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Warsaw.d178317.Destination-Travel-Guides
For centuries Warsaw has been a center of refinement and knowledge. Its strategic position has also made it one of the most invaded countries in
Europe.
Shaped by history’s defining events,
World War Two, and the closing of the
Iron Curtain, Warsaw is a survivor, and has risen from the ashes of war and the shackles of
Communism.
Its true heart is its
Old Town, the site of the
Warsaw Uprising, one of the most heroic resistance actions ever seen against the nazis.
After the war much of it, such as the opulent
Royal Castle, was painstakingly rebuilt.
One of the few statues not destroyed by the
German army, is the mermaid
Syrena, the
symbol and protector of Warsaw.
Visit St Johns Cathedral and
St Anne’s Church, whose interior miraculously survived the war.
The Warsaw
Museum, is the keeping place of the city’s dramatic stories.
Warsaw University served as military barracks while education was mostly outlawed, but an underground “secret university” of more than
3000 students emerged.
The POLIN Museum of the
History of Polish Jews was once the infamous
Warsaw ghetto, where over 400,000 were incarcerated in just less than one and a half square miles. Nearby, the
Warsaw Uprising Monument and the
Warsaw Rising Museum pay tribute to one of the bravest chapters of the city’s history.
Visit the
Palace of Culture and Science, a gift to the
Polish people from
Stalin.
Stroll along the
Royal Route, a path once used by
Polish Kings, today a popular tourist walk, studded with historical sites.
Along
Nowy Swiat Street, pass the monument to Polish astronomer,
Nicolaus Copernicus.
Closer to the river is the
Copernicus Science Centre.
See the heart of another of Warsaw’s famous sons,
Fryderyk Chopin in the
Holy Cross Church. His music floats through
Lazienki Park, home to
Lazienki Palace.
The last stop on the Royal Route is
Wilanow Palace, with luxurious artworks and formal gardens.
Since the fall of the Iron Curtain,
Poland’s economy has boomed, reflected in the luxury malls, such as
Zlote Tarasy and the VITKAC
Department store.
Visit
Praga to discover venues like the
Soho Factory. An ammunition factory now home to a range of stylish shops and the
Neon Museum.
These reclaimed urban areas are perhaps the perfect reflection of Warsaw today.
- published: 20 Jul 2016
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