Zamek Królewski (Royal Castle)
Walking through the Royal Castle, you have to constantly remind yourself that most of it was reconstructed between 1971 and 1984, although the darker elements of the décor were actually salvaged from the ruins. The castle, located on a plateau overlooking the Vistula River, was built for the Dukes of Mazovia and expanded when King Zygmunt III Vasa moved the capital to Warsaw. From the early 17th until the late 18th century, this was the seat of the Polish kings. It subsequently housed the parliament and is now a museum displaying tapestries, period furniture, coffin portraits and collections of porcelain and other decorative arts. Work is underway to recreate the castle gardens, set on the slopes of the Vistula River, which were also badly scarred when the Nazis levelled the rest of the castle complex.
Plac Zamkovy 4 (ticket office situated at Ulica Swietojanska 2)
Tel: (022) 355 5170.
Website: www.zamek-krolewski.com.pl
Opening hours: Tues-Sat 1000-1800, Sun and Mon 1100-1800. Last visitors admitted an hour before closing.
Admission charge; free admission on Mondays (Jul-Sep).
Łazienki Park
In addition to a number of palaces, Łazienki Park contains the Chopin Monument (where the annual Chopin Festival is held each summer, with free concert recitals in the park twice on Sunday from June to August) and the Orangerie, set within extensive 18th-century gardens. Pałac Na Wyspie (Palace on the Water) is best viewed from near the monument to Jan Sobiewski, on the bridge where Ulica Agrykola crosses the water. Originally built in 1624, for King Zygmunt III Vasa, Zamek Ujazdowski (Ujazdowski Castle) now houses the Centre of Contemporary Art, although the centre is set to move locations in the coming years. The 1764 Pałac Belweder (Belvedere Palace) was the residence of King Stanislaus Augustus Poniatowski and later of Poland's 20th-century presidents. On warm summer days, rowing boats offer short cruises around the park's lake. Cycling is banned in the park.
Ulica Agrykola 1
Tel: (022) 625 7944.
Website: www.lazienki-krolewskie.pl
Opening hours: Most museums are open Tues-Sun 0900-1600; park open daily from 0800 until sunset.
Free admission to the park; charge for Palace on the Water and for the Orangerie.
Wilanów Palace
In the mid 1600s, King Jan III Sobieski commissioned Augustyn Locci to build the baroque palace and garden of Wilanów for his summer residence. Construction continued from 1677 until the king's death in 1696. It remained popular with subsequent monarchs. Visitors can tour the interior and the gallery, which features portraits of famous Poles. Artistic handicrafts are on display in the Orangerie. Also here is the Muzeum Plakatu w Wilanowie (Poster Museum at Wilanow), the first of its kind in the world. Entrance to the palace requires a guide, for a group of one to 35 people, although the park is open to unaccompanied visitors. Restoration work is ongoing but affects few visits.
Ulica Wiertnicza 1
Tel: (022) 842 8101.
Website: www.wilanow-palac.art.pl
Opening hours: Palace open Mon, Wed and Sat 0930-1830, Tues, Thurs and Fri 0930-1630, Sun 1030-1830 (May-mid Sep); Mon and Wed-Sat 0930-1630, Sun 1030-1630 (mid Sep-May); park open daily 0900 until sunset.
Admission charge for both the park and the palace; free admission to the park on Thursdays and the palace on Sundays.
Pawiak Prison
This eerie old prison symbolises the oppression that has haunted Varsovians over the last two centuries. Originally built in the 1830s, at the order of the ruling Czars, the prison incarcerated many victims of the Nazi reign of terror from 1939-1944, when it served as the largest political prison in Poland. A third of the estimated 100,000 detainees never made it out alive. The Nazis tried to dynamite the evidence of their crimes as they left but Pawiak is back as a museum and a testament to the city's seemingly endless ability to suffer and survive.
Ulica Dzielna 24/26
Tel: (022) 831 1317.
Opening hours: Wed and Fri 0900-1700, Thurs and Sat 0900-1600, Sun 1000-1600.
Free admission.
Narodowe (National Museum)
The National Museum's impressive art collection dates from ancient times to the present day. Highlights include Jan Matejko's monumental Battle of Grunwald (1878), which celebrates the Polish victory over the Teutonic Knights in 1410, and a collection of Egyptian art, which is unique in Europe. Unusually, there are also galleries of Polish and European decorative arts. Frequent temporary exhibitions bring prized international works (from Andy Warhol to Caravaggio) to Warsaw.
