This is a preview of the content in our Bologna + Modena Art & Culture app. Get the app to:
  • Read offline
  • Remove ads
  • Access all content
  • Use the in-app Map to find sites, and add custom locations (your hotel...)
  • Build a list of your own favourites
  • Search the contents with full-text search functionality
  • ... and more!
iOS App Store Google Play

City of Towers

The Medieval Manhattan

Medieval Bologna Skyline

Imagine you're in the Middle Ages, on your way to Bologna over the Apennine foothills from Florence (that's walking, most likely, or horseback if you're a nobleman or a military captain, or on a mule if you're a posh cleric). If it's a clear day, you will see the city ten miles before you reach it, and it's an astounding sight: a dense forest of slender towers glittering on the plain, the skyline of a proper modern city.

It's hard to imagine, but most north Italian cities were like this. Before the 20th-century Americans, no people in history had such an insatiable lust for verticality as the medieval Italians. Between church campaniles, public buildings and private fortifications, towers of over 200 feet (and up to 500) were extremely common. The 'Two Towers' that serve as the mighty landmarks of Bologna's city centre today are among the few survivors. The remains or sites of 194 others have been located so far, and no doubt quite a few have disappeared altogether.

Read the full content in the app
iOS App Store Google Play

Medieval Art and Architecture

Towers and Gates

Text © Dana Facaros & Michael Pauls

Image by Angelo Finelli/Wikimedia