Palazzo Arese Bethlen Explained

Palazzo Arese Bethlen
Status:destroyed
Address:via Monte di Pietà 11
Location Town:Milan
Owner:Francesco Teodoro Arese Lucini
Location Country:Italy
Start Date:1828
Coordinates:45.4696°N 9.1905°W
Destruction Date:1943

Palazzo Arese-Bethlen was a neoclassical palazzo in Milan situated on what is now via Monte di Pietà 11. It was destroyed in 1943 following the bombing of Milan in World War II.

History

The palazzo was constructed in 1828 by Francesco Teodoro Arese Lucini, designed by Pelagio Pelagi.[1] The home was built in the centre of Milan, on the large garden of the monastery of Sant Agostino Neri. After the death of count Arese the palazzo was sold to the Hungarian Bethlen family. Because of its central location and vast gardens, the building and grounds were eventually subdivided and sold to developers. When the Bethlen family abandoned the palazzo, it was divided into smaller apartments until it was demolished by developers following damage sustained in the bombing of Milan in World War II, even if this only damaged the central part of the construction and not its wings.[2]

See also

References

  1. Mazzocca. Fernando. Francesco Teodoro Arese Lucini, Un Mecenate Milanese Del Risorgimento. Arte Lombarda, Nuova Serie. no. 83 (4). 80–96.
  2. Web site: Contributo a una bibliografia dei palazzi privati di Milano dal XIV secolo all'età neoclassica. Comune of Milan.