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NEWSLETTER

 

Gigantic metropolis, historic towns and villages of sentimental charm for which poems and songs have been written. Poland officially has a total of 887 towns. The largest is Warsaw, with a population of 1.7 million, while the smallest Polish town has just 884 inhabitants.

The main cities are not only the capitals of their fast-developing regions, but also have their own unique character. Lodz is famed for its grand Piotrkowska Street and industrial sites of the 19th century. The city also offers Europe’s largest urban forest and Jewish cemetery.

Krakow, the historic capital of the kings who resided at the Wawel castle, is today Poland’s cultural and entertainment centre – it contains one quarter of the country’s museums. The city’s bars and restaurants are too numerous to count.

In Wroclaw, apart from the historic buildings of Ostrow Tumski, the Church of St Elizabeth and the Leopoldynska Hall, you can also see the post-modernist Hall of the Century, a reinforced concrete structure which was the most contemporary building of its time.

The Polish urban landscape is created not only by the giant cities, but also – and maybe most especially – by smaller towns. The country’s small provincial towns were rudely dismissed by the poet Andrzej Bursa. Was he right? Absolutely not! These places are exceptional.

Kazimierz Dolny, a town beloved by artists on the Vistula river. Sandomierz, with its numerous monuments standing above a maze of cellars carved out of the rock. Suwalki, with a street lined with buildings from the time of the Congress Kingdom. The military town of Borne Sulinowo, which for 40 years was not shown on any Polish map.

Then there is Plock, with its Romanesque cathedral and castle on the high banks of the Vistula, and Pultusk, with the longest marketplace in Europe. Next we have Biecz, an architectural miracle dating back 400 years, built from the profits of the local trade in Hungarian wine. Finally, there is Chelmno, an exemplary Teutonic Order town, which has retained its medieval layout and has not been disfigured by modern architecture and is also a Mecca for lovers (relics of St. Valentine can be found there).

Sandomierz

SandomierzThe medieval city of Sandomierz, located on seven hills, belongs to the most beautiful and oldest cities in Poland. Over 120 monuments of architecture dating back to various periods...

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Szydłów – a Polish Carcassone

Szydłów – a Polish CarcassoneSzydłów was named a Polish Carcassone many years ago because of its perfectly preserved medieval urban arrangement and town walls. Made of local limestone in the 14th century...

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Tricity (Trojmiasto)

Tricity (Trojmiasto)The neighbouring cities and town of Gdynia, Gdańsk and Sopot, form an extensive urban agglomeration called the Tricity along the Baltic Sea coast of northern Poland...

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Wiślica – the cradle of the Polish State

Wiślica – the cradle of the Polish StateAs old as over 1000 years the town of Wiślica is one of the oldest towns in Poland. Some sources say that it was here that the duke of the Wiślica accepted Christianity there in 880...

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Szczecin – the historic capital of the West Pomerania

Szczecin – the historic capital of the West PomeraniaSzczecin is situated at the beginning of the estuary of the Oder River (Odra), some 65 km from the Baltic Sea. Many centuries ago this region was the ducal territory of the aristocratic Griffin dynasty and the scene of stormy history which saw the numerous incorporations of Szczecin into other countries, Sweden, Prussia and Poland.

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Torun - the city of many nations

Torun - the city of many nationsThe Old and the New Town in Toruń, with the Teutonic Castle, were entered on the UNESCO list of the most important historic sites of world cultural heritage in 1997.

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Warsaw, capital of Poland

Warsaw, capital of PolandWelcome to Warsaw, the capital of Poland, a city worth seeing, which will captivate you with its own, distinctive atmosphere. It is worth staying there for a few days...

 

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Wroclaw Finally Gets Some Richly Deserved Respect

Wroclaw-korekta_800x256

Warsaw is the capital of Poland and Krakow is constantly being touted as the “exciting new” Prague, Budapest and Berlin all rolled together… but for my zloty (Polish currency) the real darling of Poland is Wroclaw (loosely pronounced Vrote-Suave) the capital of Lower Silesia in southern Poland.

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