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of Interest
The most striking feature of the city is the Duomo,
the large, white-marble cathedral (13861813), which
shows traces of many styles (especially Gothic). It
is elaborately ornamented, with 135 pinnacles and more
than 200 marble statues. A statue of the Madonna is
on the highest pinnacle (354 ft/108 m). Other points
of interest in Milan include Brera Palace and Picture
Gallery (17th cent.), which includes major works by
Mantegna, Bellini, Piero della Francesca, and Raphael;
the Castello Sforzesco (15th cent., with 19th-century
additions), which houses a museum of art; the Church
of Santa Maria delle Grazie (146590), containing the
famous fresco, the Last Supper, by Leonardo da Vinci;
the Basilica of Sant' Ambrogio (founded in the 4th cent.,
rebuilt in the 11th12th cent.); the Ambrosian Library,
which houses a rich collection of paintings; the Church
of Sant' Eustorgio (9th cent.); the Leonardo da Vinci
Museum of Science and Technology; the gallery of modern
art; and the Poldi Pezzoli Museum, with paintings by
Boticelli, Pollaiuolo, Mantegna, and Piero della Francesca.
Long a center of music, Milan has a conservatory and
a famous opera house, Teatro alla Scala (opened in 1778).
Between the Duomo and La Scala is the 130-year-old Galleria,
an enclosed four-story glass-roofed arcade that contains
shops and eateries and is a popular gathering place.
The city also has three universities and a polytechnic
institute.
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