Silver coin Inventions of Leonardo da Vinci - Flying Machine proof
Silver coin Inventions of Leonardo da Vinci - Flying Machine proof
The product can also be purchased directly in the stores of the Czech Mint
Inventions of Leonardo da Vinci
The four-part miniseries "Inventions of Leonardo Da Vinci" introduces another flying machine after the helicopter. The Czech Mint dedicated the silver coin to the glider.
The helicopter proved to be an impasse in Leonardo's attempt to create a flying machine. The inventor realized that the human power that should drive it would not be enough to take off. So he returned to the drawing board. He admired the animals, enforced their rights and was likely to be a vegetarian. He decided to imitate what he had learned from his beloved dumb faces. He was initially inspired by a bird flight. As a model for the new invention, which he simply called a "bird", he chose a kite - a small and agile predator. He created a number of sketches based on its skeleton, but it was still not perfect. He continued studying the flying creatures and finally wrote down in his diary: "Remember that your bird must not imitate anything other than a bat. And that's because it's flying through the membrane and not the feathers like the birds. That bird must rise to a wind, so its wings must be robust – made of thick skin and ropes." Unlike the helicopter Leonardo actually built and even tried his "bird" which more than anything else recalls today's hang-glider. Unfortunately, he was not successful at the time, but when his compatriots repeated his attempt five centuries later, they succeeded. Leonardo da Vinci could become the first flightman in human history. The glider, however, was not the last invention. He invented a parachute, a wind gauge to check velocity of wind, an anemoscope to check wind direction and an inclinometer to check the horizontal position of the flight.
The author of the entire miniseries is the medal maker Asamat Baltaev, DiS. He was inspired by Leonardo's diaries when creating the reverse side - the renaissance master himself looks at the layout of the glider. The composition of the reverse side is closed by the English inscription FLYING MACHINE. The obverse side of the coin then presents all inventions that will gradually appear in the miniseries - a helicopter, a glider, a machine gun and a tank. All of this is linked to the attributes of Niue Island, which is the coin issuer. The coins of the Czech Mint are issued with its foreign license and therefore they bear the name and the portrait of Queen Elizabeth II, the nominal value of 1 DOLLAR (NZD) and the year of the issue 2019.
Leonardo da Vinci's four inventions were stored in a thematic collector's box which you can also find in the offer of the Czech Mint.