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{{short description|2003 novel by Dan Brown}}
<table align="right" width="337" style="padding-left: 20px;">
{{About|the novel|the 2006 film|The Da Vinci Code (film)|other uses|The Da Vinci Code (disambiguation)}}
<tr><td>]</td></tr>
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2013}}
<tr><td><small>'']'', by ]. Jacques Sauni&egrave;re, murdered curator of the ], is found naked in the spread-eagle position on the floor of the museum with a cryptic message written in blood on his torso.</small></td></tr>
{{Infobox book
</table>
| name = The Da Vinci Code
| image = DaVinciCode.jpg
| caption = The first U.S. edition
| author = ]
| country = United States
| genre = ], ], ], ]
| publisher = ] (US)
| series = ] #2
| release_date = March 18, 2003<ref>{{cite web |url=https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,1924489,00.html |title=How Good Is Dan Brown's The Lost Symbol? |date=September 15, 2009 |publisher=Time}}</ref>
| pages = 689 (U.S. hardback)<br />489 (U.S. paperback)
| isbn = 0-385-50420-9
| isbn_note = (US)
| dewey = 813/.54 21
| congress = PS3552.R685434 D3 2003
| oclc = 50920659
| preceded_by = ]
| followed_by = ]
}}
'''''The Da Vinci Code''''' is a 2003 ] ] by ]. It is Brown's second novel to include the character ]: the first was his 2000 novel '']''. ''The Da Vinci Code'' follows ] Langdon and ] Sophie Neveu after a murder in the ] in Paris entangles them in a dispute between the ] and ] over the possibility of ] and ] having had a child together.


The novel explores an alternative religious history, whose central plot point is that the ] ] were descended from ] and Mary Magdalene, ideas derived from Clive Prince's '']'' (1997) and books by ]. The book also refers to '']'' (1982), although Brown stated that it was not used as research material.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Suthersanen |first=Uma |date=June 2006 |title=Copyright in the Courts: The Da Vinci Code |url=https://www.wipo.int/wipo_magazine/en/2006/03/article_0004.html |access-date=2024-06-12 |website=WIPO Magazine |language=en}}</ref>
'''''The Da Vinci Code''''' is a novel written by ] author ] and published in ] by Random House . It was a ] bestseller. Although it is a detective thriller by genre, the novel helped spur widespread popular interest in certain theories concerning the legend of the ] and the role of ] in the history of ]. It is a ] to Brown's ] novel '']''.


''The Da Vinci Code'' provoked a popular interest in speculation concerning the ] legend and Mary Magdalene's role in the ]. The book has been extensively denounced by many ] as an attack on the ], and also consistently criticized by scholars for ]. The novel became a massive worldwide ],<ref>Wyat, Edward (November 4, 2005). {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131012054731/http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/04/books/04code.html |date=October 12, 2013 }}. ''The New York Times''.</ref> selling 80 million copies {{As of|2009|lc=on}},<ref>{{cite news |url = http://www.mercurynews.com/celebrities/ci_12530761?nclick_check=1 |title = New novel from Dan Brown due this fall |newspaper = San Jose Mercury News |access-date = 2011-01-04 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110604112734/http://www.mercurynews.com/celebrities/ci_12530761?nclick_check=1 |archive-date = June 4, 2011 |url-status = live |df = mdy-all }}</ref> and has been translated into 44 languages. In November 2004, ] published a Special Illustrated Edition with 160 illustrations. In 2006, ] was released by ].
==Description==


==Plot==
{{msg:spoiler}}
] curator and ] grand master Jacques Saunière is fatally shot one night at the museum by an ] Catholic monk named Silas, who is working on behalf of someone he knows only as the Teacher, who wishes to discover the location of the "keystone", an item crucial in the search for the ]. After Saunière's body is discovered in the pose of the '']'' by ], the police summon Harvard professor Robert Langdon, who is in town on business. Police captain Bezu Fache tells him that he was summoned to help the police decode the cryptic message Saunière left during the final minutes of his life. The message includes a ] out of order and an anagram: "O, draconian devil! Oh, lame saint!" Langdon explains to Fache that the pentacle Saunière drew on his chest in his own blood represents an allusion to the goddess and not devil worship, as Fache believes.


Sophie Neveu, a police ], secretly explains to Langdon that she is Saunière's estranged granddaughter and that Fache thinks Langdon is the murderer because the last line in her grandfather's message, which was meant for Neveu, said "P.S. Find Robert Langdon", which Fache had erased prior to Langdon's arrival. However, "P.S." does not refer to "]", but rather to Sophie ''—'' the nickname given to her by her grandfather was "Princess Sophie". She understands that her grandfather intended Langdon to decipher the code, which leads to Leonardo da Vinci's '']'', which in turn leads to his painting '']''. They find a pendant that holds the address of the Paris branch of the Depository Bank of Zurich.
The book concerns the attempts of the protagonist, Dr. ], Professor of Religious Symbology at ], to solve the murder of Jacques Sauni&egrave;re, the curator of the ] in ]. The title of the novel refers, among other things, to the fact that Sauni&egrave;re's body is found inside the Louvre naked and posed like ] famous drawing, '']'', with a cryptic message written on his torso. The interpretation of hidden messages inside Da Vinci's famous works, including the '']'' and '']'', figure prominently in the solution to the mystery.


]]]
The main conflict in the novel revolves around the solution to two mysteries:
Neveu and Langdon escape from the police and visit the bank. In the safe deposit box, which is unlocked with the Fibonacci sequence, they find a box containing the keystone: a ], a cylindrical, hand-held vault with five concentric, rotating dials labeled with letters. When they are lined up correctly, they unlock the device, but if the cryptex is forced open, an enclosed vial of vinegar breaks and dissolves the message inside the cryptex, which was written on ]. The box containing the cryptex contains clues to its password.
*What secret was Sauni&egrave;re protecting that led to his murder?
*Who is the mastermind behind his murder?


Langdon and Neveu take the keystone to the home of Langdon's friend, Sir Leigh Teabing, an expert on the Holy Grail, the legend of which is heavily connected to the Priory. There, Teabing explains that the Grail is not a cup but connected to ], and that she was Jesus Christ's wife and is the person to his right in '']''. The trio then flee the country on Teabing's private plane, on which they conclude that the proper combination of letters spells out Neveu's given name, Sofia. Opening the cryptex, they discover a smaller cryptex inside it, along with another riddle that ultimately leads the group to the tomb of ] in ].
The novel has several concurrent story lines that follow different characters. Eventually all the story lines are brought together and resolved at the end of the book.


During the flight to Britain, Neveu reveals the source of her estrangement from her grandfather ten years earlier: arriving home unexpectedly from university, Neveu secretly witnessed a spring fertility rite conducted in the secret basement of her grandfather's country estate. From her hiding place, she was shocked to see her grandfather with a woman at the center of a ritual attended by men and women who were wearing masks and chanting praise to the goddess. She fled the house and broke off all contact with Saunière. Langdon explains that what she witnessed was an ancient ceremony known as '']'' or "sacred marriage".
The unraveling of the mystery requires the solution to a series of brain-teaser puzzles. The solution itself is found to be intimately connected with the possible location of the ] and to a mysterious society called the ], as well as to the ]. The ] organization ] also figures prominently in the plot.


By the time they arrive at ], Teabing is revealed to be the Teacher for whom Silas is working. Teabing wishes to use the Holy Grail, which he believes is a series of documents establishing that ] married Mary Magdalene and fathered children, in order to ruin the ]. He compels Langdon at gunpoint to solve the second cryptex's password, which Langdon realizes is "apple". Langdon secretly opens the cryptex and removes its contents before tossing the empty cryptex in the air. Teabing is arrested by Fache, who by now realizes that Langdon is innocent. Bishop Aringarosa, head of religious sect ] and Silas' mentor, realizing that Silas has been used to murder innocent people, rushes to help the police find him. When the police find Silas hiding in an Opus Dei Center, Silas assumes that they are there to kill him and he rushes out, accidentally shooting Bishop Aringarosa. Bishop Aringarosa survives but is informed that Silas was found dead later from a gunshot wound.
The novel is the second book by Brown in which ] is the main character. The previous one, ''Angels and Demons'', took place in ] and concerned the ].

The final message inside the second keystone leads Neveu and Langdon to ], whose docent turns out to be Neveu's long-lost brother, whom Neveu had been told died as a child in the car accident that killed her parents. The guardian of Rosslyn Chapel, Marie Chauvel Saint Clair, is Neveu's long-lost grandmother and Saunière's wife who was the woman who participated with him in the "sacred marriage". It is revealed that Neveu and her brother are descendants of Jesus Christ and Mary Magdalene. The Priory of Sion hid her identity to protect her from possible threats to her life. The real meaning of the last message is that the Grail is buried beneath the small ] directly below '']'', the inverted glass pyramid of the Louvre. It also lies beneath the "Rose Line", an allusion to "Rosslyn". Langdon figures out this final piece to the puzzle; he follows the Rose Line (]) to ''La Pyramide Inversée'', where he kneels to pray before the hidden sarcophagus of Mary Magdalene, as the ] did before.


