Piazza Maggiore, Bologna — Visitor Guide & Things to Do Nearby
About Piazza Maggiore
Piazza Maggiore is the beating heart of Bologna and one of the most significant public squares in Italy. It was the first major public square built after the fall of the Roman Empire, created around 1200 when the municipality began demolishing buildings to carve out a civic gathering space.
The square is framed by five historic buildings: the Basilica di San Petronio (one of the largest churches in the world, still unfinished after 600 years), the Palazzo d'Accursio (city hall), the Palazzo del Podesta, the Palazzo dei Notai, and the Palazzo dei Banchi. Each tells a different chapter of Bologna's story.
One of the square's most intriguing features is practical: medieval standard measurement units are carved into the walls of Palazzo d'Accursio, put there so merchants couldn't cheat customers at the market.
The "Crescentone," the crescent-shaped pedestrian platform added in 1934, still bears visible damage from an American tank that crossed it on April 21, 1945, the day Bologna was liberated. The marks have been deliberately left unrepaired.
Under the Palazzo del Podesta portico, there's a perfect acoustic anomaly: whispers carry clearly across 20 metres, a phenomenon that delights visitors who discover it.
Bologna students have a superstition: crossing the square diagonally will delay your graduation. If you're on a Questo quest through Bologna, Piazza Maggiore is a stop where medieval engineering, wartime scars, and local superstitions share the same stone.
Plan Your Visit
- Address
- Piazza Maggiore, 1, 40124 Bologna BO, Italy
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