enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Culture of Milan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Milan

    Football is the most popular sport in Italy, and Milan is home to two world-famous football teams: A.C. Milan and Internazionale. The former is normally referred to as "Mìlan" (notice the stress on the first syllable, unlike the English and Milanese name of the city), the latter as "Inter".

  3. History of architecture and art in Milan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_architecture...

    Trade and finance activities made Milan Italy's main economic hub, [64] [note 8] while agriculture in the Milanese area, thanks in part to the government's completion of many water works, was among the most developed and modern in Europe: [57] at the same time, the city became Italy's major publishing and cultural center, [64] with the work of ...

  4. History of Milan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Milan

    During World War I, the city played a rearguard role, a shelter for wounded soldiers convalescing (including Ernest Hemingway, who remembered his days in Milan in the famous novel A Farewell to Arms [96]) and as a center for the production of war material, being directly hit from the war on the occasion of a single Austrian air raid on 14 ...

  5. Fashion in Milan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fashion_in_Milan

    Milan started to become an internationally successful and famous fashion capital towards the late-1980s and early 1990s. After a brief fall of popularity in the 2000s (when, according to the Global Language Monitor Milan ranked slightly lower than its relatives, such as New York City , Paris , London and Rome ), the city has throned 2009's ...

  6. Milan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milan

    Milan (/ m ɪ ˈ l æ n / mil-AN, US also / m ɪ ˈ l ɑː n / mil-AHN, [5] [6] Milanese: ⓘ; Italian: Milano ⓘ) is a city in northern Italy, regional capital of Lombardy, the largest city in Italy by urban population [7] and the second-most-populous city proper in Italy after Rome.

  7. Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galleria_Vittorio_Emanuele_II

    The Milan gallery and its roof have been acknowledged as an important reference on 19th-century iron-and-glass architecture by Pevsner [4] and Hitchcock. [5] As one can still observe today, the roof consists of four barrel vaults (approximately 14.5 m in width and 8.5 m in height) that are crowned with a huge dome (around 37.5 m as internal ...

  8. Italian fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_fashion

    The Italian Catherine de' Medici, as Queen of France. Her fashions were the main trendsetters of courts at the time. Fashion in Italy started to become the most fashionable in Europe since the 11th century, and powerful cities of the time, such as Venice, Milan, Florence, Naples, Vicenza and Rome began to produce robes, jewelry, textiles, shoes, fabrics, ornaments and elaborate dresses. [8]

  9. Milan Cathedral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milan_Cathedral

    Duomo di Milano, front façade, Milan, Italy Plate celebrating the laying of the first stone in 1386. Milan Cathedral (Italian: Duomo di Milano [ˈdwɔːmo di miˈlaːno]; Lombard: Domm de Milan [ˈdɔm de miˈlãː]), or Metropolitan Cathedral-Basilica of the Nativity of Saint Mary (Italian: Basilica cattedrale metropolitana di Santa Maria Nascente), is the cathedral church of Milan, Lombardy ...