==Characters== ==Characters==
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
*''']''': A professor of symbology at Harvard University and the protagonist of the novel.
*'''Jacques Saunière''': The grandmaster of the Priory of Sion, Curator of Louvre Museum.
*'''Sophie Neveu''': A cryptologist of the French police and granddaughter of Saunière.
*'''Bezu Fache''': A member of Opus Dei and a French police captain.
*'''Silas / The Monk''': A member of Opus Dei who murders Saunière and the secondary antagonist of the novel.
*'''Manuel Aringarosa''': A bishop of the Vatican and member of Opus Dei.
*'''Sister Sandrine''': A Seneschal of the Priory of Sion and nun of St. Sulpice.
{{col-2}}
*'''André Vernet''': A guard of Zurich bank.
*'''Sir Leigh Teabing / The Teacher''': A Grail scholar and British expatriate living in Paris, and the main antagonist of the novel.
*'''Rémy Legaludec''': A servant who assists Teabing.
*'''Jérôme Collet''': A French police lieutenant and Fache's deputy.
*'''Marie Chauvel Saint-Clair''': Sophie's grandmother.
{{col-end}}


==Reaction==
These are the principal characters that drive the plot of the story:


===Sales===
*''']''', Professor of Religious Symbology at ]. A well-respected scholar. At the beginning of the story, he is in ] to give a lecture on his work. Having made an appointment to meet with Jacques Sauni&egrave;re, the curator of the ], he is startled to find the French police at his hotel room door. They inform him that Sauni&egrave;re has been murdered and they would like his immediate assistance at the Louvre to help them solve the crime. Unbeknownst to Langdon, he is in fact the prime suspect in the murder and has been summoned to scene of the crime in order that the police may extract a confession from him.
''The Da Vinci Code'' was a major success in 2003, outsold only by ]'s '']''.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.usatoday.com/life/books/news/2003-12-11-da-vinci-code_x.htm | title='Code' deciphers interest in religious history | work=USA Today | first=Bob | last=Minzesheimer | date=December 11, 2003 | access-date=2010-05-25 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100110094551/http://www.usatoday.com/life/books/news/2003-12-11-da-vinci-code_x.htm | archive-date=January 10, 2010 | url-status=live | df=mdy-all }}</ref> As of 2016, it had sold 80 million copies worldwide.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Heller |first1=Karen |title=Meet the elite group of authors who sell 100 million books – or 350 million |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/meet-the-elite-group-of-authors-who-sell-100-million-books-or-350-million-paolo-coelho-stephen-king-a7499096.html |website=Independent |date=December 29, 2016 |access-date=April 25, 2020}}</ref>


===Historical inaccuracies===
*'''Jacques Sauni&egrave;re''' the curator of ], secret head of the ], and grandfather of Sophie Neveu. Before being murdered by Silas in the museum, he reveals false information to Silas about the Priory's keystone, which supposedly contains information about the true location of the ]. After being shot in the stomach, he uses the last minutes of his life to arrange a series of clues for his estranged granddaughter Sophie to unravel the mystery of his death and preserve the secret kept by the Priory of Sion.
{{Main|Criticism of The Da Vinci Code}}
]. The TFP acronym in the banner stands for the ].]]
''The Da Vinci Code'' generated criticism when it was first published for the fictitious description of the core aspects of Christianity and descriptions of ], history, and architecture. The book has received negative reviews mostly from Catholic and other Christian communities. Many critics took issue with the level of research Brown did when writing the story. '']'' writer Laura Miller characterized the novel as "based on a notorious hoax", "rank nonsense", and "bogus", saying the book is heavily based on the fabrications of ], who is asserted to have created the Priory of Sion in 1956.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Miller |first=Laura |date=2004-02-22 |title=THE LAST WORD; The Da Vinci Con |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/22/books/the-last-word-the-da-vinci-con.html |access-date=2023-12-29 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref>


Critics accuse Brown of distorting and fabricating history. ] author Marcia Ford considered that novels should be judged not on their literary merit, but on their conclusions:
*'''Sophie Neveu''' - the granddaughter of Jacques Sauni&egrave;re. She is a French government ]. She was raised by her grandfather after her parents, grandmother, and brother were killed in an automobile accident when she was a girl. Her grandfather used to call her "Princess Sophie" and trained her to solve complicated word puzzles. As a girl, she accidentally discovered a strange key in her grandfather's room inscribed with the initials "P.S." . Later, as a college student, she made a surprise visit to her grandfather's house in ] and observed him participating in an occult sex ritual. The incident led to her estrangement with her grandfather until the night of his murder.


{{Blockquote |Regardless of whether you agree with Brown's conclusions, it's clear that his history is largely fanciful, which means he and his publisher have violated a long-held if unspoken agreement with the reader: Fiction that purports to present historical facts should be researched as carefully as a nonfiction book would be.<ref name="faithfulreader1">{{cite web|url= http://www.faithfulreader.com/features/0405-da_vinci_debunkers.asp |title=Da Vinci Debunkers: Spawns of Dan Brown's Bestseller | first = Marcia | last = Ford |publisher=FaithfulReader |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040527122442/http://faithfulreader.com/features/0405-da_vinci_debunkers.asp |archive-date=2004-05-27 |access-date=2015-04-29 |url-status=dead}}</ref>}}
*'''Bezu Fache''' - a captian in the DPCF, the French equivalent of the FBI. Tough, canny, persistent, he is in charge of the investigation of Sauni&egrave;re's murder. From the message left by the dying curator, he is convinced the murderer is ], whom he summons to the ] in order to extract a confession. He is thwarted in his early attempt by Sophie Neveu, who knows Langdon to be innocent and surreptitiously notifies Langdon that he is in fact the prime suspect. He pursues Langdon doggedly throughout the book in the belief that letting him get away would be career suicide.


] wrote:
*'''Silas''' - an ] devotee (erroneously called a "monk") of ] who practices severe ]. He was orphaned in ] as a young man, fell into a life of crime, and was imprisoned in the ] until accidentally freed by an earthquake. He finds refuge with a young priest named Aringarosa who gives him the name ] and who eventually becomes the head of ]. Before the beginning of the events in the novel, Aringarosa put him in contact with the Teacher and tells him that the mission he will be given is of the utmost importance in saving the true Word of God. Under the orders of the Teacher, he murders Jacques Sauni&egrave;re and the other three leaders of the ] in order to extract the location of the Priory's "]". Discovering later that he has been duped with false information, he chases Langdon and Neveu in order to obtain the actual keystone. He does not know the true identity of the Teacher. He is reluctant to commit murder, knowing that it is a ], and does so only because he is assured his actions will save the ].
{{Blockquote|The most flagrant aspect{{nbsp}}... is not that Dan Brown disagrees with Christianity but that he utterly warps it in order to disagree with it{{nbsp}}... to the point of completely rewriting a vast number of historical events. And making the matter worse has been Brown's willingness to pass off his distortions as 'facts' with which innumerable scholars and historians agree.<ref name="faithfulreader1" />}}


Much of the controversy generated by ''The Da Vinci Code'' was due to the fact that the book was marketed as being historically accurate; the novel opens with a "fact" page that states that "The Priory of Sion—a French ] founded in 1099—is a real organization", whereas the ] is a hoax created in 1956 by ], which Plantard admitted under oath in 1994, well before the publication of ''The Da Vinci Code''.<ref name="lepoint">"Affaire Pelat: Le Rapport du Juge", ''Le Point'', no. 1112 (8–14 January 1994), p. 11.</ref> The fact page itself is part of the novel as a fictional piece, but is not presented as such. The page also states that "all descriptions of artwork, architecture, documents{{nbsp}}... and secret rituals in this novel are accurate", a claim disputed by numerous academic scholars and experts in numerous areas.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.historyversusthedavincicode.com/ |title = History vs The Da Vinci Code |access-date = 2009-02-03}}</ref>
*'''Bishop Manuel Aringarosa''' - the world-wide head of ] and the patron of the albino monk Silas. Six months before the start of the narrative, he is summoned by the ] to a meeting at an astronomical observatory in the ] and told, to his great surprise, that in six months the Pope will withdraw his support of ]. Since he believes that Opus Dei is the force keeping the Church from disintegrating into the corruption of the modern era, he believes his faith demands that he take action to save Opus Dei. Shortly after the meeting with the Vatican officials, he is contacted by a shadowy figure calling himself the "The Teacher" who has learned somehow of the secret meeting. The Teacher informs him that he can deliver an artifact to Aringarosa so valuable to the Church that it will give Opus Dei extreme leverage over the Vatican.


Brown addressed the idea of some of the more controversial aspects being fact on his website, stating that the page at the beginning of the novel mentions only "documents, rituals, organization, artwork and architecture" but not any of the ancient theories discussed by fictional characters, stating that "Interpreting those ideas is left to the reader". Brown also says, "It is my belief that some of the theories discussed by these characters may have merit" and "the secret behind ''The Da Vinci Code'' was too well documented and significant for me to dismiss."<ref>{{cite web | first1 = Ken | last1 = Kelleher | first2 = Carolyn | last2 = Kelleher|url=http://www.danbrown.com/#/davinciCode/questions|title= The Da Vinci Code | type = FAQs | publisher = Dan Brown |date=April 24, 2006 |access-date=2009-02-03 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080325062025/http://www.danbrown.com/novels/davinci_code/faqs.html |archive-date = 2008-03-25}}</ref>
*'''The Teacher''' - shadowy figure who drives the plot of the story. He has learned not only about the plight of ], but also the identities of the four leaders of the ], who in turn know the location of the keystone. He contacts Aringarosa and agrees to supply him with a fantastic artificact that will give Opus Dei great power, namely documents that, if released, would destroy the Church. Aringarosa, acting out of self interest and piety, agrees to his offer in order to save both Opus Dei and the Church. The Teacher uses Silas, Aringarosa's protectee, to carry out his plans. Neither Silas nor Aringarosa ever learn his real identity.


In 2003, while promoting the novel, Brown was asked in interviews what parts of the history in his novel actually happened. He replied "Absolutely all of it."<ref>{{cite web|date=June 3, 2003|work=NBC Today|url=http://www.booksattransworld.co.uk/danbrown/interview.htm|title=NBC Today Interview|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928001540/http://www.booksattransworld.co.uk/danbrown/interview.htm|archive-date=September 28, 2007|df=mdy-all}}</ref> In a 2003 interview with CNN's ] he was again asked how much of the historical background was true. He replied, "99% is true... the background is all true".<ref>{{cite news|url=http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0305/25/sm.21.html|title= Interview With Dan Brown|date=May 25, 2003|publisher=]|work=]}}</ref> Asked by ] in an ] special if the book would have been different if he had written it as non-fiction he replied, "I don't think it would have."<ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.historyversusthedavincicode.com/fiction.htm|title = Fiction|access-date = 2009-02-03|website = History vs The Da Vinci Code}}</ref>
*'''Andr&eacute; Vernet''' - president of the ] branch of the ]. He is surprised when Neveu and Langdon arrive at the bank and inform him that Jacques Sauni&egrave;re, a long-time account holder at the bank, has died and that Neveu now possesses the depository key to the account. His suspicions are aroused when Neveu and Langdon, after accessing the bank with the key, do not know the account number, indicating that they have no legitimate business being in the bank. When he sees a news report that Neveu and Langdon are fugitives suspected in Sauni&egrave;re's murder, he returns to where he left them, but he finds that they have indeed entered the correct account number and retrieved the contents of Sauni&egrave;re's deposit box. Realizing they are legitimate clients according to the strict rules of the bank, he feels duty-bound to help them escape. Acting as a bank driver, he bluffs his way past the police in one of the bank's trucks with Langdon and Neveu concealed in the back of the truck. He later changes his mind and attempts to turn them in, but is thwarted by Langdon, who steals the truck and escapes with Neveu to the nearby chateau of his friend, Sir Leigh Teabing.


