Gene expression shapes the nervous system at every biological level, from molecular and cellular processes defining neuronal identity and function to systems-level wiring and circuit dynamics underlying behaviour. Here, we generate the first high-resolution, single-cell transcriptomic atlas of the adult Drosophila melanogaster central brain by integrating multiple datasets, achieving an unprecedented tenfold coverage of every neuron in this complex tissue. We show that a neuron\'s genetic identity overwhelmingly reflects its developmental origin, preserving a genetic address based on both lineage and birth order. We reveal foundational rules linking neurogenesis to transcriptional identity and provide a framework for systematically defining neuronal types. This atlas provides a powerful resource for mapping the cellular substrates of behaviour by integrating annotations of hemilineage, cell types/subtypes and molecular signatures of underlying physiological properties. It lays the groundwork for a long-sought bridge between developmental processes and the functional circuits that give rise to behaviour.