#5 Discover the best Etruscan display outside Lazio in Museo Civico Archeologico
In the Palazzo Galvani, the Museo Civico Archeologico has excellent displays of Egyptian and Roman antiquities, while the Etruscan section upstairs is one of the best outside Lazio, with finds from the settlement of Felsina, which predated Bologna.
There are good introductory panels to the Etruscan section in English, but you’ll need the English audio guide for more information.
#6 Drool at the food shops along Via Clavature
Via Clavature – together with nearby Via Pescerie Vecchie and Via Draperie – is lined with food shops that make for some of the city’s most enticing sights.
In autumn, especially, the market is a visual feast, with fat porcini mushrooms, truffles in baskets of rice, thick rolls of mortadella, hanging pheasants, ducks and hares, and skinned frogs by the kilo.
At no. 10, the church of Santa Maria della Vita holds an outstanding Compianto del Cristo Morto by Niccolò dell’Arca – seven life-sized terracotta figures that are among the most dramatic examples of Renaissance sculpture you’ll see.
#7 Visit Europe’s oldest university, The Archiginnasio
Bologna’s old university – the Archiginnasio – was founded at more or less the same time as Piazza Maggiore was laid out, predating the rest of Europe’s universities.
Although it didn’t get its own home until 1565, when Antonio Morandi was commissioned to construct the present building on the site until then reserved for San Petronio.
You can wander into the main courtyard, covered with the coats of arms of its more illustrious graduates, and visit the library and the heavily decorated Sala dello Stabat Mater, where Rossini’s work of that name was first performed in 1842, conducted by Donizzetti.