These are excerpts from articles about places in Poland that appear on the Poland Portal. See talk page for instructions about adding new articles.
Portal:Poland/Selected location/1
Kraków's Grand Square (Rynek Główny)
Kraków, situated on the
Vistula River in the
Lesser Poland region, is one of the largest and oldest cities in Poland, dating back to the 7th century. As Poland's capital city from 1038 to 1596, Kraków has traditionally been one of the leading centres of Polish scientific, cultural and artistic life, and it remains the spiritual heart of Poland. It is a major tourist attraction whose landmarks include the
Main Market Square with
St. Mary's Basilica and the
Cloth Hall (pictured), the
Royal Castle and
cathedral on the Wawel Hill, and the medieval
St Florian's Gate with the
Barbican along the
Royal Coronation Route. (
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Portal:Poland/Selected location/2
Palace of Culture and Science
Warsaw (
Warszawa) is the capital and, with a population of over 1.7 million, the largest city of Poland. Founded in 1300 on the
Vistula River, Warsaw became the seat of the
dukes of Masovia in 1413.
Masovia was annexed by Poland in 1526, and 70 years later, in 1596, King
Sigismund III moved his seat from
Kraków to Warsaw. The rise in political status was accompanied by strong economic and cultural development. Occupied by
Nazi Germany during
World War II, Warsaw was the site of the
Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943 and the
Warsaw Uprising in 1944, followed by a complete destruction of the city. Painstakingly rebuilt in the
Communist era, Warsaw is now an increasingly important political and economic hub of Central Europe. (
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Medieval port crane in Gdańsk
Gdańsk is Poland's principal seaport located in the
Kashubian region on the
Baltic Sea. Together with the spa town of
Sopot and the industrial city of
Gdynia, it forms a
conurbation known as
Trójmiasto ("Tricity"). It has a complex political history with long spells of Polish rule interspersed with periods of German control and two spells as a free city. As an important port and shipbuilding center, the picturesque city was a member of the
Hanseatic League. For much of its history the majority of its inhabitants were German speakers who referred to their city as
Danzig, but after
World War II it became firmly Polish. Gdańsk is the birthplace of the
Solidarity movement which, led by
Lech Wałęsa, played a role in bringing down the communist rule across Central Europe. (
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St. Nicholas Orthodox Church in Białystok
Białystok is the largest city in north-eastern Poland, located close to the Belarusian border. Originally part of the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania, it was annexed by
Prussia in the
Third Partition of Poland in 1795 only to pass into Russian hands with the
Treaty of Tilsit of 1807. Under Russian rule, it enjoyed an economic boom fueled by development of
textile industry. The city was predominantly Jewish, but most of Białystok's Jewish population was exterminated by the
Nazis during the city's German occupation in 1941–1944, despite its resistance in the
Białystok Ghetto Uprising. In addition to textiles, Białystok is a large producer of alcoholic beverages and home of the
Żubrówka vodka. (
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Portal:Poland/Selected location/5
Silesian Planetarium in Chorzów
Chorzów is a city on the
Rawa River in
Upper Silesia and part of the
Upper Silesian Metropolitan Union, Poland's largest
conurbation. Originally called
Königshütte in German and
Królewska Huta in Polish (both meaning "Royal Iron Works"), it was renamed Chorzów after a merger with a village of that name in 1934. Chorzów used to be one of the most important cities of the
Upper Silesian Industrial Region with extensive industry in
coal mining, steel, chemistry, manufacturing, and energy sectors. As heavy-industry establishments were either closed or scaled down, or restructured and modernized, the city has been evolving towards
service economy. Chorzów is nationally famous for its
Silesian Central Park, complete with amusement grounds, a cable line railway, a
zoo, a
sports stadium, and
the largest and oldest planetarium in Poland (pictured). (
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Izrael Poznański's Palace in Łódź
Łódź, located in central Poland, is one of the country's largest cities. Although dating back as far as the 14th century, the city's growth began under
Russian rule in the 1820s as immigrants were attracted by its booming
textile industry. Nicknamed "promised land", its character was shaped by its Polish, Jewish, German and Russian population. During the
Nazi German occupation, it was renamed
Litzmannstadt and became the site of the second largest
Jewish ghetto. After
World War II, Łódź became the principal center of Polish
filmmaking and home of the
National Film School. As textile industry collapsed following the fall of communism, Łódź has attracted investment in the
IT sector, from companies including
Dell and
Infosys. (
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Szczecin as seen from the Oder River
Szczecin is one of Poland's largest seaports, located at the mouth of the
Oder River where it empties into the
Szczecin Lagoon. It is the capital city of the
West Pomeranian Voivodeship, a region in the northwestern part of the country. Founded by the
Slavs in the 8th century, it passed into German, Danish and Swedish hands during the course of history. In 1720, following the