Aleje Jerozolimskie 3
Tel: (022) 621 1031.
Website: www.mnw.art.pl
Opening hours: Permanent galleries Tues-Sun 1000-1600; temporary galleries Tues-Wed 1000-1600, Thurs-Fri 1000-2000, Sat-Sun 1000-1700.
Admission charge; free on Saturdays
Katedra Św Jana (St John's Cathedral)
St John's is claimed to be the oldest church in Warsaw. Although a major church in the Mazovian gothic style, completed in the 15th century, St John's was only upgraded from a parish church to a cathedral in 1798. Destroyed during WWII, it has been reconstructed in its original style and features major gothic art works by Wit Stwosz. The cathedral was used in 1764 for the coronation of the last Polish king (Stanislaw II) and for the swearing in of the Sejm (Polish parliament) after the constitution of 1791. The covered footbridge connecting it to the Royal Palace was the result of a failed assassination attempt on King Zygmunt III.
Ulica Świętojaęska 8
Tel. (022) 831 0289.
Opening hours: Mon-Sat 1000-1800, Sun 1400-1800 (cathedral); daily 1000-1300 and 1500-1730 (crypt).
Free admission to cathedral; admission charge for the crypt.
Getto Żydowskie (Jewish Ghetto)
What is markedly absent from Warsaw contributes as much to its history as anything that has been preserved or reconstructed. Pre-war Warsaw had a Jewish population second only to New York. After the Nazi invasion, some 380,000 Jews were rounded up and forced into the city's Jewish ghetto. A 3m- (10ft-) high wall encircled the area, from the Palace of Culture and Science to the Umschlagplatz monument, corner of Ulica Stawki and Ulica Dzika. This stark monument, erected in the late 1980s, marks the place from where Jews were despatched by train to the Treblinka concentration camp, following the Ghetto Uprising of 19 April 1943. The centre of the ghetto is marked by the Monument to the Ghetto Heroes, Ulica L Zamenhofa, which was erected on a sea of ruins in 1948. Other memorials are the Monument of the Killed and Murdered in the East, Ulica Muranowska, and the 1944 Warsaw Uprising Monument, Plac Krasinskich. Only three sections of the actual ghetto wall remain.
You can pick up the ‘Jewish Warsaw' leaflet from tourist centres; it highlights places of interest that connect to Jewish history. Notable points include: the Nożyk Synagogue, which is the only existing Warsaw synagogue to have survived the war, possibly because it was used as a Nazi warehouse; the Jewish Historical Institute, which includes artwork exhibits and library and photographic archives; and the Jewish Cemetery, founded in 1806 and still used. There are also plans for the Museum of the History of Polish Jews (website: www.jewishmuseum.org.pl) opposite the Ghetto Heroes monument, which will be funded by Jewish groups around the world.
Nożyk Synagogue
Ulica Twarda 6
Tel: (022) 620 4324.
Website: www.warszawa.jewish.org.pl
Opening hours: Mon-Fri 0900-1700, Sun 1100-1800 (May-Sep); Mon-Fri 0900-1700, Sun 1100-1600 (Oct-Apr).
Admission charge.
Jewish Historical Institute and Ronald S Lauder Foundation Genealogy Project
Ulica Tłomackie 3/5
Tel: (022) 827 9221.
Website: www.jhi.pl
Opening hours: Mon-Wed and Fri 0900-1600, Thurs 1100-1800.
Admission charge.
Jewish Cemetery
Ulica Okopowa 49/51
Tel: (022) 838 2622.
Opening hours: Mon-Thurs 1000-1600, Fri 0900-1300, Sun 0900-1600.
Admission charge.
Warsaw Rising Museum
This is a must-see museum for those with any interest in history and tales of bravery. In order to get a taste of what life in Warsaw must have been like for all Poles during WWII, this thoroughly comprehensive museum shows examples of how residents resisted the German forces through film footage, photographs, recorded interviews, life-size dioramas, soundscapes and informative plaques, written in both Polish and English. Cityscape pictures pinpointing the handful of buildings that survived WWII are located on the museum's elevated viewing platform; they are a grim reminder of the destruction wrought by the Nazis on the city.
Ulica Przyokopowej 28
Tel: (022) 539 7905.
