PIAZZA MAGGIORE
It is lovely to walk around Bologna under
the porticoes and look at the windows
of old shops or market stalls especially behind Piazza
Maggiore.
As
soon as you get to Piazza Maggiore, the heart of the city,
you'll come across the Fontana del Nettuno, one of the
symbols of Bologna. This beautiful fountain, dedicated
to the sea god, is the work of Giambologna and was built
between 1564 and 1566. The brass sirens and putti at the
base were made designed by Tommaso Laureti.

To the right you'll see Palazzo del Comune (town hall)
built in the 13th and 14th centuries and its bell tower
(1444) with a magnificent carillon clock. Three important
works of art are on the façade of the palace: the
Madonna di Piazza by Nicolò dell'Arca, the statue
of Pope Gregory XIII and an eagle attributed to Michelagelo.
Inside the building is marvellous and so are its treasures,
such as the Museo Morandi.

The square is dominated by the Church of San Petronio.
It was built by the Free Comune.
The church was meant to be bigger than St
Peter in Rome, but the money ran out and the building
remained unfinished.
The first foundation stone was laid in 1390 as planned
by Antonio di Vincenzo. The church was built over several
centuries.

The semicircular apse was completed only towards the middle
of the 17th century. The massive side walls were built
with the recycled materials from the nearby demolished
buildings. The base of the façade, which contrasts
with the unfinished upper part, is characterized by elegant
mouldings made of red Veronese marble and Istrian stone.
The
middle portal was ordered to Jacopo della Quercia in 1428.
When the artist died ten years later it had not yet been
completed.
The reliefs on it, the Old Testament on the
pillars, the New Testament on the architrave and the Madonna
della Lunetta, are to be considered as outstanding examples
of the sculpture of the uattrocento.
The inside is gothic,
with a nave and two aisles divided by 10 brickwork pillars
supporting ogival arches.
The aisles have 11 chapels each with polychrome window glasses. In the chapels, full of works ofart, are the
tombs of some of the most famous citizensof Bologna.
On the main altar is a monumaental tribune designed by
Jacopo Barozzi, known as the Vignola.
The sundial on the
floor is also worth seeing.
The campanile (bell tower)
dates back to the 15th century.
It stands on the external
walls of the last chapel on the right-hand side.
To the east of the square, opposite the church, stands
Palazzo di Re Enzo (King Enzo's Palace), built between
1244 and 1246. It was here that king Enzo, Frederick II's
son, defeated at the battle of Parma in 1248, was kept
prisoner from 1249 till his death in 1272
On the other side of the square you'll see
the Pavaglione, a mass of building whose porticoes are
a meeting point for the Bolognesi.
It is made of two buildings
planned by Terribilia: the Palazzo dell'Ospedale della
Morte (Palace of the Death Hospital) of the 16th century
and thePalazzo dell'Archiginnasio, built between1562 and 1563.
The former is the seat of the Museo Civico Archeologico,
which contains Palaeozoic, Etruscan and Roman finds, and
of the Museo Civico Medievale e del Risorgimento.
The Palazzo dell'Archiginnasio instead is the seat of
the Biblioteca Comunale with its 700,000 books, rare manuscripts
and codexes.
It is the most important public library in
Italy. It was the first seat of the University of Bologna
in the 16th century.

The walls inside are covered with the polychrome coats
of arms of the Italian and foreign students that attended
the university.
You can't miss the Teatro Anatomico (Anatomy Theater)
(1638-49), whose walls are covered with wood panels, statues
of famous ancient doctors and figures by Ercole Lelli
(1753).
Beyond these splendid buildings you'll
find a maze of alleys always full of people looking for
the typical products of Bolognese cuisine. You can't miss
this area just a few yards away from the marvellous Piazza
Maggiore
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