Title: CRACOW OLD CITY
1CRACOW OLD CITY
2History of Cracow
- In 1257 Cracow was rebuilt and received city
rights under Magdebur Law. The city was growing
and in 1364 Kazimierz III founded the Univeristy
of Cracow, which was the second in central
Europe. Until 1596 Cracow was the Polish capital,
when it was moved to the more central Warsaw. In
the late 18th century Cracow became a part of the
Austrian province of Galicia.
3Tadeusz Kosciuszko initiated a revolt, the
Kosciuszko insurrection, in Cracow's Market
Square in 1794. The Prussian army put down the
revolt, and looted Polish royal treasure kept in
the city. The Congress of Vienna (1815) gave
Cracow independance as the Free City of Cracow.
The city again became the focus of a struggle for
national sovereignty in 1846, during the Cracow
Uprising. The uprising failed to spread outside
the city to other Polish-inhabited lands, and was
put down, resulting in Cracow's annexation by
Austria. Under Austrian protection Cracow became
a Polish national symbol and a center of culture
and art.
4- During the Second World War, over 150 professors
and other academics of the Jagiellonian
University were summoned to a meeting, arrested
and dispatched to the concentration camp at
Sachsenhausen. Many relics and monuments of
national culture were destroyed or looted. Cracow
escaped complete destruction during the German
withdrawal and much of the historic buildings and
works of art were saved. In 1978, UNESCO placed
Cracow on the list of World Heritage Sites.
5ROYAL WAWEL CASTLE
- The old city of Cracow has a rich architecture.
First of all, there is the Royal Wawel Castle, a
site of royal coronations and royal sepulchres.
Wawel was the seat of national government. This
status was only lost when the capital was moved
to Warsaw in the 17th century. Sigismund's Chapel
is also situated on the Wawel Hill. It was
founded by king Sigmund I. Built as a tomb chapel
of the last Jagiellons, it was hailed by many
historians of art as the most beautiful example
of renaissance.
6St. Marys Church
- On the Market Square there are St. Mary's
Church, The Cloth Hall, the Town Hall, St.
Wojciechs Church and more monuments. St. Marys
Church is a Brick Gothic church built in the 14th
century. It is particularly famous for its wooden
altarpiece carved by Veit Stoss. On every hour, a
trumpet signal called the hejnal is played from
the top of the taller of St. Mary's two towers.
7The Cloth Hall
The Cloth Hall - the world's oldest shopping mall
has been in business in the middle of Krakow's
central Grand Square for 700 years. After the
1555 fire the Cloth Hall was rebuilt as a
Renaissance building with an ornate roof adorned
with grotesque masks.
- Nowadays stalls on the ground floor and shops
in the arcades mostly sell assorted souvenirs.
Upstairs Cracow National Museum exhibits
collection of the 19th century Polish art,
including Jan Matejko's famous movie-like giant
paintings.
8Defence wall
- At the end of Florianska Street there are the
Florianska Gate and the Barbakan. The Barbakan
used to protect the main entrance of the city
the Florianska Gate. This gate as a rectangular
Gothic tower of wild stone has been the part of
defence wall. At the Florianska Gate Krakow's
Royal Road begins. Here entered kings and
princes, foreign envoys and guests of
distinction, coronation processions and other
parades, to move up the Florianska Street to the
central Market Square, and further down the
Grodzka Street to the Wawel Royal Castle.