Bologna
The best way to study Italian in Bologna, to visit the most beautiful places, to dine in the most characteristic restaurants is to choose the tailor-made course in Bologna by Italian tutor.
At the foot of the Appennine Mountains, just 80 km from the sea, Bologna’s economic and cultural vitality is due to its position. Bologna was born around 1000 B.C, developed significantly in the Etruscan age and became a strategic hub in the Roman road system. Since then Bologna has had a central role in the connections between northern and southern Italy and between Europe and the Mediterranean Sea.
Its university, the most ancient in Europe, turned Bologna into a global city. Its people have been welcoming people from all around the world for hundreds of years. That is why people from Bologna are very warm and open towards other cultures.
The best way to learn Italian in Bologna, to visit the most beautiful places, to dine in the most characteristic restaurants is to choose the tailor-made course in Bologna by Italian tutor.

Bologna is a beautiful town thanks to its great monuments and its urban structure which still preserves its prosperous medieval aspect. The colour red characterises the facades and roofs of the buildings. Its porticos are 40 kilometres long and make Bologna unique in the world. They are a meeting point and a shelter when the weather is bad and they also host beautiful shops and workshops.


Bologna is the food capital of Italy
It’s very lively but it is not too chaotic unlike other big tourist cities. It’s the ideal place for an immersion in Italian culture, art and language. Sometime ago the uniqueness of Bologna hit the news.
The prestigious British newspaper “The Telegraph” published on its website an article in which the journalist Nick Gordon described his stay in the ‘city of the two towers’. He came to Bologna to improve his Italian and described the town as, “the best Italian place to learn Italian because people are welcoming, there are not too many tourists unlike in Rome and Florence and you can find great Italian courses”.
Gordon decided to come to the capital of Emilia-Romagna to study Italian because: ‘I wasn’t looking for a small city because I wanted an enjoyable atmosphere, but I wanted to avoid tourists who can speak English. The best way to learn italian? Bologna was the ideal solution”.

Well-known for its wine, its food and its enjoyable life-style, Bologna is very well-connected (less than an hour by train) to other marvellous Italian towns like Ferrara, Ravenna, Padua and Florence.
Ravenna