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Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta, Torcello: the marble pulpit and ambo and part of the iconostasis

RIBA38141
NOTES: The pulpit and ambo are made up from fragments from the 7th century original church.

Santa Giulia City Museum, Brescia: the remains of the stone-paved atria of the Roman town houses occupied between the first and fourth centuries

RIBA40324
Tortelli Frassoni Architetti Associati
NOTES: This museum, built on the ruins of Roman town houses, is located in the former female Benedictine monastery of San Salvatore-Giulia, founded in 753. It was acquired by Brescia town council in 1996 and converted into a museum by Giovanni Tortelli and Roberto Frassoni. It opened to the public in 2006. It comprises the Lombard church of San Salvatore and its crypt, the Romanesque church of Santa Maria in Solario, the Nuns' Choir, the sixteenth-century church of Santa Giulia and three Renaissance cloisters.

Santa Giulia City Museum, Brescia: the remains of the stone-paved atria of the Roman town houses occupied between the first and fourth centuries

RIBA40325
Tortelli Frassoni Architetti Associati
NOTES: This museum, built on the ruins of Roman town houses, is located in the former female Benedictine monastery of San Salvatore-Giulia, founded in 753. It was acquired by Brescia town council in 1996 and converted into a museum by Giovanni Tortelli and Roberto Frassoni. It opened to the public in 2006. It comprises the Lombard church of San Salvatore and its crypt, the Romanesque church of Santa Maria in Solario, the Nuns' Choir, the sixteenth-century church of Santa Giulia and three Renaissance cloisters.

Santa Giulia City Museum, Brescia: the remains of the stone-paved atria of the Roman town houses occupied between the first and fourth centuries

RIBA40329
Tortelli Frassoni Architetti Associati
NOTES: This museum, built on the ruins of Roman town houses, is located in the former female Benedictine monastery of San Salvatore-Giulia, founded in 753. It was acquired by Brescia town council in 1996 and converted into a museum by Giovanni Tortelli and Roberto Frassoni. It opened to the public in 2006. It comprises the Lombard church of San Salvatore and its crypt, the Romanesque church of Santa Maria in Solario, the Nuns' Choir, the sixteenth-century church of Santa Giulia and three Renaissance cloisters.

Santa Giulia City Museum, Brescia: the remains of the stone-paved atria of the Roman town houses occupied between the first and fourth centuries

RIBA40330
Tortelli Frassoni Architetti Associati
NOTES: This museum, built on the ruins of Roman town houses, is located in the former female Benedictine monastery of San Salvatore-Giulia, founded in 753. It was acquired by Brescia town council in 1996 and converted into a museum by Giovanni Tortelli and Roberto Frassoni. It opened to the public in 2006. It comprises the Lombard church of San Salvatore and its crypt, the Romanesque church of Santa Maria in Solario, the Nuns' Choir, the sixteenth-century church of Santa Giulia and three Renaissance cloisters.

Santa Giulia City Museum, Brescia: the remains of the stone-paved atria of the Roman town houses occupied between the first and fourth centuries

RIBA40331
Tortelli Frassoni Architetti Associati
NOTES: This museum, built on the ruins of Roman town houses, is located in the former female Benedictine monastery of San Salvatore-Giulia, founded in 753. It was acquired by Brescia town council in 1996 and converted into a museum by Giovanni Tortelli and Roberto Frassoni. It opened to the public in 2006. It comprises the Lombard church of San Salvatore and its crypt, the Romanesque church of Santa Maria in Solario, the Nuns' Choir, the sixteenth-century church of Santa Giulia and three Renaissance cloisters.

Santa Giulia City Museum, Brescia: the remains of the stone-paved atria of the Roman town houses occupied between the first and fourth centuries

RIBA40332
Tortelli Frassoni Architetti Associati
NOTES: This museum, built on the ruins of Roman town houses, is located in the former female Benedictine monastery of San Salvatore-Giulia, founded in 753. It was acquired by Brescia town council in 1996 and converted into a museum by Giovanni Tortelli and Roberto Frassoni. It opened to the public in 2006. It comprises the Lombard church of San Salvatore and its crypt, the Romanesque church of Santa Maria in Solario, the Nuns' Choir, the sixteenth-century church of Santa Giulia and three Renaissance cloisters.
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