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See also: Lombardy, See also: Italy, in the province of Milan, 8 m. by See also: rail N.N.E. of that city, with which it is also connected by both steam and electric trams
.
It lies on the Lambro, a tributary of the Po, 532 ft. above See also: sea-level
.
Pop
.
(1906), 32,000 (See also: town); 53,33o(commune)
.
Of the See also: medieval fortifications little remains save the See also: Porto d'Agrate
.
Near it is the nunnery in which the nun of See also: Monza (see Manzoni's Promessi sposi) was enclosed
.
The See also: cathedral of St rohn Baptist is the See also: principal See also: object of See also: interest; Theodelinda's See also: basilica of 590 was enlarged at the close of the 13th century by throwing the atrium into the See also: main See also: building, and the See also: present See also: fine blackand-See also: white marble
See also: facade was erected about the See also: middle of the 14th by Matteo da Campione, and restored in '899-1901
.
On the See also: left-See also: hand See also: side of the front rises an incongruous brick-built tower, 278 ft. high, erected by Pellegrini in 1592-1606
.
Within the See also: church are the iron
See also: crown of Lombardy, supposed to have been beaten out of one of the nails used at the Crucifixion. and the See also: treasury containing the See also: relics of Theodelinda, comprising her crown, See also: fan and comb of gold, and the See also: golden See also: hen and seven chickens, representing Lombardy and her seven provinces, and crosses, reliquaries, &c., of the Lombard and See also: Gothic periods
.
The interior ha s been modernized; there is a fine See also: relief by Matteo da Campione in the See also: organ-loft, representing the See also: coronation of a See also: king, and some 15th-century frescoes with scenes from the
See also: life of Theodelinda
.
Next to the cathedral in See also: artistic importance come the church of See also: Santa Maria in Istrada, and the broletto or old palace of the commune, usually styled the Arengario; the former (founded in 1357) has a See also: rich terra-cotta facade of 1393, and the latter is raised on a See also: system of pointed See also: arches, and has a tall square tower terminating in machicolations surrounding a See also: sharp central See also: cone
.
The royal palace of Monza (built in 1777 for the archduke See also: Ferdinand) lies not far from the town on the
See also: banks of the Lambro
.
See also: Cotton goods and felt hats are the See also: staple products of the flourishing Monza industry; then dyeing, organ-building, and a See also: publishing See also: trade
.
Monza (anc
.
Modicia) was not a place of consequence till it attracted the See also: eye of See also: Theodoric; and its first important associations are with Theodelinda
.
During the See also: period of the republics Monza was sometimes See also: independent, sometimes subject to Milan
.
The See also: Visconti, who ultimately became masters of the city, built a See also: castle in 1325 on the site now occupied by the Palazzo Durini
.
In the course of its See also: history Monza stood See also: thirty-two sieges, and was repeatedly plundered-notably by the forces of See also: Charles V
.
The countship (1499-1796) was
See also: purchased in 1546 by the wealthy banker Durini, and remained in his See also: family till the Revolution
.
At Monza King See also: Humbert was assassinated on the 29th of See also: July 1900
.
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