outcome

  • 06:40

    of humanity’s actions:

  • 06:42

    “Animals will be seen upon the earth who will always be fighting with one another,

  • 06:45

    with very great losses and frequent deaths on each side. And there will be no end to

  • 06:50

    their malice; … when they are filled with their food, the satisfaction of their desires

  • 06:53

    will be to deal death, and grief and labor and fear and fright to every living thing;

  • 06:59

    … Nothing will remain on earth or under the earth or in the waters that will not be

  • 07:04

    persecuted, disturbed and spoiled, and those of one country move to another. And their

  • 07:08

    bodies will become the tomb and the means of transit of all the living bodies they have

  • 07:12

    killed. O Earth! what delays thee to open and hurl them headlong into the deep fissures

  • 07:18

    of a huge abyss and caverns, and no longer to display in the sight of heaven so savage

  • 07:23

    and ruthless a monster?”

  • 07:25

    The monster, the animal da Vinci denounces for causing such destruction, is of course

  • 07:30

    humans.

  • 07:31

    I hope you enjoyed this History of Veganism Spotlight on Leonardo da Vinci. I’d love

  • 07:37

    to hear what you thought of da Vinci’s writings! Were you aware of his belief about animal

  • 07:41

    ethics? If it sparked your appetite for some old school vegans, be sure to check out the

  • 07:45

    series so far, again linked below and in the sidebar.

  • 07:49

    The time it’s taken to produce the History of Veganism series so far clocks in at about

  • 07:53

    __. I’d like to give a special thanks my $50 and above patrons and my whole Nugget

  • 07:59

    Army Patreon family for making this and all of my videos possible. You guys are my rock.

  • 08:05

    And you rock. Couldn’t do it without you.

  • 08:09

    If you’d like to help support Bite Size Vegan so I can keep putting in the long hours

  • 08:12

    to bring you this educational resource, check out the support links in the video description

  • 08:16

    below where you can give a one-time donation or receive perks and rewards for your support

  • 08:21

    and become part of the coolest online family ever by joining the Nugget Army- the link

  • 08:25

    for that is also in the iCard sidebar.

  • 08:28

    If you liked this nugget of da Vinci, as it were, do give the video a thumbs up and share

  • 08:33

    it around for the love of history. If you’re new here, I’d love to have you as a subscriber.

  • 08:37

    I put out fresh content covering all aspects of veganism every Monday, Wednesday and some

  • 08:41

    Fridays. Now go live vegan, break the vegan da Vinci code, and I’ll see you soon.

  • 08:48

    This video is totally going to outperform The da Vinci Code in box office sales.

All

The example sentences of ABJURED in videos (1 in total of 1)

from preposition or subordinating conjunction an determiner early adjective age noun, singular or mass abjured verb, past tense the determiner use noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction meat noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction the determiner time noun, singular or mass will modal come verb, base form when wh-adverb men noun, plural such adjective as preposition or subordinating conjunction i personal pronoun

Use "abjured" in a sentence | "abjured" example sentences

How to use "abjured" in a sentence?

  • Indeed, one modern President abjured God altogether, ending speeches with a chaste 'Thank you very much.' This was Jimmy Carter, the most genuinely devout President of the postwar period.
    -Jonathan Rauch-

Definition and meaning of ABJURED

What does "abjured mean?"

/abˈjo͝or/

verb
solemnly renounce.

What are synonyms of "abjured"?
Some common synonyms of "abjured" are:
  • renounce,
  • relinquish,
  • reject,
  • forgo,
  • forswear,
  • disavow,
  • abandon,
  • deny,
  • gainsay,
  • disclaim,
  • repudiate,
  • spurn,
  • abnegate,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.