(Excerpted from the Istituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza, Florence, Italy
& The Science Museum, London)
Leonardo's inspiration came from ancient Greek texts. Ctesibus produced the
first organ and water clocks with moving figures. Hero of Alexandria detailed
several automata that were used in theater and for religious purposes. The
Greek tradition was revived by Vitruvius, who described several automata and
developed the canon of proportions, which is the basis of classical anatomical
aesthetics. Arab authors also designed complex mechanical arrangements.
Al-Jazari, for instance, illustrated several designs which also anticipated
the principle of the modern flush toilet.
In approximately 1495, before he began work on the Last Supper, Leonardo
designed and possibly built the first humanoid robot in Western civilization.
The robot, an outgrowth of his earliest anatomy and kinesiology studies
recorded in the Codex Huygens, was designed according to the Vitruvian canon.
This armored robot knight was designed to sit up, wave its arms, and move its
head via a flexible neck while opening and closing its anatomically correct
jaw. It may have made sounds to the accompaniment of automated drums. On the
outside, the robot is dressed in a typical German-Italian suit of armor of
the late fifteenth century. This robot would influence his later anatomical
studies in which he modeled the human limbs with cords to simulate the
tendons and muscles.
The robot consisted of two independent systems:
three-degree-of-freedom legs, ankles, knees, and hips; and
four-degree-of-freedom arms with articulated shoulders, elbows,
wrists, and hands. The orientation of the arms indicates it was
designed for whole-arm grasping, which means that all the joints moved
in unison. A mechanical, analog-programmable controller within the
chest provided power and control for the arms. The legs were powered
by an external crank arrangement driving the cable, which was
connected to key locations in the ankle, knee, and hip.