Great Northern War, Sweden ceded Stettin, as it was then known, to
Prussia. Nine years later it became the birthplace of Sophie Friederike Auguste von Anhalt-Zerbst-Dornburg, better known as Empress
Catherine the Great of Russia. After the city's destruction during
World War II and subsequent
expulsion of its German population, Szczecin was rebuilt and resettled with Poles and Ukrainians. Its major industries include
shipbuilding,
metallurgy,
fishing and
beer making. (
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Portal:Poland/Selected location/8
Courtyard of the Lublin Castle
Lublin is the largest city in eastern Poland. Dating back to early Middle Ages, the city played an important role in the nation's history. It was the site of the
Lublin Union which established the
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1569, and of the
Lublin Committee which introduced the communist regime in Poland in 1944; seat of a major
yeshiva and the Jewish
Council of Four Lands in the 16th–18th centuries, but also of the
Majdanek extermination camp during the
Holocaust. Its colleges include the
Marie Curie University, as well as the
Catholic University of Lublin where Karol Wojtyła, the future
Pope John Paul II, gave lectures in ethics. Since Lublin's biggest employer, the state-owned truck manufacturer
FSC, was acquired by the South Korean
Daewoo and then entered bankruptcy in 2001, the city has been struggling to improve its economic performance and standards of living, making it one of the main beneficiaries of
EU development funds. (
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Portal:Poland/Selected location/9
The Spodek multipurpose sports arena at night
Katowice, located on the
Kłodnica and
Rawa rivers in the
Silesian Highlands, is the capital city of the
Silesian Voivodeship. With 312,201 inhabitants, it is the largest city of the
Upper Silesian Industry Area and the principal scientific, cultural, industrial, business and transport center of the region. Before
World War II, Katowice was the seat of the
Silesian Sejm, the legislature of the
Silesian Voivodeship. The multipurpose arena complex known as
Spodek, or "Saucer"
(pictured), is the city's most recognizable landmark. (
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Portal:Poland/Selected location/10
Roman Catholic Cathedral of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Masovia in Płock
Płock is a town on the
Vistula River in the western part of the
Masovian Voivodeship. During the reigns of
Vladislaus Herman and
Boleslaus the Wrymouth in the 10th–11th centuries, Płock was briefly Poland's capital city, and later served as one of the seats of the
dukes of Masovia. The town has two cathedrals: the Roman Catholic
Cathedral of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Masovia (pictured) where Vladislaus and Boleslaus are buried, and the
Temple of Mercy and Charity, the principal seat of the
Mariavite Church, a native Polish branch of Christianity. Płock is home to Poland's largest
oil refinery, owned by
PKN Orlen and served by the
Druzhba ("Friendship") pipeline linking Russia with Germany. (
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Portal:Poland/Selected location/11
Słupsk is a city on the
Słupia River, 18 km away from the
Baltic Sea coast. It dates back to a medieval
Slavic settlement on a ford along a trade route connecting eastern and western parts of
Pomerania.
Incorporated in 1265, the town gradually fell under
Brandenburgian rule, becoming a German town known as
Stolp. In Polish hands since the end of
World War II, Słupsk is developing thanks to local footwear industry and a bus factory owned by
Scania. With the election of
Robert Biedroń in 2014, it became the first town in Poland with an openly gay mayor. (
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Portal:Poland/Selected location/12
Centennial Square in Sosnowiec
Sosnowiec is a city located in the
Upper Silesian Metropolitan Union, although, historically and culturally, it is part of the Dąbrowskie Basin (
Zagłębie Dąbrowskie). Thanks to rich natural resources and a strategic location on the border of
Russian,
German and
Austro-Hungarian empires, the village of Sosnowiec grew rapidly during the 19th century and was granted a town charter in 1902. Another period of vigorous development occurred in the 1970s, when
Edward Gierek, a native of Sosnowiec, served as first secretary of the communist
Polish United Workers' Party. On the city's centennial in 2002, the city center
(pictured) was thoroughly rebuilt and modernized. Some coal mines and steel mills continue to operate in Sosnowiec as trade and service sectors are expanding. (
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Portal:Poland/Selected location/13
Wrocław, situated on the
Oder River in
Lower Silesia, is the fourth largest city in Poland. Dating back to the 11th century, the city has changed its allegiance and name several times in history, and has been known as
Vratislav in Czech and
Breslau in German. An important economic and cultural hub of eastern Germany until
World War II, it can boast
eleven Nobel prize winners who were born or lived in Breslau. The picturesque historic center was destroyed during the
Siege of Breslau at the end of the war, but then meticulously rebuilt and is now a popular tourist attraction, along with the
Centennial Hall and the
Racławice Panorama. Modern Wrocław is a growing high-tech and financial center of Poland. (
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Portal:Poland/Selected location/14
Zielona Góra is a city in western Poland. Prior to
World War II it was part of the German province of
