Back to Show
Secrets of the Dead
Theft of the Mona Lisa from the Louvre
In the summer of 1911, the relatively obscure Mona Lisa portrait was stolen from a Renaissance gallery in The Louvre Museum. The scandal soon made the Leonardo da Vinci painting a household name. A handyman Vincenzo Peruggia committed the crime, removing the wooden panel portrait from its frame and escaping in broad daylight the following day when the museum was closed.
Support Provided By
Unlock with PBS Passport
55:10
Where did Hannibal and his army cross the Alps to launch a surprise attack on Rome?
Unlock with PBS Passport
55:10
Uncover the story of early America’s free Black communities via 150-year-old remains.
Unlock with PBS Passport
55:11
Was Leonardo a copycat?
Unlock with PBS Passport
55:11
Follow archaeologists who map underwater ruins of ancient Rome’s version of Las Vegas
Unlock with PBS Passport
55:09
What did Vincent Van Gogh really do on the night of December 23, 1888?
Unlock with PBS Passport
55:11
Follow scientists trying to determine which giant animal was the apex predator
Unlock with PBS Passport
54:41
Discover the truth about the first permanent English colony in the New World.
Unlock with PBS Passport
54:41
Learn why Franklin held human skeletal remains in the basement of his British residence.