De lichtshow van de kathedraal van St. Marco is prachtig. Dit is de tweede kathedraal van Milaan, gelegen in het winkelcentrum, een normale stijl tijdens de kerstvakantie, met veel verbazingwekkende tijden en emotionele verbazingwekkende verrassingen.
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De lichtshow van de kathedraal van St. Marco is prachtig. Dit is de tweede kathedraal van Milaan, gelegen in het winkelcentrum, een normale stijl tijdens de kerstvakantie, met veel verbazingwekkende tijden en emotionele verbazingwekkende verrassingen.
St. Mark's Church is said to be the second Cathedral in Milan. There are many frescoes in the church. Most of them were painted from the Renaissance (from noon to 4 p.m.). The church was built in the thirteenth century. The windows of roses inside were beautifully carved.
It's worth seeing. All the golden mosaic puzzles on the top feel brilliant. It also retains the horror of San Marco. You can't enter with backpacks on both shoulders. The queue is usually long. No tickets are accepted.
Unfortunately, we came to Italy in winter. It started to get dark at 4:30 p.m. and all the attractions closed earlier. When we came to this church, the door was closed and we could only walk around and take pictures. Considering this trip to Italy, we will see more and bigger churches, so we don't plan to revisit here as the next day. As St. Mark's Church is being restored, it is not particularly beautiful in appearance, but only partially photographed.
About St. Mark's Church #St. Mark's Church was built in 336 by Pope Mark in memory of St. Mark, the author of the Bible Gospel. The remains of Pope Mark are stored under the altar. After many times of construction, the style of the church retained the 9th century ring mosaic, blue and gold roof lions like the family emblem of Pope Paul II in the 15th century, while other decorations such as the Jade Ring Gallery were the art of the late 18th century Baroque. Like Rome itself, each section of the artistic style left its mark in this church, which is worth visiting.