Brandenburg and known as
Grünberg; both Polish and German names mean "Green Mountain". Grünberg grew during the 19th century thanks to booming textile industry. Today it is the seat of the legislature (
sejmik) of the
Lubusz Voivodeship. The surrounding area is one few places in Poland that are suitable for growing grapes. Wine has been produced locally since the 13th century and a
wine festival has taken place annually since 1852. The best known modern local wine is called
Monte Verde, which is the city's name in Latin. (
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Nowa Huta is an industrial easternmost district of the city of
Kraków. Its history began in 1949, when Poland's communist government started to build the Lenin Steelworks (now
Tadeusz Sendzimir Steelworks owned by
Mittal Steel Company) together with a town for the workers. Nowa Huta, whose name translates as "New Steelworks", was meant to be an ideal
socialist and
atheist proletarian town supposed to counterbalance Kraków's conservative
bourgeoisie. It is Poland's foremost example of
socialist realist urban planning and architecture. The workers eventually turned against the communist regime when they demanded – with the help of Archbishop Karol Wojtyła, the future
Pope John Paul II – the right to build a church in the 1960s; and when they supported the
Solidarity movement in the 1980s. (
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Poznań is the fifth largest city in Poland and one of the nation's oldest. In the early years of Poland's history, it was the seat of Polish rulers, some of whom are buried in the
Poznań Cathedral. Located on the
Warta river in west-central Poland, it is now the capital of
Greater Poland and an important centre of education, industry, and trade, hosting regular
international trade fairs. With high
GDP per capita and low unemployment, it is Poland's most prosperous city after
Warsaw. The city's most important cultural event is the annual
Malta Theatre Festival. (
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Portal:Poland/Selected location/17
A wisent in the Białowieża Forest
The
Białowieża Forest, an ancient woodland straddling the Polish-Belarusian border, is one of the last and largest remaining parts of the immense
primeval forest which once spread across the
European Plain. It is home to the
wisent (pictured),
elk,
wild boars,
konik horses, and other animals. Its name,
Puszcza Białowieska in
Polish and
Belavezhskaya Pushcha in
Belarusian, comes from the village of
Białowieża located in the forest. Historically it belonged to Polish kings and, later, Russian emperors who used it as royal hunting grounds or food reserve for the army. It has been protected since 1538 when King
Sigismund I instituted death penalty for poaching the wisent. Today parts of the forest on both sides of the border are protected as national parks, a
UNESCO World Heritage Site and a
Biosphere Reserve. (
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Portal:Poland/Selected location/18
Swoboda Lock on the Augustów Canal
The
Augustów Canal is a
summit-level canal which links the
Biebrza River in northeastern Poland with the
Neman River in Belarus. At over 100 km long, it comprises 18
locks (example pictured) and 22
sluice gates. Ever since the canal was built in 1823−1839 to provide a navigable waterway from the
"Congress" Kingdom of Poland to the
Baltic Sea bypassing
Prussia, it has been described by experts as a technological marvel. It uses a post-glacial channel depression, forming the chain of Augustów Lakes, and the river valleys of the Biebrza,
Netta,
Czarna Hańcza, and Neman, which made it possible to perfectly integrate the canal with the surrounding elements of the natural environment. Although the project was never finalized, the completed part of the Augustów Canal remained an inland waterway of local significance used for commercial shipping to and from the
Vistula and Neman Rivers until rendered obsolete by the regional railway network. (
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Portal:Poland/Selected location/19
Old Town Hall of Toruń by night
Toruń is a city on the
Vistula River in northern Poland. Known in German as
Thorn, it was founded by the
Teutonic Knights in 1233 and ceded to the
Kingdom of Poland under the terms of a
treaty signed here in 1466. Seven years later, it became the birthplace of
Nicolaus Copernicus. Today, Toruń is the seat of the legislature (
sejmik) of the
Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, forming with the city of
Bydgoszcz, its western neighbor, the
Bydgoszcz-Toruń metropolitan area. With its medieval spatial layout preserved almost intact and with many
brick Gothic buildings, including the town hall, churches and burgher houses, Toruń is a popular tourist attraction and a
UNESCO World Heritage Site. It is also famous for
its traditional gingerbread flavored with honey and spices. (
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Portal:Poland/Selected location/20
Bydgoszcz is a city in northern Poland, straddling the confluence of the
Vistula River and its left-bank tributary, the
Brda. It is the eighth-largest city in Poland and the co-capital, with
Toruń, of the
Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship. Bydgoszcz is an architecturally rich city, with
gothic,
neo-gothic,
neo-baroque,
neoclassicist,
modernist and
Art Nouveau styles present, for which it has earned the nickname "Little Berlin". The notable granaries on
Mill Island and along the riverside belong to one of the most recognized
timber-framed landmarks in Poland. (
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