[2] The commercial importance of this land for the Pars Occidentalis Roman Empire alludes as to the presence of buildings and property connected to Monza and Milan.
[11] In 1539 the Humiliatis were moved to the monastery of Saint Catherine alla Chiusa of Milan by Pope Paul III.
[15][16] The absence of the nuns and the transfer of the relics of the Magi marked the beginning of the farm's decline[17] until the suppression of monastic orders by Napoleon.
In 1925 it was passed on to the Cavajoni-Bologna family, that radically restored the farmhouse and church in 1952, on the anniversary of the monastic consecration of Marcellina.
Having been built in the fourth century,[24] the structure of the farm is not the original one due to posterior restructuring work.
[25] The interior has a U-shaped lock with a long porch, composed by eighteen granite arcades,[24] reminiscent of the cloister.
[5][26] The façade facing Via dei Mille is decorated with wrought-iron balconies[26] and was connected with a leafy avenue to the city center.