In 2005, UK TV personality ] edited and narrated a detailed rebuttal of the main arguments of Brown and those of ], ] and ], who authored the book '']'', in the program ''The Real Da Vinci Code'', shown on ] ]. The program featured lengthy interviews with many of the main protagonists cited by Brown as "absolute fact" in ''The Da Vinci Code''. Arnaud de Sède, son of ], stated categorically that his father and Plantard had made up the existence of the ], the cornerstone of the ] theory: "frankly, it was piffle",<ref>{{cite AV media|title=The Real Da Vinci Code|publisher=]}}</ref> noting that the concept of a descendant of Jesus was also an element of the 1999 ] film '']''.
*'''Sir Leigh Teabing''' - British Royal Historian, a ], ] scholar, and friend of ]. Independently wealthy, he lives outside Paris in a ] where Langdon and Neveu take refuge after escaping from the Depository Bank of Zurich with the ] box containing the keystone. He reveals to Neveu the "real" interpretation of the Grail (see below). After they are discovered at his home simultaneously by Silas and the French police, the three of them flee with his chauffeur R&eacute;my, flying to ] in his private jet. After Neveu solves the combination lock of the keystone, he interprets the enclosed riddle as meaning they should go to the ] in ] to find the next hidden clue that will let them unlock the second combination lock of the keystone.


The earliest appearance of this theory is due to the 13th-century ] monk and chronicler ] who reported that ] believed that the 'evil' and 'earthly' Jesus Christ had a relationship with Mary Magdalene, described as his ] (and that the 'good Christ' was incorporeal and existed spiritually in the body of Paul).<ref>{{Citation | first1 = WA | last1 = Sibly | first2 = MD | last2 = Sibly | title = The History of the Albigensian Crusade: Peter of les Vaux-de-Cernay's "Historia Albigensis" | publisher = Boydell | year = 1998 | isbn = 0-85115-658-4 | quote = Further, in their secret meetings they said that the Christ who was born in the earthly and visible Bethlehem and crucified at Jerusalem was 'evil', and that Mary Magdalene was his concubine – and that she was the woman taken in adultery who is referred to in the Scriptures; the 'good' Christ, they said, neither ate nor drank nor assumed the true flesh and was never in this world, except spiritually in the body of Paul. I have used the term 'the earthly and visible Bethlehem' because the heretics believed there is a different and invisible earth in which – according to some of them – the 'good' Christ was born and crucified.}}</ref> The program ''The Real Da Vinci Code'' also cast doubt on the Rosslyn Chapel association with the Grail and on other related stories, such as the alleged landing of Mary Magdalene in France.
*'''R&eacute;my''' - chauffeur of Leigh Teabing. After flying with Teabing, Langdon, and Neveu to England, he drives them to the ] in London. Unbeknownst to the others, he is in fact working for the Teacher. While they are inside the Temple Church, he meets with Silas, who was tipped off by the Teacher to meet R&eacute;my there. Armed with a pistol, he enters the church before the others can locate and solve the riddle supposedly hidden there. He takes his Teabing hostage and demands the keystone from Langdon. When Langdon gives him the keystone, he and Silas flee in his car with Teabing as hostage.


According to ''The Da Vinci Code'', the Roman Emperor ] suppressed ] because it portrayed Jesus as purely human.<ref>{{Citation|first = Tim|last = O'Neill|chapter-url = http://www.historyversusthedavincicode.com/chapterfiftyfive.htm#christpower|chapter = 55. Early Christianity and Political Power|title = History versus the Da Vinci Code|year = 2006|access-date = February 16, 2009|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090515112028/http://www.historyversusthedavincicode.com/chapterfiftyfive.htm#christpower|archive-date = May 15, 2009|url-status = live|df = mdy-all}}.</ref> The novel portrays Constantine as wanting Christianity to act as a unifying religion for the ], thinking that Christianity would appeal to ]s only if it featured a ] similar to pagan heroes. According to the ], Jesus was merely a human prophet, not a demigod. Therefore, to change Jesus' image, Constantine destroyed the Gnostic Gospels and promoted the gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, which portray Jesus as divine or semi-divine; however, most scholars agree that all Gnostic writings depict Christ as purely divine, his human body being a mere illusion (]).<ref>{{cite encyclopedia | title = Docetae | volume = 5 | encyclopedia = Catholic Encyclopedia | location = New York | publisher = Robert Appleton | year = 1913 | first = John Peter | last = Arendzen | quote = The idea of the unreality of Christ's human nature was held by the oldest Gnostic sects{{nbsp}}... Docetism, as far as at present known, always an accompaniment of Gnosticism or later of ].}}</ref> Gnostic sects saw Christ this way because they regarded matter as evil, and therefore believed that a divine spirit would never have taken on a material body.<ref name="chapterfiftyfive">{{cite book|last=O'Neill |first=Tim |title=History versus the Da Vinci Code |df=mdy-all |year=2006 |access-date=February 16, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090515112028/http://www.historyversusthedavincicode.com/chapterfiftyfive.htm#nagdss |url-status=live |chapter=55. Nag Hammadi and the Dead Sea Scrolls |chapter-url=http://www.historyversusthedavincicode.com/chapterfiftyfive.htm#nagdss |archive-date=May 15, 2009}}</ref>
*'''Docent at Rosslyn Chapel''' - he is giving a guided tour of ] to Langdon and Neveu when he sees the ] box they are carrying and realizes that it seems to be an exact duplicate of a box owned by his grandmother, who is the head of the trust that oversees the chapel.


===Literary criticism===
*'''Guardian of the Rosslyn Trust''' - she is, in fact, the wife of Jacques Sauni&egrave;re and Sophie Neveu's grandmother. The docent is Sophie's brother. She and her grandson survived a car accident that claimed Sophie's parents' lives. Believing that they had been targeted for assassination by the Church for knowing the powerful secret of the ], she and Sauni&egrave;re agreed that she and Sophie's brother should live secretly in ]. She tells Neveu and Langdon that although the ] and the secret documents were once buried in the vault of ], they were removed to France by the Priory of Sion only several years ago. Reading the parchment inside the second keystone, she realizes where the Grail is now hidden, but refuses to tell Langdon, saying he will figure it out eventually on his own. According to her, the Priory of Sion never intended to reveal the secret of the Grail according to any set timetable. She believes that such a revelation is unnecessary anyway, since the true nature and spiritual power of the Grail is emerging into the world without the location of the actual artifact being revealed. She also informs Sophie Neveu of her true identity through her bloodline.
The book received both positive and negative reviews from critics, and it has been the subject of negative appraisals concerning its portrayal of history. Its writing and historical accuracy were reviewed negatively by '']'',<ref name="NewYorker">Lane, Anthony (May 29, 2006). {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131012034806/http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2006/05/29/060529crci_cinema?currentPage=all |date=October 12, 2013 }}. '']''.</ref> ],<ref>Miller, Laura (December 29, 2004). {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110918112741/http://dir.salon.com/story/books/feature/2004/12/29/da_vinci_code/ |date=September 18, 2011 }}. Salon.com. Retrieved 2009-05-15.</ref> and '']''.<ref>Steyn, Mark (May 10, 2006) {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130611235940/http://www.macleans.ca/culture/books/article.jsp?content=20060515_126652_126652 |date=June 11, 2013 }}. '']''.</ref> On the May/June 2003 issue of '']'', a magazine that aggregates critic reviews of books, the book received a {{rating|4|5}} (4.0 out of 5) based on critic reviews with the critical summary stating, "Overall, this breezy, entertaining thriller will take you on an ingeniously conceived ride through history."<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Da Vinci Code|url=http://www.bookmarksmagazine.com/Reviews/DaVinciCode.htm|access-date=14 January 2023 |website=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050923144037/http://www.bookmarksmagazine.com/Reviews/DaVinciCode.htm|archive-date=23 Sep 2005}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Bookmarks Selections|url=http://www.bookmarksmagazine.com/reviews.html|access-date=14 January 2023 |website=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070708134115/http://www.bookmarksmagazine.com/reviews.html|archive-date=8 Jul 2007}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://critics.gr/Product/Kodikas-Nta-Bintsi--BBLO-/Show.aspx|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090221122427/http://critics.gr/Product/Kodikas-Nta-Bintsi--BBLO-/Show.aspx|title=The Da Vinci Code|website=Critics|archivedate=21 Feb 2009|accessdate=1 March 2015|language=Greek}}</ref>
====Positive====
] of ''The New York Times'' said that one word "concisely conveys the kind of extreme enthusiasm with which this riddle-filled, code-breaking, exhilaratingly brainy thriller can be recommended. That word is wow. The author is Dan Brown (a name you will want to remember). In this gleefully erudite suspense novel, Mr. Brown takes the format he has been developing through three earlier novels and fine-tunes it to blockbuster perfection."<ref>] (March 17, 2003). {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160408050458/http://www.nytimes.com/2003/03/17/books/books-of-the-times-spinning-a-thriller-from-a-gallery-at-the-louvre.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm |date=April 8, 2016 }}.</ref> David Lazarus of '']'' said, "This story has so many twists—all satisfying, most unexpected—that it would be a sin to reveal too much of the plot in advance. Let's just say that if this novel doesn't get your pulse racing, you need to check your meds."<ref>Lazarus, David (April 6, 2003). . '']''.</ref> The book appeared at number 43 on a 2010 list of 101 best books ever written, which was derived from a survey of more than 15,000 Australian readers.<ref>{{Citation | last = Yeoman | first = William | date = June 30, 2010 | url =https://thewest.com.au/news/australia/vampires-trump-wizards-as-readers-pick-their-best-ng-ya-207095 | title = Vampires trump wizards as readers pick their best | newspaper = ] | access-date = March 24, 2011 }}{{citation | url = http://l.yimg.com/ea/doc/-/100629/the_top_100_list-162jebm.pdf |title=List |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110804161548/http://l.yimg.com/ea/doc/-/100629/the_top_100_list-162jebm.pdf | archive-date = August 4, 2011 | df = mdy-all }}.</ref>


