Milan, Italy - “What can you tell us?” asked friends who are planning a trip there next year.
So many things come to mind – fashion and food among them – but what symbolizes this capital of the Lombardy region in Northern Italy for us is its Duomo (ˈdwōmō); Cathedral.
Each time we’ve visited the city with a 1.35 million population, we’ve been two tourist pilgrims, setting out on foot - just as religious pilgrims must have done before us - making our way to the imposing Gothic Italian structure eagerly seeking the first sight of its towering spires.
We entered Piazza del Duomo at the back of the Cathedral last fall, our mid-morning arrival before buses disgorged the masses of fellow tourists who fill the square, each angling for the best shot of the building that stands 148-feet (45 meters) tall and took six centuries to complete.
At this time of day there were no lines waiting to enter the Duomo dedicated to Santa Maria Nascente.
This seat of the Archbishop of Milan is crowned with 135 spires. On a previous visit we took the rooftop tour and walked among those intricately sculpted towers – it was amazing and we highly recommend it.
It isn’t until you go inside that you grasp just how enormous this place is and you understand why its construction took 600 years.
At 5’10” The Scout shrinks in size when compared to those massive pillars.
And how about that wall of organ pipes?
The stained glass windows which tower over visitors are works of art that tell through their illustrations the stories of the Virgin and Saints and, as such, were once considered Biblia Pauperum, a pauper’s bible – easy to read and appealing.
The Duomo’s 3,400 statues and 700 figures are decorating elements typical of all Gothic Cathedrals, used to send the message of Christian salvation (sometimes, rather violently depicted it seems, as illustrated in the photo above!)
And other times quite whimsical as we noted with this fellow – one of many such figures on the Duomo’s exterior.
That’s it for Travel Photo Thursday at Budget Travelers Sandbox and Travel Photo Discovery updated each Monday.
If You Go:
Duomo Milano
Piazza el Duomo, Milano
www.duomomilano.it
As always, thanks for the time you spent with us today. Happy Travels!
Showing posts with label Milano Italy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Milano Italy. Show all posts
Thursday, August 8, 2013
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
TPThursday: Travel Guilt or Gratitude?
Thanksgiving Day is being celebrated throughout the United States today with traditional acts of gluttony and, hopefully, with some time spent on gratitude (the day’s original purpose).
We are bypassing the culinary gluttony this year for. . . What else? Travel gluttony. So, as I was stuffing our bags instead of a turkey, I was thinking about how grateful I am for the freedom and ability to travel as well as the joy it brings.
I recalled a passage from Paul Theroux’s book, “Pillars of Hercules”. Thanksgiving seemed the perfect day to share it with you:
“Did the traveler, doing no observable work,
(Early morning Milano, Italy’s train station)
freely moving among settled, serious people, get a pang of conscience?
(Afternoon Bologna, Italy)
(Evening Cetona, Italy)
I told myself that writing – this effort of observation – absolved me from any guilt;
(Squero di San Trovaso, one of Venice’s few remaining gondola workshops)
but of course that was just a feeble excuse.
(Wine store in Venice, Italy)
This was pleasure.
(A piazza in Milano, Italy)
No guilt, just gratitude.”
Happy Thanksgiving ~ we are grateful to all of you for stopping by on this Travel Photo Thursday. Remember to stop by Budget Travelers Sandbox for more armchair travel.
If you want to regularly receive these posts in your inbox, just sign up in the box to the right on the home page or scroll down and join our growing group of followers. Thanks for visiting!
We are bypassing the culinary gluttony this year for. . . What else? Travel gluttony. So, as I was stuffing our bags instead of a turkey, I was thinking about how grateful I am for the freedom and ability to travel as well as the joy it brings.
I recalled a passage from Paul Theroux’s book, “Pillars of Hercules”. Thanksgiving seemed the perfect day to share it with you:
“Did the traveler, doing no observable work,
(Early morning Milano, Italy’s train station)
freely moving among settled, serious people, get a pang of conscience?
(Afternoon Bologna, Italy)
(Evening Cetona, Italy)
I told myself that writing – this effort of observation – absolved me from any guilt;
(Squero di San Trovaso, one of Venice’s few remaining gondola workshops)
but of course that was just a feeble excuse.
(Wine store in Venice, Italy)
This was pleasure.
(A piazza in Milano, Italy)
No guilt, just gratitude.”
Happy Thanksgiving ~ we are grateful to all of you for stopping by on this Travel Photo Thursday. Remember to stop by Budget Travelers Sandbox for more armchair travel.
If you want to regularly receive these posts in your inbox, just sign up in the box to the right on the home page or scroll down and join our growing group of followers. Thanks for visiting!
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