ID:999 Hotels, Agritourisms, Pensions and B&B near Brescia - Brescia (Brescia)


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Find hotels in Brescia in Lombardy

- Find hotels in Brescia in Lombardy

bookings in Brescia and surroundings

- bookings in Brescia and surroundings

Hotels in Brescia in Lombardy

- Hotels in Brescia in Lombardy

Holiday-houses in Brescia

- Holiday-houses in Brescia

Bed and breakfast near Brescia

- Bed and breakfast near Brescia

Holiday in Brescia: Where to stay

- Holiday in Brescia: Where to stay

B&B in Brescia

- B&B in Brescia

Visit Brescia

- Visit Brescia

Holiday-houses in Brescia and surroundings

- Holiday-houses in Brescia and surroundings

Room rentals in Brescia

- Room rentals in Brescia

Holiday in Lombardy

- Holiday in Lombardy

Brescia and the Mille Miglia, thousand miles

- Brescia and the Mille Miglia, thousand miles

Book a hotel in the heart of brescia

- Book a hotel in the heart of brescia

Banco di Brescia

- Banco di Brescia

Art and monuments in Brescia

- Art and monuments in Brescia

The best hotels near Brescia

- The best hotels near Brescia

Holyday near the lake of Garda, Gardaland

- Holyday near the lake of Garda, Gardaland

Brescia the City of the thousand miles -Mille Miglia

- Brescia the City of the thousand miles -Mille Miglia

Stay in Brescia

- Stay in Brescia

List of agritourisms in the area of brescia

- List of agritourisms in the area of brescia

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Brescia  is a city and comune in the region of Lombardy in northern Italy. It is situated at the foot of the Alps, between the Mella and the Naviglio, with a population of around 191,000. It is the second largest city in Lombardy, after the capital, Milan. Brescia is called "the Lioness of Italy" after ten days of popular uprising that took place in the city in the spring of 1849 against Austrian oppression.

 

The city is the administrative capital of the Province of Brescia, one of the largest in Italy, with about 1,200,000 inhabitants. The ancient city of Brixia, Brescia has been an important regional centre since pre-Roman times and a number of Roman and medieval monuments are preserved, among which is the prominent castle. The city is at the centre of the third-largest Italian industrial area, concentrating on mechanical and automotive engineering and machine tools, as well as the Beretta arms firm. Its companies are typically small or medium- sized enterprises, often with family managements. The financial sector is also a major employer, and the tourist trade benefits from the proximity of Lake Garda, Lake Iseo and the Alps.

 

The plan of the city is rectangular, and the streets intersect at right angles, a peculiarity handed down from Roman times, though the area enclosed by the medieval walls is larger than that of the Roman town, which occupied the eastern portion of the present one. The Piazza del Foro marks the site of the forum, and the museum on its north side is ensconced in a Corinthian temple with three cellae, by some attributed to Hercules, but more probably the Capitolium of the city, erected by Vespasian in 73 AD (if the inscription really belongs to the building[1]), which was excavated in 1823. The museum houses a famous bronze statue of Victory, found in 1826. Scanty remains of a building on the south side of the forum, called the curia, but which may have been a basilica, and of the theatre, east of the temple, still exist.

 

 

Main sights

  • Piazza della Loggia, a noteworthy example of Renaissance piazza, with the eponymous loggia (the current Town Hall) built in 1492 by the architect Filippino de' Grassi. On May 28, 1974 the square was the location of a terrorist bombing.
  • Duomo Vecchio ("Old Cathedral"), also known as La Rotonda. It is an exteriorly rusticated Romanesque church, striking for its circular shape. The main structure was built in the 11th century on the ruins of an earlier basilica. Near the entrance is the pink Veronese marble sarcophagus of Berardo Maggi, while in the presbitery is the entrance to the crypt of San Filastrio. The structure houses paintings of the Assumption, the Evangelists Luke and Mark, and Feast of the Paschal Lamb , and Eli and the Angel by Alessandro Bonvicino (known as il Moretto); two canvasses by Girolamo Romanino, and other paintings by Palma il Giovane, Francesco Maffei, Bonvicino, and others[2].
  • Duomo Nuovo ("New Cathedral"): Construction on the new cathedral began in 1604 and continued till 1825. While initially a contract was awarded to Palladio, economic shortfalls awarded the project, still completed in a Palladian style, to the young Brescian architect Giovanni Battista Lantana, with decorative projects were directed mainly by Pietro Maria Bagnadore. The facade is mainly owed to the designs Giovanni Battista and Antonio Marchetti, while the cupola was designed by Luigi Cagnola. Interior frescoes including the Marriage, Visitation, and Birth of the Virgin, as well as the Sacrifice of Isaac, were frescoed by Bonvicino. The main attractions is the Arch of Sts. Apollonius and Filastrius (1510)[3].
  • The Broletto, formerly the Province Hall. It is a massive building of the 12th and 13th centuries with a lofty tower.
  • In Piazza del Foro is the most important array of Roman remains in Lombardy. These include the Capitoline Temple, built by Vespasianus in 73 AD.
  • The monastery of San Salvatore (or Santa Giulia), dating from the Lombard age but later renovated several times. It is one of the best example of High Middle Ages architecture in northern Italy.
  • Santa Maria dei Miracoli (1488-1523), with a fine façade by Giovanni Antonio Amadeo, decorated with bas-reliefs and a Renaissance peristilium.
  • The Romanesque-Gothic church of St. Francis, with a Gothic façade and cloisters.
  • The castle, at the north-east angle of the town, commands a fine view.
  • Church of San Nazario e Celso, with the Averoldi Polyptych by Titian.
  • Church of San Clemente, with numerous painting by Alessandro Bonvicino (generally known as Moretto).
  • Church of San Giovanni, with a refectory partly painted by the Moretto and partly by Girolamo Romanino.
  • The Pinacoteca Tosio Martinengo, the local art gallery hosts works of the painters of the classical Brescian school, Romanino, Bonvicino, and Bonvicino's pupil, Giovanni Battista Moroni.
  • Biblioteca Queriniana, containing rare early manuscripts, including a 14th-century manuscript of Dante, and some rare incunabula.

The city has no fewer than seventy-two public fountains. The stone quarries of Mazzano, 20 km east of Brescia, supplied marble for the Monument to Vittorio Emanuele II in Rome.

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