====Disparaging====
==Summary of Spoilers==
] likened Brown's work to "Jokes for the John", calling such literature the "intellectual equivalent of ]".<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.stephenking.com/com_address/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071013011628/http://www.stephenking.com/com_address/ | archive-date = 2007-10-13 |title= Stephen King address, University of Maine |publisher= Archive |access-date=2011-01-04}}</ref> ] described it as a "potboiler written with little grace and style", although he added it did "supply an intriguing plot".<ref name="Ebert1">{{citation|title=Veni, Vidi, Da Vinci|last=Ebert|first=Roger|work=RogerEbert.com|date=May 18, 2006|url=https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-da-vinci-code-2006}}</ref> In his review of the film '']'', whose plot also involves ancient conspiracies and treasure hunts, he wrote: "I should read a potboiler like ''The Da Vinci Code'' every once in a while, just to remind myself that life is too short to read books like ''The Da Vinci Code''."<ref name="Ebert2">{{citation|title=Clueless caper just fool's gold|last=Ebert|first=Roger|work=RogerEbert.com|date=November 18, 2004|url=https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/national-treasure-2004}}</ref> While interviewing ] in a 2008 issue of '']'', ] characterized ''The Da Vinci Code'' as "a bizarre little offshoot" of Eco's novel, '']''. In response, Eco remarked, "Dan Brown is a character from ''Foucault's Pendulum!'' I invented him. He shares my characters' fascinations—the world conspiracy of ], ], and ]. The role of the Knights Templar. The ]. The principle that everything is connected. I suspect Dan Brown might not even exist."<ref>Zanganeh, Lila Azam. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161006141852/http://www.theparisreview.org/interviews/5856/the-art-of-fiction-no-197-pauleacute-baacutertoacuten |date=October 6, 2016 }}. ''The Paris Review''. Summer 2008, Number 185. Retrieved 2012-04-27.</ref>


====Negative====
* Jacques Sauni&egrave;re was the head of the ] and therefore possessed the knowledge of the "]", which in turn reveals the location of the ], as well as documents which would shake the foundation of ] and the ]. He was killed in order to extract this information from him and eliminate the members of the Priory of Sion.
] said during a lecture, "Do not start me on ''The Da Vinci Code''. A novel so bad that it gives bad novels a bad name."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2005/oct/07/famed_author_takes_kansas/?city_local |title=Famed author takes on Kansas |newspaper=LJWorld |date=October 7, 2005 |access-date=2011-01-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090830024742/http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2005/oct/07/famed_author_takes_kansas/?city_local |archive-date=August 30, 2009 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> ] has referred to Brown's writings as "complete loose stool-water" and "arse gravy of the worst kind".<ref>{{Citation | contribution-url = http://www.qitranscripts.com/transcripts/3x12 | contribution = 3x12 | type = episode transcript | title = ] }}{{Dead link|date=February 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}.</ref> In a live chat on June 14, 2006, he clarified, "I just loathe all those book about the ] and Masons and Catholic conspiracies and all that botty-dribble. I mean, there's so much more that's interesting and exciting in art and in history. It plays to the worst and laziest in humanity, the desire to think the worst of the past and the desire to feel superior to it in some fatuous way."<ref>{{cite web | url= http://www.douglasadams.se/forum/viewtopic.php?p=175185#175185 | title= Interview with Douglas Adams Continuum | publisher= Douglas Adams | place= ] | access-date= 2011-01-04 | url-status= dead | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110519064736/http://www.douglasadams.se/forum/viewtopic.php?p=175185#175185 | archive-date= May 19, 2011 | df= mdy-all }}</ref> ], reviewing the movie based on the book for '']'', called the book "Dan Brown's best-selling primer on how not to write an English sentence".<ref name="NewYorkTimes">{{cite news|last=Scott |first=A.O. |url=http://movies2.nytimes.com/2006/05/18/movies/18code.html |title = Movie Review: A 'Da Vinci Code' That Takes Longer to Watch Than Read|newspaper=]|date= May 18, 2006 |access-date=2011-01-04}}</ref> '']'' reviewer ] refers to it as "unmitigated junk" and decries "the crumbling coarseness of the style".<ref name="NewYorker" /> Linguist ] and others posted several entries critical of Brown's writing, at ], calling Brown one of the "worst prose stylists in the history of literature" and saying Brown's "writing is not just bad; it is staggeringly, clumsily, thoughtlessly, almost ingeniously bad".<ref>{{Citation | title = ] | contribution-url = http://itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/archives/000844.html | contribution = The Dan Brown code | publisher = University of Pennsylvania}} (also follow other links at the bottom of that page)</ref>


===Lawsuits===
* The reason that Sophie Neveu broke off contact with her grandfather is that she witnessed him in a sex ritual in ] while she was in college.
Author ] alleged that Brown plagiarized two of his novels, ''The Da Vinci Legacy'', originally published in 1983, and ''Daughter of God'', originally published in 2000. He sought to block distribution of the book and film. However, ] of the ] ruled against Perdue in 2005, saying that "A reasonable average lay observer would not conclude that ''The Da Vinci Code'' is substantially similar to ''Daughter of God''" and that "Any slightly similar elements are on the level of generalized or otherwise unprotectable ideas."<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161128175257/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4126710.stm |date=November 28, 2016 }}, ], August 6, 2005</ref> Perdue appealed; the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the original decision, saying Mr. Perdue's arguments were "without merit".<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160406233626/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4929550.stm |date=April 6, 2016 }}, ], April 21, 2006</ref>


In early 2006, Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh filed suit against Brown's publisher, Random House. They alleged that significant portions of ''The Da Vinci Code'' were plagiarized from '']'', violating their copyright.<ref name=TrialBBC>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/4949488.stm |title=Judge creates own Da Vinci code |work=BBC News |date=April 27, 2006 |access-date=2009-09-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070905211028/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/4949488.stm |archive-date=September 5, 2007 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> Brown confirmed during the court case that he named the principal Grail expert of his story Leigh Teabing, an anagram of "Baigent Leigh", after the two plaintiffs. In reply to the suggestion that ] was also referred to in the book, since he has medical problems resulting in a severe limp, like the character of Leigh Teabing, Brown stated he was unaware of Lincoln's illness and the correspondence was a coincidence.<ref name=TrialWashPost>{{Cite web|url=http://nyakornel.blogspot.com/2007/05/pros-and-cons-of-da-vinci-code-to.html|title= Authors who lost 'Da Vinci Code' copying case to mount legal appeal|access-date=July 12, 2006}}</ref> Since Baigent and Leigh had presented their conclusions as historical research, not as fiction, ], who presided over the trial, deemed that a novelist must be free to use these ideas in a fictional context, and ruled against Baigent and Leigh. Smith also hid ] in his written judgment, in the form of seemingly random italicized letters in the 71-page document, which apparently spell out a message. Smith indicated he would confirm the code if someone broke it.<ref name=TrialMSNBC>{{cite web | url = https://www.today.com/popculture/judge-rejects-claims-da-vinci-suit-wbna12202180 | title = Judge rejects claims in 'Da Vinci' suit | work = Today.com | publisher = MSN | date = April 7, 2006 | access-date = 2009-02-03 | df = mdy-all }}</ref> After losing before the ] on July 12, 2006, Baigent and Leigh appealed to the ], unsuccessfully.<ref name="TrialWashPost"/><ref name="TrialMSNBC"/>
* The message Sauni&egrave;re wrote with his own blood on the floor before dying contained the extra line "P.S. Find ]", which was the reason Bezu Fache suspected Langdon of being the murderer. Fache had erased this line before Langdon arrived so that Langdon would not be aware that the police suspected him. Sophie Neveu sees the real text of the message by accident when it is ]ed to her office by the police. When Sophie sees the message, she realizes the it is meant for her, since her grandfather called her "Princess Sophie" when she was a girl. From this she also knows Langdon to be innocent. She informs him of this secretly when they are in the ] by telling him to call her personal ] box and listen to the message for him that she has left there.


In April 2006 Mikhail Anikin, a Russian scientist and art historian working as a senior researcher at the ] in St Petersburg, stated the intention to bring a lawsuit against Brown, maintaining that he was the one who coined the phrase used as the book's title and one of the ideas regarding the ''Mona Lisa'' used in its plot. Anikin interprets the ''Mona Lisa'' to be a Christian allegory consisting of two images, one of Jesus Christ that comprises the image's right half, and one of the Virgin Mary that forms its left half. According to Anikin, he expressed this idea to a group of experts from the Museum of Houston during a 1988 ] exhibit at the Hermitage, and when one of the Americans requested permission to pass it along to a friend Anikin granted the request on condition that he be credited in any book using his interpretation. Anikin eventually compiled his research into ''Leonardo da Vinci or Theology on Canvas'', a book published in 2000, but ''The Da Vinci Code'', published three years later, makes no mention of Anikin and instead asserts that the idea in question is a "well-known opinion of a number of scientists".<ref>Page, Jeremy. "Now Russian sues Brown over his Da Vinski Code", '']'', April 12, 2006</ref><ref>{{Citation | last = Grachev | first = Guerman | url = http://english.pravda.ru/society/stories/13-04-2006/79125-danbrown-0/ | title = Russian scientist to sue best-selling author Dan Brown over 'Da Vinci Code' plagiarism | date = 13 April 2006 | newspaper = Pravda | place = ] | access-date = May 13, 2011 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20121007082243/http://english.pravda.ru/society/stories/13-04-2006/79125-danbrown-0/ | archive-date = October 7, 2012 | url-status = live | df = mdy-all }}.</ref>
* The other three lines of Sauni&egrave;re's blood message are ]s. The first line are the digits of the ] out of order. The second and third lines ("O Draconian Devil!" and "Oh, Lame Saint") are anagrams respectively for "Leonardo da Vinci" and "The Mona Lisa" (in English). These clues were meant to lead to a second set of clues. On the glass over the ], Sauni&egrave;re wrote the message "So Dark the Con of Man" with a curator's pen that can only be read in ]. The second clue is an anagram for '']'', another Da Vinci painting hanging nearby. Behind this painting, Sauni&egrave;re hid a key. On the key, written with the curator's pen, is an address.


