The
Duomo of Monza often known in
English as
Monza Cathedral is the main religious building of
Monza, near
Milan, in northern
Italy. Unlike most duomos it is not in fact a cathedral, as Monza has always been part of the
Diocese of Milan, but is in the charge of an archpriest who has the right to certain episcopal vestments including the mitre and the ring. The church is also known as the Basilica of
San Giovanni Battista from its dedication to
John the Baptist. The church has a nave and two aisles, separated by octagonal columns with
Romanesque capitals and round columns with
Baroque capitals. It ends in large apses, and has a series of chapels opening into the aisles.
The wall decoration is overwhelmingly Baroque. Other artworks include a choir by Matteo da
Campione, the high altar by
Andrea Appiani, and the presbytery and transept frescoes by
Giuseppe Meda and
Giuseppe Arcimboldi. In the right transept is the entrance to the Serpero
Museum which houses the treasury with the
Iron Crown of Lombardy, and the
Late Antique ivory
Poet and Muse diptych, of about
500, as well as an internationally important collection of late antique and early medieval works of various kinds, many deposited by
Theodelinda herself. These includes small metal
6th century ampullae from the
Holy Land which are evidence of the emerging iconography of medieval art, among them the earliest depictions of the treatments of the Crucifixion and
Nativity of Jesus in art that were to become standard throughout the
Middle Ages and beyond. Only
Bobbio has an equivalent collection of ampullae. The library holds a number of old and important illuminated manuscripts. The massive west front is divided into five parts by six lisene (applied strips), each of which is surmounted by a tabernacle housing a statue. The façade has several mullioned windows with, in the centre, a large rose window framed by a motif inspired by
Roman antique ceilings, decorated with rosettes, masks and star motifs. The façade is considered Romanesque in its structure and
Gothic in its decoration[citation needed].
Typical of the latter is the porch, with
14th century gargoyles on the sides and the
13th century lunette with the
16th century busts of Theodelinda and
King Agilulf. Over the porch is the statue of
Saint John the Baptist (
15th century). Over the portal is depicted the
Baptism of Jesus, assisted by
Saint Peter, the
Blessed Virgin Mary,
Saint Zachary and
Saint Paul. In the upper section is portrayed Theodelinda offering to John the Baptist the Iron Crown of Lombardy, together with her kneeling husband Agilulf and their children
Adaloald and
Gundeberga.
Apart the
Iron Crown, the most famous attraction of the church is the
Chapel of Theodelinda. It has
15th-century frescoes from the Zavattari workshop depicting the stories of the queen's life, such as the dove episode, her marriage proposal, her meeting with her first husband,
Authari, the latter's death in battle, and her new marriage with Agilulf. All the figures are portrayed with rich garments typical of the Visconti era. The vault is decorated with 14th century figures of saints and evangelists enthroned. On the outer arch are depicted Theodelinda with her court venerating Saint John the Baptist. An ancient and unusual privilege of the
Duomo is its right to employ ceremonial armed guards, rather on the line of the
Papal Swiss Guard at the Vatican. Known as Alabardieri from the halberds they carry, the date of their institution is described in a 1763 edict of
Maria Theresa of Austria as 'immemorial'. Their eighteenth-century style uniform, of blue wool with gold braiding and a belt buckle with an image of the Iron Crown, is unchanged from that approved in the edict, except that since the
Napoleonic period the bicorne hat has replaced the earlier tricorne. The basilica, which would in essence have been complete by 603 when heir to the
Lombard throne Adaloald was baptised here by
Secundus of Non, is believed to have been commissioned towards the end of the seventh century by the Lombard
Queen of Italy, Theodelinda, as a royal chapel to serve the nearby palace. According to the legend she had made a vow to build a church dedicated to Saint John the Baptist, and when riding along the banks of the
Lambro River, she was halted by a dove who told her Modo (
Latin for "now"), to which she replied Etiam ("yes"). Monza itself was initially known as Modoetia. In
595, she had a oraculum (chapel) built on the
Greek Cross plan; of this chapel only the walls exist today. The queen was buried here, in what is now the central left aisle of the church. On the remains of the oraculum, a new church was erected in the 13th century. It was again rebuilt as a basilica, starting from 1300, on a
Latin Cross plan with an octagonal tiburium. In the late 14th century, the side chapels were added and, as designed by Matteo da Campione, the Pisan-Gothic style west front in white and green marble was begun.
- published: 12 Apr 2014
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