Decode the message hidden behind Leonardo da Vinci's Last Dinner

Leonardo da Vinci's painting The Last Supper is different from all the paintings and themes by the hidden message that the artist left us.

More than a decade ago, Leonardo da Vinci's painting The Last Supper became the subject of controversy after Dan Brown's novel The Da Vinci Code. The Da Vinci Code then gave the theory, accepted by few people, about the role of Mary Magdalene and the Holy Grail.

However, at the present time, after 15 years of analysis, experts assert that the picture holds some private secrets related to the hypothesis that the Da Vinci Code came up.

The banquet , the last meal that Jesus shared with his disciples before his death, was a fascinating and often exploited topic. The Smithsonian Channel says Leonardo da Vinci's The Last Supper is well known, but it is not the only version depicting the party.

Picture 1 of Decode the message hidden behind Leonardo da Vinci's Last Dinner
Leonardo da Vinci's The Last Supper contains the message: 13 people in the picture are ordinary people, not saints, Jesus is a mortal.

There are many different ways of expressing the image of Jesus and the 12 apostles appearing before the 15th-century painting of Leonardo da Vinci. But they all have one thing in common. Leonardo da Vinci's The Last Supper depicts a subtle message that makes it more special than all other paintings of the same type.

If the previous works portray 13 saints, Leonardo da Vinci thinks that they are just ordinary people and that Jesus truly died. The most obvious manifestation is that the predecessors all drew 13 people with the halos on their heads, and the version of Leonardo da Vinci, even God, had no halo around the head.

"Before Leonardo da Vinci, all The Last Supper shows that Jesus and his disciples had a halo, describing them as saints. But Da Vinci chose to ignore this convention and draw them without aura. , the video on the Smithsonian explains.

Picture 2 of Decode the message hidden behind Leonardo da Vinci's Last Dinner

Picture 3 of Decode the message hidden behind Leonardo da Vinci's Last Dinner
While Leonardo da Vinci's The Last Supper does not paint halo, every picture and theme depicts 12 apostles and Jesus with aura, proving they are holy.

Mario Taddei, an inventor in Milan and an expert on Da Vinci's works that choose to ignore the halo is a way of sending messages. According to Taddei, the person described in the painting is not saints but just "ordinary men" , implying that the true Jesus died.

"I believe Leonardo did not place the halo because he thought they were ordinary people and this is Leonardo's real secret. There are no extraterrestrial or supernatural objects at the party. Leonardo wants to tell us. that 13 men are simply men ".

In The Da Vinci Code novel and film of the same name after that, the picture plays an important role with the story that the person on the right side of Jesus is Mary Magdalene and not a John disciple. This implies that Mary is the Holy Grail. The argument in fiction has received many harsh criticisms from some people.

But according to the Smithsonian, the novel is not entirely deflected in explaining the picture. Leonardo da Vinci left a delicate message with his last Supper. He tells us that Jesus is a human being (a mortal life) - something that was once said in The Da Vinci Code.