Brown has been sued twice in U.S. Federal courts by the author Jack Dunn who claims Brown copied a huge part of his book ''The Vatican Boys'' to write ''The Da Vinci Code'' and ''Angels & Demons''. Neither lawsuit was allowed to go to a jury trial. In 2017, in London, another claim was begun against Brown by Jack Dunn who claimed that justice was not served in the U.S. lawsuits.<ref name="Dunn">{{Cite web |last=Teodorczuk |first=Tom |date=2017-12-14 |title=Dan Brown faces possible new plagiarism lawsuit over 'The Da Vinci Code' |url=https://www.marketwatch.com/story/dan-brown-faces-possible-new-plagiarism-lawsuit-over-the-da-vinci-code-2017-10-18 |access-date=2022-03-20 |website=MarketWatch}}</ref> Possibly the largest reaction occurred in ], India, where a group of around 25 protesters "stormed" Crossword bookstore, pulled copies of the book from the racks, and threw them to the ground. On the same day, a group of 50–60 protesters successfully made the ] on Park Street decide to stop selling the book "until the controversy sparked by the film's release was resolved".<ref>{{Cite web|url =http://www.telegraphindia.com/1060518/asp/calcutta/story_6236447.asp |archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20160827001915/http://www.telegraphindia.com/1060518/asp/calcutta/story_6236447.asp |url-status =dead |archive-date =August 27, 2016 |title = Novel earns vandal wrath - Code controversy deepens with warning from protesters |date =May 18, 2006 |work =The Telegraph|location=India }}</ref> Thus in 2006, seven ] (], ], ], ], ]) banned the release or exhibition of the ] movie '']'' (as well as the book).<ref>"" on the ground that it outraged the religious feeling of Christians. Roman Catholic Bishop Marampudi Joji, based in Andhra Pradesh's capital Hyderabad, welcomed the ban. ''BBC News'', 3 June 2006. Retrieved 3 June 2006.</ref> Later, two states, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, lifted the ban under high court order.<ref>{{Cite web |agency=TNN|date=Jun 22, 2006 |title=HC quashes ban on Da Vinci Code {{!}} Hyderabad News - Times of India |url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/hc-quashes-ban-on-da-vinci-code/articleshow/1669485.cms |access-date=2022-07-11 |website=The Times of India |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=HC allows Da Vinci Code screening in TN |url=https://www.rediff.com/news/2006/jul/08tn.htm |access-date=2022-07-11 |website=www.rediff.com}}</ref>
* The key opens a safety deposit box at the Paris branch of the ]. Sauni&egrave;re's account number at the bank is the ] digits, arranged in the correct order.


==Release details==
* The instructions that Sauni&egrave;re revealed to Silas at gunpoint are actually a well-rehearsed lie, namely that the keystone is buried in the Church of ] beneath an ] that lies exactly along the ancient "Rose Line" (the former ] which passed through Paris before it was redefined to pass through ]). In reality, the message beneath the obelisk simply contains a reference to a passage in the ] which reads "Hitherto shalt thou go and no further". When Silas reads this, he realizes he has been duped.
The book has been translated into over 44 languages, primarily hardcover.<ref>{{Citation | title = Secrets | url = http://www.danbrown.com/secrets/foreign.html | contribution = World editions of The Da Vinci Code | type = official site | publisher = Dan Brown | url-status = dead | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060127001617/http://www.danbrown.com/secrets/foreign.html | archive-date = January 27, 2006 | df = mdy-all }}.</ref> Major English-language (hardcover) editions include:
* {{Citation |place=US |title=The Da Vinci Code |date=April 2003 |edition=1st |publisher=Doubleday |isbn=0-385-50420-9 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/davincicodenove00brow}}.
* {{Citation | title = The Da Vinci Code | edition = spec illustr | date = November 2, 2004 | publisher = Doubleday | isbn = 0-385-51375-5 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/davincicode00brow_0 }} (as of January 2006, has sold 576,000 copies).
* {{Citation | place = UK | title = The Da Vinci Code | date = April 2004 | publisher = Corgi Adult | isbn = 0-552-14951-9 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/davincicode00danb }}.
* {{Citation | place = UK | title = The Da Vinci Code | edition = illustr | date = October 2, 2004 | publisher = Bantam | isbn = 0-593-05425-3}}.
* {{Citation | place = US/] | title = The Da Vinci Code | type = trade paperback |date=March 2006 | publisher = Anchor}}.
* {{Citation | date = March 28, 2006 | title = The da Vinci code | publisher = Anchor | type = paperback}}, 5 million copies.
* {{Citation | date = March 28, 2006 | title = The da Vinci code | publisher = Broadway | edition = special illustrated | type = paperback}}, released 200,000 copies.
* {{Citation | date = May 19, 2006 | publisher = Doubleday, Broadway | title = The Da Vinci Code Illustrated Screenplay: Behind the Scenes of the Major Motion Picture | first = Akiva | last = Goldsman | author-link = Akiva Goldsman | others = Howard, Ron; Brown, Dan introd}}, the day of the film's release. Including film stills, behind-the-scenes photos and the full script. 25,000 copies of the hardcover, and 200,000 of the paperback version.<ref>{{Citation | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071013104154/http://www.cbc.ca/story/arts/national/2006/01/09/best-sellers-potter.html | archive-date=2007-10-13| url = https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/harry-potter-still-magic-for-book-sales-1.587812 | contribution = Harry Potter still magic for book sales | publisher = ] | title = Arts | url-status = live | date = January 9, 2006}}.</ref>


==Film==
* The keystone is a actually a cryptex, a cylindrical device invented by ] for transporting secure messages. In order to open it, the combination of rotating components must be arranged in the correct order. If forced open, an enclosed vial of vinegar will rupture and dissolve the message, which was written on ]. The ] box containing the cryptex contains clues to the combination of the cryptex, written in backwards script in the same manner as Leonardo's journals. While fleeing to ] aboard Teabing's plane, Langdon solves the riddle and finds the combination to be "S-O-F-I-A", the ancient ] form of Sophie's name.
{{Main article |The Da Vinci Code (film)}}
] adapted the novel to film, with a screenplay written by ], and ] winner ] directing. The film was released on May 19, 2006, and stars ] as ], ] as Sophie Neveu, and Sir ] as Sir Leigh Teabing. During its opening weekend, moviegoers spent an estimated $77&nbsp;million in America, and $224&nbsp;million worldwide.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?page=main&id=davincicode.htm |title=The Da Vinci Code (2006) |publisher=Box Office Mojo |access-date=2006-12-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130513152758/http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?page=main&id=davincicode.htm |archive-date=May 13, 2013 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref>


The movie received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert in its review wrote that "Ron Howard is a better filmmaker than Dan Brown is a novelist; he follows Brown's formula (exotic location, startling revelation, desperate chase scene, repeat as needed) and elevates it into a superior entertainment, with Tom Hanks as a theo-intellectual Indiana Jones... it's involving, intriguing and constantly seems on the edge of startling revelations."<ref name="Ebert1"/>
* The keystone cryptex actually contains a second smaller cryptex with a second riddle that reveals its combination. The riddle, which says to seek the orb above a tomb of "a knight a pope interred" refers not to a medieval knight, but rather to the tomb of ], who was buried in ], and was eulogized by ] (A. Pope). The orb refers to the apple observed by Newton which led to his discovery of the ], and thus the combination to the second cryptex is "A-P-P-L-E".


The film received two sequels: '']'', released in 2009, and ], released in 2016. Ron Howard returned to direct both sequels.
* The Teacher is actually Sir Leigh Teabing. He learned of the identities of the leaders of the ] and bugged their offices. R&eacute;my is his collaborator. It is Teabing who contacts Bishop Aringarosa using a phony French accent to hide his identity and dupes him into financing the plan to find the Grail. He never intended to hand the Grail over to Aringarosa but was simply taking advantage of ]'s resolve to find it. Instead he believed that the Priory of Sion intended to renege on its vow to reveal the secret of the Grail to the world at the appointed time, and thus he was planning to steal the Grail documents and reveal them to the world himself. It is he who informed Silas that Langdon and Sophie Neveu were at his chateau. He did not seize the keystone from them himself because he did not want to reveal his identity to them. His plan to have Silas break into his house and seize the keystone was thwarted when the police raided the house, having followed the ] device in the truck Langdon had stolen and having heard Silas' gunshot. Teabing leads Neveu and Langdon to the ] in London knowing full well that it was a blind alley. Rather he wanted to stage the hostage scene with R&eacute;my in order to obtain the keystone without revealing his real plot to Langdon and Neveu. The call Silas receives while riding in the limousine with R&eacute;my is in fact Teabing, surreptitiously calling from the back of the limousine.


==See also==
* In order to erase all knowledge of his work, Teabing kills R&eacute;my by giving him ] laced with ], knowing R&eacute;my has a deadly allergy to peanuts. Teabing also anonymously tells the police that Silas is hiding in the London headquarters of ].
{{Portal|Novels|Religion}}
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{{div col|colwidth=20em|small=no}}
* {{Annotated link |Bible conspiracy theory}}
* {{Annotated link |Constantinian shift}}
* ]
* {{Annotated link |Desposyni}}
* {{Annotated link |False title}}
* {{Annotated link |List of best-selling books}}
* {{Annotated link |List of books banned in India}}
* {{Annotated link |Smithy code}}
* {{Annotated link |The Jesus Scroll|''The Jesus Scroll''}}
* {{Annotated link |Mona Lisa replicas and reinterpretations|''Mona Lisa'' replicas and reinterpretations}}
* {{Annotated link |The Rozabal Line|''The Rozabal Line''}}
* {{Annotated link |The Doomsday Conspiracy|''The Doomsday Conspiracy''}}
{{div col end}}
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==References==
* In ], in the showdown with Teabing, Langdon secretly opens the second cryptex and removes its contents before destroying it in front of Teabing. Teabing is arrested and led away while fruitlessly begging Langdon to tell him the contents of the second cryptex and the secret location of the Grail.
{{Reflist}}


==Further reading==
* Bishop Aringarosa and Silas believed they were saving the ], not destroying it.
* Bock, Darrell L. ''Breaking the da Vinci code: Answers to the questions everyone's asking'' (Thomas Nelson, 2004).
* Ehrman, Bart D. ''Truth and fiction in The Da Vinci Code: a historian reveals what we really know about Jesus, Mary Magdalene, and Constantine'' (Oxford University Press, 2004).
* Easley, Michael J., and John Ankerberg. ''The Da Vinci Code Controversy: 10 Facts You Should Know'' (Moody Publishers, 2006).
* Gale, Cengage Learning. ''A Study Guide for Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code'' (Gale, Cengage Learning, 2015).
* Hawel, Zeineb Sami. "Did Dan Brown Break or Repair the Taboos in the Da Vinci Code? An Analytical Study of His Dialectical Style." ''International Journal of Linguistics and Literature'' (IJLL) 7.4: 5-24. {{dead link|date=November 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}
* Kennedy, Tammie M. "Mary Magdalene and the Politics of Public Memory: Interrogating" The Da Vinci Code"." ''Feminist Formations'' (2012): 120-139.
* Mexal, Stephen J. "Realism, Narrative History, and the Production of the Bestseller: The Da Vinci Code and the Virtual Public Sphere." ''Journal of Popular Culture'' 44.5 (2011): 1085–1101. {{dead link|date=November 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}
* Newheiser, Anna-Kaisa, Miguel Farias, and Nicole Tausch. "The functional nature of conspiracy beliefs: Examining the underpinnings of belief in the Da Vinci Code conspiracy." ''Personality and Individual Differences'' 51.8 (2011): 1007–1011.
* Olson, Carl E., and Sandra Miesel. ''The da Vinci hoax: Exposing the errors in The da Vinci code'' (Ignatius Press, 2004).
* Propp, William H. C. "Is The Da Vinci Code True?." ''Journal of Religion and Popular Culture'' 25.1 (2013): 34–48.
* ] "." (2004)
* Schneider-Mayerson, Matthew. "The Dan Brown phenomenon: conspiracism in post-9/11 popular fiction." ''Radical History Review'' 2011.111 (2011): 194–201. {{dead link|date=November 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}
* Walsh, Richard G. "Passover Plots: From Modern Fictions to Mark and Back Again." ''Postscripts: The Journal of Sacred Texts, Cultural Histories, and Contemporary Contexts'' 3.2-3 (2007): 201–222.


