// AiMilano // 米兰游览
米兰游览
游览观光 乍一看, foggy 米兰好象最多2天就可以游览过来; 有很多公司, 商店, 看“最后的完餐”和duomo. 但是对这座伦巴第的城市的滋味比你眼睛看的更有感觉.
有很多的私有博物馆,下面会提到.多数博物馆和画廊在周1早上是关闭的
Kill an hour
圆顶在vittorio emanuele 2 Piazza del Duomo - Milan 地图
在米兰所有的路都指向DUOMO, 但实际上可以直接通过大教堂进入够物拱廊, 就在广场外面.它是钢的玻璃技艺,圆顶场所由giuseppe mengoni设计并在1865年之1877年建立的新古典主义的新巴洛克风格.
圆顶场所很快变成了 Golden Rectangle. prada被祖父建立在1903年 还有 Louis Vuitton, Gucci Tod's 都在 2004年开业.
如果你什么都不买, 你可以在duomo角落里的咖啡厅休息一下, 使用20世纪的马赛克和花装饰. Gucci 在天冷的时候还在室外设立一个小咖啡室.
特别注意一下20世纪的马赛克, 特别是在那个共牛够物中心下. 你可以在那转动脚跟以带来好运
最后的晚餐 Piazza Santa Maria delle Grazie 2 20123 Milan Tel: +39 (02) 894-21146 Open: Tues-Sun 8.15am-6.45pm Map it
如果你想看最后的晚餐,您必须很坚定.从Dan Brown's 成功的写出“达芬奇密码”。
游客必须提前几个星期甚至几个月预定;观看时间15分钟, 最多25个人同时 (为了保持温度). .
音像指南可能提供各种的信息. 由于壁画干燥要比潮湿好. 问题就在此.在1652年居民在墙壁切开一个门毁坏了画的部分 (Jesus's feet) 在第19世纪 Napoleon's使用屋子作为马棚 . 用了昂贵的21年恢复,在1999年揭开.
必须确定观看可以在屋子的后面,对透视理解深刻的达芬奇用3维的手法让它看起来像是屋子的延伸, 最后,图片在走廊的效果如同您进入时.一个描述在2站中被轰炸过的教堂, 暴露出它的元素 .之后, 不要忘记去美丽的修道院.一部分由bramante设计。
Poldi Pezzoli 博物馆 Via Manzoni 12 - 20121 Milan Tel: +39 (02) 794889 Open: Tues-Sun 10am-6pm 地图
他被誉为米兰最大的魅力之一,但是游客参观这私有收藏 可能会对地板上的装饰失望. 在楼上,你会发现三种吸引你的地方.
它们其中2个, 你会相当震惊“维京和孩子””妇女的画像“ , 可以俯视院子里的黄金屋子. 第3个焦点是首饰的屋子其中有首饰,搪瓷,耶酥受难像的收藏品. 任何这一件都有单独的价值; 他们会给你诱人的时间.
遗憾的博物馆没有咖啡,但你能走到monte napoleone
历史教训
城堡 Sforzesco Piazza Castello - 20121 Milan Tel: +39 (02) 88463703 Open: Tues-Sun 9am-5.30pm 地图
这是座皇家宫殿,是堡垒和军事营房它的主塔在1521年被炸了. 这座15世纪的城堡,有viscontis建造和frenchman占领, 西班牙人和奥地利人看起来更加骄傲.新神色部分来自喷泉
Sant' Ambrogio Piazza Sant'Ambrogio 15 Milan 20123 Tel: +39 (02) 8645-0895 Open: Mon-Fri 7am-noon, 2.30-7pm; Sat-Sun 7am-1pm, 3-6pm.
当老米兰人呼叫ambrosiani的时候,会出现他们的守护神ambrogio.有时候通过“勉强主教” Ambrogio, 在374年当统治者, 变成个人倾向而不是主教的意图,但是规定, 在期间转换成圣augustine.他的庆祝日仍然在12月7日.
If you are feeling respectful, the saint's ghoulish remains are on display, next to those of the Christian martyrs Gervasius and Protasius, in the crypt of Sant'Ambrogio. Otherwise, simply enjoy what is unquestionably Milan's most beautiful church, with mosaics from the 4th-9th centuries and a beautifully carved golden altar.
