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Very close to Milan Cathedral, only a few minutes walk, a small white building, the interior is relatively simple, the bone room is not particularly easy to see, on the right hand side of the door, where is more amazing.
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Very close to Milan Cathedral, only a few minutes walk, a small white building, the interior is relatively simple, the bone room is not particularly easy to see, on the right hand side of the door, where is more amazing.
It takes about 10 minutes to walk southeast from the Milan church, and the facade is incomparable to the Milan cathedral, but the essence here is the human bone room, a room decorated with many bones.
The rare human bone church, built from the 12th century, was originally only to collect the remains of the unfortunate people who died of various diseases in the hospital, and then built the church together. It was deep and the place was not big, but it was shocking and worth a visit. About a minute walk from the cathedral. Completely free of ticket, just push the door in
Very interesting church, a little more understanding of European Catholic culture.
The bone chamber will have Ossa's sign at the entrance to the right-hand passage of the church. The room was not very large, but the lights were gloomy. Skulls and arm bones were embedded in the walls around it. Actually, I'm a little curious. Where are the bones of the other parts? Visiting the bone chamber is free of charge.
This humble chapel not far south of Milan Cathedral. The famous human skeleton chamber is located on the left of the main building of the church, without entering the church. Saint Bernardino Bone Church. This Church in the centre of Milan has a long and rich history - in the 12th century there was a hospital opposite the church. There was a cemetery next to the hospital. Later, the cemetery was full. People had to vacate the cemetery for the newly deceased. In 1269, the prototype of the Saint Bernardino Bone Church was built, and the remains of the original cemetery had a new storage site. You remember that in the Middle Ages, the Black Death was prevalent in Europe. Among the few traces that remain today, the hell-like tragedy of that year was frightening.
A few hundred metres behind Milan Cathedral, the small church looks not very impressive, but next to another church is very eye-catching, the entrance is in the small door adjacent to that church. Even if you have a map in your hand, you have to confirm it again and again before you go in. There is no doubt that the inside and the ordinary chapel, walking a circle without human bones, wondering whether they have gone wrong and left, saw the original dark corridor, into which is the room where the human bones are stored. There are many bones that pile up to the ceiling. I don't know if it's because there's not much sunshine or because it's psychologically active. It's obviously cold and gloomy. There are always people in twos and threes who see that the silence of human bones is only a wall between life and death.