==External links==
* Bezu Fache figures out that Neveu and Langdon are innocent after discovering the bugging equipment in Teabing's barn.
{{wikiquote}}
* {{Citation | url = http://www.danbrown.com/the-davinci-code/ | type = official website | title = The Da Vinci Code | date = January 5, 2013 | publisher = Dan Brown}}
* {{Citation | url = http://www.danbrownofficial.co.uk/danbrownbooks_thedavincicode.asp | type = official website | title = The Da Vinci Code | date = September 19, 2023 | publisher = Dan Brown | place = UK}}
* {{Citation | url = https://sites.google.com/site/mysteriesofrenneslechateau/ | title = Mysteries of Rennes-le-Château | access-date = January 13, 2014 | archive-date = April 14, 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150414192610/https://sites.google.com/site/mysteriesofrenneslechateau/ | url-status = dead }}
* {{Citation | url = http://www.rochesterbible.org/video/davinci/davinci.html | title = The Da Vinci Code and Textual Criticism: A Video Response to the Novel | publisher = Rochester Bible | url-status = dead | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20101212103730/http://www.rochesterbible.org/video/davinci/davinci.html | archive-date = December 12, 2010 | df = mdy-all }}
* {{Citation | url = http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/may2006/dvc-m25.shtml | contribution = The Da Vinci Code, novel and film, and 'countercultural' myth | title = WSWS | type = review | first = David | last = Walsh |date=May 2006}}
{{The Da Vinci Code}}
{{Dan Brown}}
{{Opus Dei}}


{{Authority control}}
* Silas accidentally shoots Aringarosa outside the London headquarters of ] while fleeing from the police. Having realized his terrible error and that he has been duped, Aringarosa tells Bezu Fache to give the ]s in his brief case to the families of the murdered leaders of the Priory of Sion.


{{DEFAULTSORT:Da Vinci Code, The}}
* The final message inside the second keystone actually does not refer to ], although the Grail was indeed once buried there, below the ] on the floor (the two interlocking triangles are the "blade" and "chalice", i.e., male and female symbols).
]

]
* The docent in Rosslyn Chapel is Sophie's long-lost brother.
]

]
* The guardian of Rosslyn Chapel is Sophie's long-lost grandmother, and the wife of Jacques Sauni&egrave;re.
]

]
* Even though all four of the leaders of the ] were killed, the secret is not lost, since there is still a contigency plan (never revealed) which will keep the organization and its secret alive.
]

]
* The real meaning of the last message is that the ] is buried beneath the small ] (i.e., the "blade", a male symbol) directly below the ''inverted'' glass pyramid of the ] (i.e., the "chalice", a female symbol, which Langdon and Sophie ironically almost crash into while making their original escape from Bezu Fache).
]

]
* At the end of the book, ] and Sophie Neveu fall in love. They arrange to meet in ] and spend a week doing nothing but exploring the union of the male and female.
]

]
== Secret of the Holy Grail ==
]

]
<table align="right" width="377" style="padding-left: 20px;">
]
<tr><td>]</td></tr>
]
<tr><td><small>Detail of the '']'' by ].
]
As explained by Leigh Teabing to Sophie Neveu, the figure at the right hand of ] is supposedly not an apostle, but ], who was (according to the book) his wife and pregnant with his child. The absence of a chalice is in the painting indicates that Da Vinci knew that Mary Magdalene was actually the ] (the bearer of Jesus' blood). This is reinforced by the letter "M" that is created with the bodily positions of Jesus, Mary, and the male apostle upon who she is leaning. Critics point out that this interpretation would mean that the Last Supper was depicted as missing an important apostle.
]
</small></td></tr>
]
</table>
]

]
According to the novel, the secrets of the ], as kept by the ], are as follows:
]

]
* The Holy Grail is not a physical ], but a woman, namely ], who carried the bloodline of Christ.
]

]
* ] was of royal descent (through the Jewish ]) and was the wife of ], of the ]. That she was a ] was a ] invented by the ] to obscure their true relationship. At the time of the ], she was pregnant. After the Crucifixion, she fled to ] where she was sheltered by the ] population in ]. She gave birth to a daughter, named Sarah. The bloodline of Jesus and Mary Magdalene became the ] kings of ].
]

]
* The French expression for the Holy Grail, ''San gr&eacute;al'', actually is a play on words for ''Sang r&eacute;al'', which literally means "royal blood".
]

* The Grail relics consist of the documents that testify to the bloodline, as well as the actual bones of ].

* The Church has suppressed the truth about Mary Magdalene and Jesus' bloodline for 2000 years. This is principally because they fear the power of the ], which they have demonized as ].

* Sophie Neveu and her brother are descendants of the original bloodline of Jesus and Mary Magdalene (their last name was changed to hide their ancestry).

* The existence of the bloodline was the secret that was contained in the documents discovered by the ] after they conquered ] in ] (see ]). The ] and the ] were organized to keep the secret.

The secrets of the Grail are connected to ] work as follows:

* Da Vinci was a member of the Priory of Sion and knew the secret of the Grail. The secret is in fact revealed in '']'', in which no actual ] is present at the table. The figure seated next to ] is not a man, but a woman, his wife ]. Most reproductions of the work are from a later alteration that obscured her obvious female characteristics.

* The '']'' is actually a self-portrait by Leonardo as a woman. The androgyny reflects the sacred union of male and female which is implied in the holy union of Jesus and Mary Magdalene. Such parity between the cosmic forces of masculine and feminine has long been a deep threat to the established power of the Church. The name ''Mona Lisa'' is actually an anagram for "Amon L'Isa", referring to the father and mother gods of ] (namely ] and ]).

==The Mystery within the Mystery==
Part of the advertising campaign for the novel was that the book itself held four codes, and that the reader who solved them would be given a prize. Several thousand people actually solved the codes, and one name was randomly chosen to be the winner. The prize was a trip to Paris.

The solution to the mystery involved discovering that the book jacket conceals ] and ] coordinates, written in reverse. Adding one degree to the latitude coordinates gives the coodinates of the headquarters of the ] in northern ], which is the location of a mysterious statue called '']'', which will supposedly figure prominent in ]'s next novel.

==Inspiration and influences==

The novel is part of the late ] revival of interest in ]. Its emphasis on the role of Mary Magdalene in early Christianity comes straight from Gnostic scriptures, as does much of its portrayal of ] and ] in the practices of the ancient church. The later ecclesiastical history described in Langdon and Teabing's lengthy soliloquies is largely adapted from modern interpretations of the relationship between Gnosticism and Christianity; the most influential of these is probably '']''. (The book explicitly names this work, among several others, on p. 253.)

==See also==

* '']'' (novel by ] which popularizes the secrets of the ], albeit offering a different explanation for their secret).
*'']'', '']'' (] by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, and Henry Lincoln) and '']'' (by Lynn Picknett and Clive Prince) , which popularised many of the book's themes: the legends surrounding the Priory of Sion, the supposed bloodline of Jesus and Mary Magdalene, and the dubious theories of ] central to Brown's novel.
*'']'' and '']'' (by ]), which shaped the book's portrayal of ] spirituality within Christianity.

==External links==
* (''Guardian'' review)
* (''New York Times'' review)
*
*
* ,
* - A response to the ''The Da Vinci Code'' from the Prelature of Opus Dei in the United States

Latest revision as of 19:31, 19 December 2024

2003 novel by Dan Brown This article is about the novel. For the 2006 film, see The Da Vinci Code (film). For other uses, see The Da Vinci Code (disambiguation).

The Da Vinci Code
The first U.S. edition
AuthorDan Brown
SeriesRobert Langdon #2
GenreMystery, detective fiction, conspiracy fiction, thriller
PublisherDoubleday (US)
Publication dateMarch 18, 2003
Publication placeUnited States
Pages689 (U.S. hardback)
489 (U.S. paperback)
ISBN0-385-50420-9 (US)
OCLC50920659
Dewey Decimal813/.54 21
LC ClassPS3552.R685434 D3 2003
Preceded byAngels & Demons 
Followed byThe Lost Symbol 

The Da Vinci Code is a 2003 mystery thriller novel by Dan Brown. It is Brown's second novel to include the character Robert Langdon: the first was his 2000 novel Angels & Demons. The Da Vinci Code follows symbologist Langdon and cryptologist Sophie Neveu after a murder in the Louvre Museum in Paris entangles them in a dispute between the Priory of Sion and Opus Dei over the possibility of Jesus and Mary Magdalene having had a child together.

The novel explores an alternative religious history, whose central plot point is that the Merovingian kings of France were descended from the bloodline of Jesus Christ and Mary Magdalene, ideas derived from Clive Prince's The Templar Revelation (1997) and books by Margaret Starbird. The book also refers to The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail (1982), although Brown stated that it was not used as research material.

The Da Vinci Code provoked a popular interest in speculation concerning the Holy Grail legend and Mary Magdalene's role in the history of Christianity. The book has been extensively denounced by many Christian denominations as an attack on the Catholic Church, and also consistently criticized by scholars for its historical and scientific inaccuracies. The novel became a massive worldwide bestseller, selling 80 million copies as of 2009, and has been translated into 44 languages. In November 2004, Random House published a Special Illustrated Edition with 160 illustrations. In 2006, a film adaptation was released by Columbia Pictures.

Plot

Louvre curator and Priory of Sion grand master Jacques Saunière is fatally shot one night at the museum by an albino Catholic monk named Silas, who is working on behalf of someone he knows only as the Teacher, who wishes to discover the location of the "keystone", an item crucial in the search for the Holy Grail. After Saunière's body is discovered in the pose of the Vitruvian Man by Leonardo da Vinci, the police summon Harvard professor Robert Langdon, who is in town on business. Police captain Bezu Fache tells him that he was summoned to help the police decode the cryptic message Saunière left during the final minutes of his life. The message includes a Fibonacci sequence out of order and an anagram: "O, draconian devil! Oh, lame saint!" Langdon explains to Fache that the pentacle Saunière drew on his chest in his own blood represents an allusion to the goddess and not devil worship, as Fache believes.

