Italy, Emilia-Romagna, Bologna trip planner. Plan your travel route on map, share with your friends and family & find great vacation deals to Bologna with Voyajo
                    Destination creator (Voyajo Team)
                    
                    
                                 
                        Bologna (Bulåggna; pronounced in the Bolognese dialect of Emiliano-Romagnolo language) is the capital city of Emilia-Romagna, in the Po Valley of Northern Italy. The city lies between the Po River and the Apennine Mountains, more specifically, between the Reno River and the Savena River (...) (from Wikipedia).
Visit Website
 
                         
                    
                                   
                        
                                         
                    Destination trips content
                    
                            
                            From Trip: Europa
By: Anso
POI's:- Towers of Bologna
- Fountain of Neptune, Bologna
- Piazza Maggiore
From Trip: Discover the best of Italy
By: yolanda_strumpher
POI's:- Fountain of Neptune, Bologna
From Trip: Italy 2014
By: PW1
Day trip from Genoa
From Trip: Traveling to Portugal :)
By: ZigaVukcevic
POI's:- Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport
From Trip: Switserland and Italy
By: dupendup
Bologna: what to see
The city was built around Piazza Maggiore, famous for the Fountain of Neptune
by Giambologna and for the numerous buildings that overlook the piazza:
Basilica of San Petronio, Palazzo dei Notai, Palazzo d’Accursio, 
Palazzo del Podestà and Palazzo dei Banchi.
Before setting out to visit the various buildings, it is worth visiting the Salaborsa.
In the 19th century it was the centre of economic life, but today it is
a cultural space and multimedia library, one of the most frequented and
most popular meeting points for Bologna residents.
The Basilica of San Petronio,
built between 14th and 17th centuries, is the largest church in Bologna
and the fifth largest in Italy. There is a meridian dating to 1655 on 
its façade, while inside it houses paintings by Giovanni da Modena, 
Jacopo di Paolo, Lorenzo Costa and Amico Aspertini.
After visiting San Petronio, walk below the porticos of via Dell’Archiginnasio to get to Piazza Galvani where you will find the Archiginnasio of Bologna, part of the University of Bologna.
Returning to Piazza Maggiore, you can see Palazzo d’Accursio,
the Town Hall, which takes its name from the Accursio family from 
Bologna who once lived there. Its façade features the beautiful Madonna 
with Child, a gilded and polychrome terracotta sculpture dating to 1478,
and the Arch of Galeazzo Alessi built in the mid 16th century, upon 
which stands the bronze statue of Pope Gregory XIII.
On the north side of Piazza Maggiore are three buildings symbolising the city's municipal era: Palazzo del Podestà, Palazzo Re Enzo and Palazzo del Capitano del Popolo.
Other things to see in Bologna include Piazza della Mercanzia,
where Palazzo Mercanzia is located, a Gothic building which 
historically housed the Chamber of Commerce. The open gallery where 
goods were unloaded, construction of which began in 1384, is still 
visible today.
One of the most enchanting and 
suggestive walks of the city is just steps from the Piazza della 
Mercanzia: the complex of Santo Stefano, also known as the Seven Churches of Bologna.
It is a complex of courtyards and porticos of seven churches built over
the temple of the goddess Isis by Saint Petronius, patron saint of the 
city of Bologna, inspired by the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in 
Jerusalem.
The towers of Bologna
The two towers located at the entrance to the city on via Emilia are Bologna's undisputed landmark: the Asinelli Tower and the Garisenda Tower.
During the 12th and 13th centuries, the richest families in the city 
competed to build these edifices, symbols of power and used as defence 
structures and as a means of assertion. Today, only a few still stand, 
the survivors of fires, wars and the relentless passing of time. Of them
all, the Asinelli and Garisenda Towers are the most prominent and 
symbolic of the city.
Their current formation, standing 
independently in the centre of the widening of the piazza of Porta 
Ravegnana, does not reflect the original layout, which included external
wooden construction and suspended walkways.
The Asinelli Tower is 97.20 metres tall 
and was built between 1109 and 1119 by the noble Bolognese family of the
same name. The building is open to the public, and visitors can climb 
its 480 or more steps to the top for a beautiful view of the city and 
surrounding hills. On the way up, it is impossible not to be captivated 
by its architecture full of trap doors and suggestive wooden ladders 
like in an old castle.
The nearby Garisenda Tower
looks different, being shorter at 48 metres tall. The building dates to
the same period and was built by the Garisendi family. Due to its 
dangerous tilt, in the 14th century it was resized and the structure 
lowered.
From Trip: Itália
By: AnaLeonor
POI's:From Trip: elishajoy5's trip 1
By: elishajoy5
POI's:- Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport
 
                      
                    
                     
                    
                    Pictures
                    
                                           
                    
                                    
                               
                    Videos