Church of San Maurizio at the Maggiore Monastery

Church of San Maurizio at the Maggiore Monastery — via Wikimedia Commons
Church of San Maurizio at the Maggiore Monastery · via Wikimedia Commons
MILAN, LOMBARDY · 16TH CENTURY

San Maurizio at the Maggiore Monastery

An early Christian church transformed in the Renaissance into a masterpiece of Leonardesque fresco painting—Milan’s answer to the Sistine Chapel.

At a glance

San Maurizio stands at the corner of via Luini and corso Magenta, housing the richest cycle of frescoes from the school of Leonardo da Vinci in Milan. Once the seat of the city’s most important Benedictine female monastery, the church preserves both medieval and Renaissance layers within its walls.

History

The monastery dates to the Carolingian era and occupies a site that reuses Roman structures—including remnants of the ancient walls of Maximian and materials from the Roman circus. Construction of the current church began in 1503, as recorded on a stone in the apse. Attributed to architect and sculptor Gian Giacomo Dolcebuono, working with Giovanni Antonio Amadeo, the building rose swiftly. By 1509, the first tombstones were already installed. Francesco Pirovano completed the façade in 1574.

What you see

The interior unfolds with a vast Renaissance fresco programme initiated in the second decade of the sixteenth century. Artists from Leonardo’s workshop—possibly including Giovanni Antonio Boltraffio—decorated the walls while engaged on other major Milan commissions. The architectural vocabulary reflects the sophisticated classicism of Dolcebuono and Amadeo’s era, evident in proportions and detailing. Medieval elements survive: a polygonal tower from Maximian’s walls and a square tower repurposed from the Roman circus remain part of the complex.

Cultural significance

The frescoes earned the church its epithet—the “Sistine Chapel” of Milan or Lombardy. Praised by nineteenth-century critics including John Ruskin and Stendhal, the cycle documents the artistic reach of Leonardo’s school in northern Italy. The monastery’s role as the city’s leading female Benedictine house underscores its spiritual and cultural weight in Renaissance Milan.

Key facts

  • Address: Corso Magenta, 15, 20123 Milan
  • Coordinates: 45.46557866558083, 9.178905487060547
  • Began: 1503
  • Phone: 02 671316
  • Website: http://www.chiesadimilano.it

Practical information

Opening hours and admission prices are not listed; check the official website or call ahead. The site remains an active parish church with liturgical functions.

Getting there

San Maurizio is located in central Milan on corso Magenta, easily accessible by public transport. The address is Corso Magenta, 15, 20123.

Sources & resources

Editorial text © Cultural Heritage Online. Based on the Cultural Heritage Online legacy archive.

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