Striking a very different note, placards just outside the medieval walls describe the different kinds of torture that took place in a sunken pit here and in nearby Piazza della Vetra. Torture by suspension, the gallows and “breaking with the wheel” drew crowds of gleeful onlookers from the Middle Ages right up to the start of the 18th century.
The Duomo Piazza del Duomo Milan Tel: +39 (02) 86463456 Open: Mon-Sun 7am-7pm Map it
It may be Milan's biggest visitor attraction (and the world's largest Gothic cathedral), but the Duomo remains primarily a place of prayer. Enter the magnificently gloomy interior, and you will spot pilgrims lighting the candles flickering in front of various Christian icons, and whispering secrets in the confessional boxes, lined up between the relics of assorted archbishops along the right-hand wall.
For something different, you can travel to the rooftop and scramble around on the uneven surface (take the lift, unless you're super-fit). If you are here on the Saturday closest to September 14th, visit the Duomo for one its holiest days, when the nail from Christ's cross is brought out of its home in the crucifix on a ceiling vault behind the altar.
Although the Duomo's glorious facade is hidden behind 7,000 square metres of scaffolding while restoration work takes place, you can still visit the interior and roof. The massive clean-up and renovation is due to finish in 2006.
Museo Bagatti Valsecchi Via Santo Spirito 10 Milan 20121 Tel: +39 02 760 06132 Open: Tues-Sun 1-5pm Map it
Though it is right opposite the Four Seasons Hotel, most people walk straight past this hidden museum. The one-time home of Fausto and Giuseppe Bagatti Valsecchi, two eccentric 19th-century brothers, the house is decorated in Renaissance style, with 15th- and 16th-century paintings and furniture gathered from villas in Lombardy and beyond. Today, things are pretty much as Giuseppe left them at his death, aged almost 90, in 1934.
Don't be put off by the dark wooden furnishings, gloomy lighting and suits of armour that greet you. The point of this place is to enter the minds of the two rather morbid brothers whose personalities still haunt the rooms. Fausto slept beneath a carved, 16th-century bedhead showing Christ's painful ascent to Calvary, while his beside table contained a skull-shaped clock and oil lamp - still on view.
But the brothers weren't all gloom and doom. Part of the fun is spotting how they used Renaissance artefacts to disguise 19th-century mod cons. A shell-shaped, marble niche in the bathroom hides a shower, while a 15th-century style sideboard in the Valtellinese Stove Room is actually an anachronistic piano. Explanations in English on transportable cards help identify the many treasures, including Bellini's “Santa Giustina de' Borromei”, that are scattered throughout the house.
Even if you don't have time for a visit, pop into the entrance for the most imaginative museum shop in Milan. Here you will find Valentino umbrellas, Etro scarves and DaDriade vases.
Pinacoteca Ambrosiana Piazza Pio XI 2 Milan 20123 Tel: +39 (02) 806921 Open: Tues-Sun 10am-5.30pm Map it
If you only have limited time in Milan, avoid the tourist throngs outside the Duomo and go instead to the Pinacoteca Ambrosiana, perhaps the city's most underrated museum. In a yellow-stained, 19th-century building, with views over a statue-studded cloistered courtyard, its 23 rooms contain some of Lombardy's finest works of art.
Few museums get off to a better start. Almost immediately upon entering, you will see Leonardo da Vinci's mysterious “Musician” (Room II), a soulful youth clutching a musical manuscript, the precise nature of which remains unknown. Next, pop into the library, where scholars shuffle papers next to shelves of leather-bound books. Leonardo's “Codex Atlanticus”, filled with the artist's spidery writing and sketches, is kept here.
In rooms VI and VII, look for Caravaggio's still-life of a basket of just-decaying fruit and Jan Brueghel's stunning “Vase of Flowers” (pictured here), filled with more than 100 types of flowers. In Room VIII, a lock of Lucrezia Borgia's strawberry-blonde hair paves the way for two gruesome, 17th-century Lombard paintings in room XV, depicting women committing brutal crimes.
Afterwards, nip up to Pasticceria Marchesi for a quick cup of coffee.
San Satiro Via Torino 9 Milan 20123 Map it
Ethereal San Satiro appears at odds with its surroundings. The church is squeezed incongruously between the trendy fashion shops on Via Falcone and Via Torino. But duck into the sombre courtyard, enter the portal and you wll find yourself basking in the golden hues of an extraordinary interior. San Satiro is the masterpiece of Donato Bramante, the 15th-century architect renowned for his illusionistic touches |
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