Sophie Neveu, a police cryptographer, secretly explains to Langdon that she is Saunière's estranged granddaughter and that Fache thinks Langdon is the murderer because the last line in her grandfather's message, which was meant for Neveu, said "P.S. Find Robert Langdon", which Fache had erased prior to Langdon's arrival. However, "P.S." does not refer to "postscript", but rather to Sophie the nickname given to her by her grandfather was "Princess Sophie". She understands that her grandfather intended Langdon to decipher the code, which leads to Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa, which in turn leads to his painting Madonna of the Rocks. They find a pendant that holds the address of the Paris branch of the Depository Bank of Zurich.

Replica cryptex: prize from Google Da Vinci Code Quest Contest

Neveu and Langdon escape from the police and visit the bank. In the safe deposit box, which is unlocked with the Fibonacci sequence, they find a box containing the keystone: a cryptex, a cylindrical, hand-held vault with five concentric, rotating dials labeled with letters. When they are lined up correctly, they unlock the device, but if the cryptex is forced open, an enclosed vial of vinegar breaks and dissolves the message inside the cryptex, which was written on papyrus. The box containing the cryptex contains clues to its password.

Langdon and Neveu take the keystone to the home of Langdon's friend, Sir Leigh Teabing, an expert on the Holy Grail, the legend of which is heavily connected to the Priory. There, Teabing explains that the Grail is not a cup but connected to Mary Magdalene, and that she was Jesus Christ's wife and is the person to his right in The Last Supper. The trio then flee the country on Teabing's private plane, on which they conclude that the proper combination of letters spells out Neveu's given name, Sofia. Opening the cryptex, they discover a smaller cryptex inside it, along with another riddle that ultimately leads the group to the tomb of Isaac Newton in Westminster Abbey.

During the flight to Britain, Neveu reveals the source of her estrangement from her grandfather ten years earlier: arriving home unexpectedly from university, Neveu secretly witnessed a spring fertility rite conducted in the secret basement of her grandfather's country estate. From her hiding place, she was shocked to see her grandfather with a woman at the center of a ritual attended by men and women who were wearing masks and chanting praise to the goddess. She fled the house and broke off all contact with Saunière. Langdon explains that what she witnessed was an ancient ceremony known as hieros gamos or "sacred marriage".

By the time they arrive at Westminster Abbey, Teabing is revealed to be the Teacher for whom Silas is working. Teabing wishes to use the Holy Grail, which he believes is a series of documents establishing that Jesus Christ married Mary Magdalene and fathered children, in order to ruin the Vatican. He compels Langdon at gunpoint to solve the second cryptex's password, which Langdon realizes is "apple". Langdon secretly opens the cryptex and removes its contents before tossing the empty cryptex in the air. Teabing is arrested by Fache, who by now realizes that Langdon is innocent. Bishop Aringarosa, head of religious sect Opus Dei and Silas' mentor, realizing that Silas has been used to murder innocent people, rushes to help the police find him. When the police find Silas hiding in an Opus Dei Center, Silas assumes that they are there to kill him and he rushes out, accidentally shooting Bishop Aringarosa. Bishop Aringarosa survives but is informed that Silas was found dead later from a gunshot wound.

The final message inside the second keystone leads Neveu and Langdon to Rosslyn Chapel, whose docent turns out to be Neveu's long-lost brother, whom Neveu had been told died as a child in the car accident that killed her parents. The guardian of Rosslyn Chapel, Marie Chauvel Saint Clair, is Neveu's long-lost grandmother and Saunière's wife who was the woman who participated with him in the "sacred marriage". It is revealed that Neveu and her brother are descendants of Jesus Christ and Mary Magdalene. The Priory of Sion hid her identity to protect her from possible threats to her life. The real meaning of the last message is that the Grail is buried beneath the small pyramid directly below La Pyramide Inversée, the inverted glass pyramid of the Louvre. It also lies beneath the "Rose Line", an allusion to "Rosslyn". Langdon figures out this final piece to the puzzle; he follows the Rose Line (prime meridian) to La Pyramide Inversée, where he kneels to pray before the hidden sarcophagus of Mary Magdalene, as the Templar knights did before.

Characters

  • Robert Langdon: A professor of symbology at Harvard University and the protagonist of the novel.
  • Jacques Saunière: The grandmaster of the Priory of Sion, Curator of Louvre Museum.
  • Sophie Neveu: A cryptologist of the French police and granddaughter of Saunière.
  • Bezu Fache: A member of Opus Dei and a French police captain.
  • Silas / The Monk: A member of Opus Dei who murders Saunière and the secondary antagonist of the novel.
  • Manuel Aringarosa: A bishop of the Vatican and member of Opus Dei.
  • Sister Sandrine: A Seneschal of the Priory of Sion and nun of St. Sulpice.
  • André Vernet: A guard of Zurich bank.
  • Sir Leigh Teabing / The Teacher: A Grail scholar and British expatriate living in Paris, and the main antagonist of the novel.
  • Rémy Legaludec: A servant who assists Teabing.
  • Jérôme Collet: A French police lieutenant and Fache's deputy.
  • Marie Chauvel Saint-Clair: Sophie's grandmother.

Reaction

Sales

The Da Vinci Code was a major success in 2003, outsold only by J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. As of 2016, it had sold 80 million copies worldwide.

Historical inaccuracies

Main article: Criticism of The Da Vinci Code
A woman protesting against The Da Vinci Code film outside a movie theater in Culver City, California. The TFP acronym in the banner stands for the American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property.

The Da Vinci Code generated criticism when it was first published for the fictitious description of the core aspects of Christianity and descriptions of European art, history, and architecture. The book has received negative reviews mostly from Catholic and other Christian communities. Many critics took issue with the level of research Brown did when writing the story. The New York Times writer Laura Miller characterized the novel as "based on a notorious hoax", "rank nonsense", and "bogus", saying the book is heavily based on the fabrications of Pierre Plantard, who is asserted to have created the Priory of Sion in 1956.

Critics accuse Brown of distorting and fabricating history. Theological author Marcia Ford considered that novels should be judged not on their literary merit, but on their conclusions:

Regardless of whether you agree with Brown's conclusions, it's clear that his history is largely fanciful, which means he and his publisher have violated a long-held if unspoken agreement with the reader: Fiction that purports to present historical facts should be researched as carefully as a nonfiction book would be.

Richard Abanes wrote:

The most flagrant aspect ... is not that Dan Brown disagrees with Christianity but that he utterly warps it in order to disagree with it ... to the point of completely rewriting a vast number of historical events. And making the matter worse has been Brown's willingness to pass off his distortions as 'facts' with which innumerable scholars and historians agree.

Much of the controversy generated by The Da Vinci Code was due to the fact that the book was marketed as being historically accurate; the novel opens with a "fact" page that states that "The Priory of Sion—a French secret society founded in 1099—is a real organization", whereas the Priory of Sion is a hoax created in 1956 by Pierre Plantard, which Plantard admitted under oath in 1994, well before the publication of The Da Vinci Code. The fact page itself is part of the novel as a fictional piece, but is not presented as such. The page also states that "all descriptions of artwork, architecture, documents ... and secret rituals in this novel are accurate", a claim disputed by numerous academic scholars and experts in numerous areas.

Brown addressed the idea of some of the more controversial aspects being fact on his website, stating that the page at the beginning of the novel mentions only "documents, rituals, organization, artwork and architecture" but not any of the ancient theories discussed by fictional characters, stating that "Interpreting those ideas is left to the reader". Brown also says, "It is my belief that some of the theories discussed by these characters may have merit" and "the secret behind The Da Vinci Code was too well documented and significant for me to dismiss."

In 2003, while promoting the novel, Brown was asked in interviews what parts of the history in his novel actually happened. He replied "Absolutely all of it." In a 2003 interview with CNN's Martin Savidge he was again asked how much of the historical background was true. He replied, "99% is true... the background is all true". Asked by Elizabeth Vargas in an ABC News special if the book would have been different if he had written it as non-fiction he replied, "I don't think it would have."

In 2005, UK TV personality Tony Robinson edited and narrated a detailed rebuttal of the main arguments of Brown and those of Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln, who authored the book Holy Blood, Holy Grail, in the program The Real Da Vinci Code, shown on British TV Channel 4. The program featured lengthy interviews with many of the main protagonists cited by Brown as "absolute fact" in The Da Vinci Code. Arnaud de Sède, son of Gérard de Sède, stated categorically that his father and Plantard had made up the existence of the Prieuré de Sion, the cornerstone of the Jesus bloodline theory: "frankly, it was piffle", noting that the concept of a descendant of Jesus was also an element of the 1999 Kevin Smith film Dogma.

The earliest appearance of this theory is due to the 13th-century Cistercian monk and chronicler Peter of Vaux de Cernay who reported that Cathars believed that the 'evil' and 'earthly' Jesus Christ had a relationship with Mary Magdalene, described as his concubine (and that the 'good Christ' was incorporeal and existed spiritually in the body of Paul). The program The Real Da Vinci Code also cast doubt on the Rosslyn Chapel association with the Grail and on other related stories, such as the alleged landing of Mary Magdalene in France.

According to The Da Vinci Code, the Roman Emperor Constantine I suppressed Gnosticism because it portrayed Jesus as purely human. The novel portrays Constantine as wanting Christianity to act as a unifying religion for the Roman Empire, thinking that Christianity would appeal to pagans only if it featured a demigod similar to pagan heroes. According to the Gnostic Gospels, Jesus was merely a human prophet, not a demigod. Therefore, to change Jesus' image, Constantine destroyed the Gnostic Gospels and promoted the gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, which portray Jesus as divine or semi-divine; however, most scholars agree that all Gnostic writings depict Christ as purely divine, his human body being a mere illusion (docetism). Gnostic sects saw Christ this way because they regarded matter as evil, and therefore believed that a divine spirit would never have taken on a material body.

Literary criticism

The book received both positive and negative reviews from critics, and it has been the subject of negative appraisals concerning its portrayal of history. Its writing and historical accuracy were reviewed negatively by The New Yorker, Salon.com, and Maclean's. On the May/June 2003 issue of Bookmarks, a magazine that aggregates critic reviews of books, the book received a (4.0 out of 5) based on critic reviews with the critical summary stating, "Overall, this breezy, entertaining thriller will take you on an ingeniously conceived ride through history."

