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Which university in Italy is the best?
The University of Bologna in Italy is the best.

Italian universities are divided into super-large national universities, large national universities, medium-sized national universities, small national universities, polytechnics and non-national universities.

According to the grading standard, it is the service, communication level, employment ability and internationalization degree provided by colleges and universities.

Among them, national universities are divided into super-large universities (Mega, with more than 40,000 students), large universities (Grandi, with 20,000-40,000 students), medium-sized universities (Medi, with 654.38+0-20,000 students), small universities (Piccoli, with 6,543,800 students) and Politecnici (.

Although non-state universities are only 16, they are also divided into large universities, medium universities and small universities. Among the super-large national universities (universities with more than 40,000 students), the University of Bologna once again topped the list, ranking first in Italy. Followed by the University of Padua ranked second, and the University of Rome ranked third.

The above data comes from a trip to Italy.

Brief introduction of Bologna University:

University of Bologna (Italian: Università? Di Bologna; English: The University of Bologna is a top international comprehensive university, located in Bologna, the capital of Emilia-Romagne Region.

Founded in 1088- Holy Roman Empire, it is recognized as the first university in the world with a complete university system and development, and is known as the "mother of world universities".

In medieval and modern Europe, Latin was the main language for learning and research. The University of Bologna always maintained the central position of European culture and academic development, leading the reform of European university system. The official Latin school name is literally translated as "Alma Mater Studiorum".

1988 In the Charter of European Universities signed by the presidents of 430 universities in Europe, the University of Bologna was officially declared as the alma mater of all universities in Europe.

In the history of more than 900 years, many outstanding alumni have emerged, including Dante, the pioneer of Renaissance, Copernicus, the astronomer who proposed Heliocentrism, and other famous figures such as Petrarch, Diu Lei, Erasmus, Gordoni, Marconi and umberto Eco, who all studied or taught here.