S. Ambrogio

Department Archive
Collection Byzantine Research Fund
Reference No. BRF/01/05/05/001
Level Item
Place Milan
Dates August 1888
Donor/Creator Weir Schultz, Mr Robert
Barnsley, Mr Sidney Howard
Scope and Content Elevation of pulpit. The drawing is initialed (RWS) and dated in pencil at the bottom.
Further information The church of S. Ambrogio, Milan, was built on the ruins of a three-aisled basilica with galleries. This fourth-century building was covered exclusively by vaults. Construction work must have begun around 1080 and the monument was completed in 1117. A vaulted atrium was attached to the east side of the new three-aisled basilica. Two belfries flank the newly-constructed narthex. Both the main and the side aisles are covered by vaults while a big slightly later octagonal dome supported by eight arches dominates the area in front of the holy bema. Worth noting is the lavish decoration of the interior: the sculpture is typically Lombard, Byzantine-influenced mosaics with Greek inscriptions decorate the walls. The monument, an excellent example of Lombard church-architecture, was used for the coronation of Lombard kings.