Positive

Janet Maslin of The New York Times said that one word "concisely conveys the kind of extreme enthusiasm with which this riddle-filled, code-breaking, exhilaratingly brainy thriller can be recommended. That word is wow. The author is Dan Brown (a name you will want to remember). In this gleefully erudite suspense novel, Mr. Brown takes the format he has been developing through three earlier novels and fine-tunes it to blockbuster perfection." David Lazarus of The San Francisco Chronicle said, "This story has so many twists—all satisfying, most unexpected—that it would be a sin to reveal too much of the plot in advance. Let's just say that if this novel doesn't get your pulse racing, you need to check your meds." The book appeared at number 43 on a 2010 list of 101 best books ever written, which was derived from a survey of more than 15,000 Australian readers.

Disparaging

Stephen King likened Brown's work to "Jokes for the John", calling such literature the "intellectual equivalent of Kraft Macaroni and Cheese". Roger Ebert described it as a "potboiler written with little grace and style", although he added it did "supply an intriguing plot". In his review of the film National Treasure, whose plot also involves ancient conspiracies and treasure hunts, he wrote: "I should read a potboiler like The Da Vinci Code every once in a while, just to remind myself that life is too short to read books like The Da Vinci Code." While interviewing Umberto Eco in a 2008 issue of The Paris Review, Lila Azam Zanganeh characterized The Da Vinci Code as "a bizarre little offshoot" of Eco's novel, Foucault's Pendulum. In response, Eco remarked, "Dan Brown is a character from Foucault's Pendulum! I invented him. He shares my characters' fascinations—the world conspiracy of Rosicrucians, Masons, and Jesuits. The role of the Knights Templar. The hermetic secret. The principle that everything is connected. I suspect Dan Brown might not even exist."

Negative

Salman Rushdie said during a lecture, "Do not start me on The Da Vinci Code. A novel so bad that it gives bad novels a bad name." Stephen Fry has referred to Brown's writings as "complete loose stool-water" and "arse gravy of the worst kind". In a live chat on June 14, 2006, he clarified, "I just loathe all those book about the Holy Grail and Masons and Catholic conspiracies and all that botty-dribble. I mean, there's so much more that's interesting and exciting in art and in history. It plays to the worst and laziest in humanity, the desire to think the worst of the past and the desire to feel superior to it in some fatuous way." A. O. Scott, reviewing the movie based on the book for The New York Times, called the book "Dan Brown's best-selling primer on how not to write an English sentence". The New Yorker reviewer Anthony Lane refers to it as "unmitigated junk" and decries "the crumbling coarseness of the style". Linguist Geoffrey Pullum and others posted several entries critical of Brown's writing, at Language Log, calling Brown one of the "worst prose stylists in the history of literature" and saying Brown's "writing is not just bad; it is staggeringly, clumsily, thoughtlessly, almost ingeniously bad".

Lawsuits

Author Lewis Perdue alleged that Brown plagiarized two of his novels, The Da Vinci Legacy, originally published in 1983, and Daughter of God, originally published in 2000. He sought to block distribution of the book and film. However, Judge George Daniels of the US District Court in New York ruled against Perdue in 2005, saying that "A reasonable average lay observer would not conclude that The Da Vinci Code is substantially similar to Daughter of God" and that "Any slightly similar elements are on the level of generalized or otherwise unprotectable ideas." Perdue appealed; the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the original decision, saying Mr. Perdue's arguments were "without merit".

In early 2006, Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh filed suit against Brown's publisher, Random House. They alleged that significant portions of The Da Vinci Code were plagiarized from The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, violating their copyright. Brown confirmed during the court case that he named the principal Grail expert of his story Leigh Teabing, an anagram of "Baigent Leigh", after the two plaintiffs. In reply to the suggestion that Henry Lincoln was also referred to in the book, since he has medical problems resulting in a severe limp, like the character of Leigh Teabing, Brown stated he was unaware of Lincoln's illness and the correspondence was a coincidence. Since Baigent and Leigh had presented their conclusions as historical research, not as fiction, Mr Justice Peter Smith, who presided over the trial, deemed that a novelist must be free to use these ideas in a fictional context, and ruled against Baigent and Leigh. Smith also hid his own secret code in his written judgment, in the form of seemingly random italicized letters in the 71-page document, which apparently spell out a message. Smith indicated he would confirm the code if someone broke it. After losing before the High Court on July 12, 2006, Baigent and Leigh appealed to the Court of Appeal, unsuccessfully.

In April 2006 Mikhail Anikin, a Russian scientist and art historian working as a senior researcher at the Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg, stated the intention to bring a lawsuit against Brown, maintaining that he was the one who coined the phrase used as the book's title and one of the ideas regarding the Mona Lisa used in its plot. Anikin interprets the Mona Lisa to be a Christian allegory consisting of two images, one of Jesus Christ that comprises the image's right half, and one of the Virgin Mary that forms its left half. According to Anikin, he expressed this idea to a group of experts from the Museum of Houston during a 1988 René Magritte exhibit at the Hermitage, and when one of the Americans requested permission to pass it along to a friend Anikin granted the request on condition that he be credited in any book using his interpretation. Anikin eventually compiled his research into Leonardo da Vinci or Theology on Canvas, a book published in 2000, but The Da Vinci Code, published three years later, makes no mention of Anikin and instead asserts that the idea in question is a "well-known opinion of a number of scientists".

Brown has been sued twice in U.S. Federal courts by the author Jack Dunn who claims Brown copied a huge part of his book The Vatican Boys to write The Da Vinci Code and Angels & Demons. Neither lawsuit was allowed to go to a jury trial. In 2017, in London, another claim was begun against Brown by Jack Dunn who claimed that justice was not served in the U.S. lawsuits. Possibly the largest reaction occurred in Kolkata, India, where a group of around 25 protesters "stormed" Crossword bookstore, pulled copies of the book from the racks, and threw them to the ground. On the same day, a group of 50–60 protesters successfully made the Oxford Bookstore on Park Street decide to stop selling the book "until the controversy sparked by the film's release was resolved". Thus in 2006, seven Indian states (Nagaland, Punjab, Goa, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh) banned the release or exhibition of the Hollywood movie The Da Vinci Code (as well as the book). Later, two states, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, lifted the ban under high court order.

Release details

The book has been translated into over 44 languages, primarily hardcover. Major English-language (hardcover) editions include:

  • The Da Vinci Code (1st ed.), US: Doubleday, April 2003, ISBN 0-385-50420-9.
  • The Da Vinci Code (spec illustr ed.), Doubleday, November 2, 2004, ISBN 0-385-51375-5 (as of January 2006, has sold 576,000 copies).
  • The Da Vinci Code, UK: Corgi Adult, April 2004, ISBN 0-552-14951-9.
  • The Da Vinci Code (illustr ed.), UK: Bantam, October 2, 2004, ISBN 0-593-05425-3.
  • The Da Vinci Code (trade paperback), US/CA: Anchor, March 2006.
  • The da Vinci code (paperback), Anchor, March 28, 2006, 5 million copies.
  • The da Vinci code (paperback) (special illustrated ed.), Broadway, March 28, 2006, released 200,000 copies.
  • Goldsman, Akiva (May 19, 2006), The Da Vinci Code Illustrated Screenplay: Behind the Scenes of the Major Motion Picture, Howard, Ron; Brown, Dan introd, Doubleday, Broadway, the day of the film's release. Including film stills, behind-the-scenes photos and the full script. 25,000 copies of the hardcover, and 200,000 of the paperback version.

Film

Main article: The Da Vinci Code (film)

Columbia Pictures adapted the novel to film, with a screenplay written by Akiva Goldsman, and Academy Award winner Ron Howard directing. The film was released on May 19, 2006, and stars Tom Hanks as Robert Langdon, Audrey Tautou as Sophie Neveu, and Sir Ian McKellen as Sir Leigh Teabing. During its opening weekend, moviegoers spent an estimated $77 million in America, and $224 million worldwide.

The movie received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert in its review wrote that "Ron Howard is a better filmmaker than Dan Brown is a novelist; he follows Brown's formula (exotic location, startling revelation, desperate chase scene, repeat as needed) and elevates it into a superior entertainment, with Tom Hanks as a theo-intellectual Indiana Jones... it's involving, intriguing and constantly seems on the edge of startling revelations."

The film received two sequels: Angels & Demons, released in 2009, and Inferno, released in 2016. Ron Howard returned to direct both sequels.

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Bock, Darrell L. Breaking the da Vinci code: Answers to the questions everyone's asking (Thomas Nelson, 2004).
  • Ehrman, Bart D. Truth and fiction in The Da Vinci Code: a historian reveals what we really know about Jesus, Mary Magdalene, and Constantine (Oxford University Press, 2004).
  • Easley, Michael J., and John Ankerberg. The Da Vinci Code Controversy: 10 Facts You Should Know (Moody Publishers, 2006).
  • Gale, Cengage Learning. A Study Guide for Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code (Gale, Cengage Learning, 2015).
  • Hawel, Zeineb Sami. "Did Dan Brown Break or Repair the Taboos in the Da Vinci Code? An Analytical Study of His Dialectical Style." International Journal of Linguistics and Literature (IJLL) 7.4: 5-24. online
  • Kennedy, Tammie M. "Mary Magdalene and the Politics of Public Memory: Interrogating" The Da Vinci Code"." Feminist Formations (2012): 120-139. online
  • Mexal, Stephen J. "Realism, Narrative History, and the Production of the Bestseller: The Da Vinci Code and the Virtual Public Sphere." Journal of Popular Culture 44.5 (2011): 1085–1101. online
  • Newheiser, Anna-Kaisa, Miguel Farias, and Nicole Tausch. "The functional nature of conspiracy beliefs: Examining the underpinnings of belief in the Da Vinci Code conspiracy." Personality and Individual Differences 51.8 (2011): 1007–1011. online
  • Olson, Carl E., and Sandra Miesel. The da Vinci hoax: Exposing the errors in The da Vinci code (Ignatius Press, 2004).
  • Propp, William H. C. "Is The Da Vinci Code True?." Journal of Religion and Popular Culture 25.1 (2013): 34–48.
  • Pullum, Geoffrey K. "The Dan Brown code." (2004)
  • Schneider-Mayerson, Matthew. "The Dan Brown phenomenon: conspiracism in post-9/11 popular fiction." Radical History Review 2011.111 (2011): 194–201. online
  • Walsh, Richard G. "Passover Plots: From Modern Fictions to Mark and Back Again." Postscripts: The Journal of Sacred Texts, Cultural Histories, and Contemporary Contexts 3.2-3 (2007): 201–222. online

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