Porta Monforte
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Porta_Monforte an entity of type: Thing
Porta Monforte è stata una delle cinque porte più recenti di Milano, ricavata lungo i bastioni spagnoli, oggi demoliti, per consentire una più diretta comunicazione fra la città e il nuovo asse stradale costituito dagli attuali Corso Concordia e Corso Indipendenza. Posta a est della città, si costituiva di due caselli daziari (1889), demoliti nel 1919. Sorgeva al centro dell'attuale Piazza del Tricolore, allo sbocco di Corso Monforte.
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Porta Monforte is a district ("quartiere") of Milan, Italy, located within the Zone 3 administrative division. It is named after the eponymous city gate, which was added in the 1890s to the existing Spanish walls of the city. The gate was meant to serve as a customs office; the tax booths were designed by Luigi Tormenti and completed in 1889. While the addition of the Monforte city gate was intended to absorb part of the traffic going through Porta Venezia and Porta Vittoria, Porta Monforte remained a minor gate. The gate itself has since been demolished; it was located in what is now Piazza del Tricolore ("Tricolour Square").
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Porta Monforte
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Porta Monforte
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Porta Monforte
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Porta Monforte is a district ("quartiere") of Milan, Italy, located within the Zone 3 administrative division. It is named after the eponymous city gate, which was added in the 1890s to the existing Spanish walls of the city. The gate was meant to serve as a customs office; the tax booths were designed by Luigi Tormenti and completed in 1889. While the addition of the Monforte city gate was intended to absorb part of the traffic going through Porta Venezia and Porta Vittoria, Porta Monforte remained a minor gate. The gate itself has since been demolished; it was located in what is now Piazza del Tricolore ("Tricolour Square"). Porta Monforte was the scene of some of the most dramatic events in the Milan riots of 1898, when the Italian army's artillery bombed a local monastery, killing hundreds of beggars that were standing in line to receive assistance and food.
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Porta Monforte è stata una delle cinque porte più recenti di Milano, ricavata lungo i bastioni spagnoli, oggi demoliti, per consentire una più diretta comunicazione fra la città e il nuovo asse stradale costituito dagli attuali Corso Concordia e Corso Indipendenza. Posta a est della città, si costituiva di due caselli daziari (1889), demoliti nel 1919. Sorgeva al centro dell'attuale Piazza del Tricolore, allo sbocco di Corso Monforte.
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