The Madonna of the Yarnwinder is a subject depicted by Leonardo da Vinci in a painting begun in 1499 or some time later. It is known today from several versions, two of which are thought to be partly by his hand. The composition shows Virgin Mary with the Christ child, who looks longingly at a yarnwinder used to collect spun yarn. The yarnwinder serves as a symbol both of Mary's domesticity and the Cross on which Christ was crucified, and may also suggest the Fates, understood in classical mythology as spinners. At least three versions are in private collections, two of them in the United... States, including the one previously known as "The Landsdowne Madonna". Leonardo was documented as being at work on the original picture in Florence in 1501. Its patron was Florimond Robertet, the Secretary of State to King Louis XII of France. The version of this painting often regarded as the most likely to be by Leonardo is now in the National Gallery of Scotland in Edinburgh, on loan from the Duke of Buccleuch. It hung in his home in Drumlanrig Castle, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland until it was stolen in 2003.
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