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  1. circa 1615. Design and construction. Architect (s) Francesco Maria Richini. Other designers. Martino Bassi. Giuseppe Piermarini. Palazzo Brera or Palazzo di Brera is a monumental palace in Milan, in Lombardy in northern Italy. It was a Jesuit college for two hundred years.

  2. Palazzo di Brera. Author: Francesco Maria Richini. Location: Italy (Milano) Year: 1615. Function: Museum. Elements: Patio, Stair / Ramp. Status: Built. Palazzo Brera or Palazzo di Brera is a monumental palace in Milan, in Lombardy in northern Italy. It was a Jesuit college for two hundred years.

    • Jesuit Brera College1
    • Jesuit Brera College2
    • Jesuit Brera College3
    • Jesuit Brera College4
    • Jesuit Brera College5
  3. In 1773 due to the dissolution of the Jesuit order, the Brera College became state property, and Empress Maria Theresa of Austria wanted to make it the seat of some of the city’s most advanced cultural institutes that still exist today: the Academy of Fine Arts, the Lombard Institute for Science and Letters, the Braidense National Library ...

  4. Brera Academy. Coordinates: 45°28′20″N 9°11′17″E. The Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera ("academy of fine arts of Brera"), also known as the Accademia di Brera or Brera Academy, is a state-run tertiary public academy of fine arts in Milan, Italy.

  5. Jesuit College of Brera, Milan: Known for: Non-Euclidean geometry Saccheri quadrilateral Saccheri–Legendre theorem: Parent(s) Giovanni Felice Saccheri Maria Saccheri: Scientific career: Fields: Mathematics, geometry, logic: Institutions

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Tommaso_CevaTommaso Ceva - Wikipedia

    Jesuit College of Brera, Milan. Notable students. Giovanni Girolamo Saccheri. Carlo Archinto. Tommaso Ceva (December 20, 1648 – February 3, 1737) was an Italian Jesuit mathematician from Milan. He was the brother of Giovanni Ceva. His work aided in spreading a knowledge of Newton 's discovery of the law of gravitation .

  7. 5 de sept. de 2017 · The Jesuits made the College into a school of higher education able to award doctorates. It received a papal bull in 1572 from Pope Gregory XIII. The topics taught there were Holy Scripture, Scholastic theology, mathematics, philosophy, Greek, Hebrew, the humanities, rhetoric and grammar.