A guide to the interior of Milan Cathedral. Discover the meaning behind the largest stained glass windows in Christendom and the gruesome St. Bartholomew.

The outside of the Duomo di Milano is a lacy, pink-marble wonder. The inside is a cavernous, solemn forest of stone. It is the largest church in Italy (St. Peter's is in the Vatican, technically) and can hold up to 40,000 people.
The Duomo creates its own atmosphere with light. The windows are monumental.
Wait, who is that guy draping a robe over his shoulder? Look closer. That is not a robe. That is his own skin. The statue of St. Bartholomew Flayed (San Bartolomeo Scorticato) by Marco d'Agrate is a masterpiece of Renaissance anatomy and a slightly macabre attraction. The saint carries his skin like a cloak, revealing every muscle and vein underneath. It is said that the sculptor was so proud of his knowledge of anatomy that he inscribed the pedestal: "Non me Praxiteles, sed Marcus finxit Agrat" ("Praxiteles did not make me, but Marco d'Agrate did").
On the floor near the entrance, you will see a brass strip running across the nave. This is a solar meridian line laid in 1786.
High above the altar, marked by a red light bulb, sits one of the True Nails from the Crucifixion. Once a year, in September, the Archbishop ascends in a cloud-painted elevator (the "Nivola") to retrieve it for veneration.

Bu rehber, Milano otobüs gezi seçeneklerinde gezinmenize yardımcı olmak için yazılmıştır ve şehrin en iyilerini verimli bir şekilde görmek isteyen ziyaretçiler için pratik tavsiyeler sunar.
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