We left at 8:46 by train from Mannheim for Milan,
where we arrived punctually at 15:35 at the grandiose train station.
See the needle with colorful thread - Milan's image as the fashion capital of Italy!
After walking three blocks to our Airbnb we took off for the Brera Museum.
Within an hour of arrival we were surrounded by Caravaggio paintings and many more...!
We slept well and kept cheese and yogurt on our outside window ledge. We got up early to join our bus tour. We needed to walk a ways and take a bus to the meeting point.
We'd walked 1.5 blocks when my trusty, old New Balance sneaker fell apart! This center piece came loose and with that the shoe no longer held together. What to do? We ran back and I changed shoes. Jack gets all the credit for talking me into taking a second pair! And running at breakneck speed we still made our bus.
We are fortunate to have seen it in person since the picture has been degrading almost since it was painted. DaVinci experimented with a different "dry" method, rather than the traditional true fresco technique. The last restoration was in 1999. It really is a masterpiece!
Across from the "Last Supper" is the "Crucifixion" by Montorfano (1495) and it serves to highlight the unique qualities of Leonardo DaVinci's work.
We continued our own tour on foot to Basilica di Sant' Ambrogio.
Below was a crypt like in most churches, but this one
had the skeletons of martyrs that Ambrose dug up before he built his church in 380 A.D.!
It was exhilarating being up so high and so close to all the ornate carvings. We spent a long time exploring the roof.
Every part of it is different and worth the climb. On the left of Jack you can see scaffolding where they were cleaning and repairing that section.
We took the subway to Sforza Castle (Castello Sforzesco) and walked around it and its beautifully maintained park and grounds.
The next day we were right back and toured the inside. The castle houses many kinds of museums. Here Jack is admiring Michelangelo's 4th Pieta called the Pieta Rondanini,
Michelangelo died while working on this statue.
Sometimes moving from one museum to the other involved outside stairs of this immense fortress.
Four famous Medici vases!
14th C memorial equestrian statue
After hours of walking through Sforza
we rewarded ourselves with a quiet dinner by the canal in Navigli.
This worker was just replacing the lilies as he does every week in this modern tomb.
Most are not as large as this one, which is a very wealthy family's plot.
Most of the few people we encountered that morning were tending the graves of their loved ones.
Then we rushed back to the great subway system, picked up our bags at our room, and took the train to Cinque Terre.
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