Website: www.1944.pl
Opening hours: Mon, Wed and Fri 0800-1800, Thurs 0800-2000, Sat-Sun 1000-1800. Closed Tues.
Admission charge.
Walking through the Royal Castle, you have to constantly remind yourself that most of it was reconstructed between 1971 and 1984, although the darker elements of the décor were actually salvaged from the ruins. The castle, located on a plateau overlooking the Vistula River, was built for the Dukes of Mazovia and expanded when King Zygmunt III Vasa moved the capital to Warsaw. From the early 17th until the late 18th century, this was the seat of the Polish kings. It subsequently housed the parliament and is now a museum displaying tapestries, period furniture, coffin portraits and collections of porcelain and other decorative arts. Work is underway to recreate the castle gardens, set on the slopes of the Vistula River, which were also badly scarred when the Nazis levelled the rest of the castle complex.
Plac Zamkovy 4 (ticket office situated at Ulica Swietojanska 2)
Tel: (022) 355 5170.
Website: www.zamek-krolewski.com.pl
Opening hours: Tues-Sat 1000-1800, Sun and Mon 1100-1800. Last visitors admitted an hour before closing.
Admission charge; free admission on Mondays (Jul-Sep).
Łazienki Park
In addition to a number of palaces, Łazienki Park contains the Chopin Monument (where the annual Chopin Festival is held each summer, with free concert recitals in the park twice on Sunday from June to August) and the Orangerie, set within extensive 18th-century gardens. Pałac Na Wyspie (Palace on the Water) is best viewed from near the monument to Jan Sobiewski, on the bridge where Ulica Agrykola crosses the water. Originally built in 1624, for King Zygmunt III Vasa, Zamek Ujazdowski (Ujazdowski Castle) now houses the Centre of Contemporary Art, although the centre is set to move locations in the coming years. The 1764 Pałac Belweder (Belvedere Palace) was the residence of King Stanislaus Augustus Poniatowski and later of Poland's 20th-century presidents. On warm summer days, rowing boats offer short cruises around the park's lake. Cycling is banned in the park.
Ulica Agrykola 1
Tel: (022) 625 7944.
Website: www.lazienki-krolewskie.pl
Opening hours: Most museums are open Tues-Sun 0900-1600; park open daily from 0800 until sunset.
Free admission to the park; charge for Palace on the Water and for the Orangerie.
Wilanów Palace
In the mid 1600s, King Jan III Sobieski commissioned Augustyn Locci to build the baroque palace and garden of Wilanów for his summer residence. Construction continued from 1677 until the king's death in 1696. It remained popular with subsequent monarchs. Visitors can tour the interior and the gallery, which features portraits of famous Poles. Artistic handicrafts are on display in the Orangerie. Also here is the Muzeum Plakatu w Wilanowie (Poster Museum at Wilanow), the first of its kind in the world. Entrance to the palace requires a guide, for a group of one to 35 people, although the park is open to unaccompanied visitors. Restoration work is ongoing but affects few visits.
Ulica Wiertnicza 1
Tel: (022) 842 8101.
Website: www.wilanow-palac.art.pl
Opening hours: Palace open Mon, Wed and Sat 0930-1830, Tues, Thurs and Fri 0930-1630, Sun 1030-1830 (May-mid Sep); Mon and Wed-Sat 0930-1630, Sun 1030-1630 (mid Sep-May); park open daily 0900 until sunset.
Admission charge for both the park and the palace; free admission to the park on Thursdays and the palace on Sundays.
Pawiak Prison
This eerie old prison symbolises the oppression that has haunted Varsovians over the last two centuries. Originally built in the 1830s, at the order of the ruling Czars, the prison incarcerated many victims of the Nazi reign of terror from 1939-1944, when it served as the largest political prison in Poland. A third of the estimated 100,000 detainees never made it out alive. The Nazis tried to dynamite the evidence of their crimes as they left but Pawiak is back as a museum and a testament to the city's seemingly endless ability to suffer and survive.
Ulica Dzielna 24/26
Tel: (022) 831 1317.
Opening hours: Wed and Fri 0900-1700, Thurs and Sat 0900-1600, Sun 1000-1600.
Free admission.
Narodowe (National Museum)
The National Museum's impressive art collection dates from ancient times to the present day. Highlights include Jan Matejko's monumental Battle of Grunwald (1878), which celebrates the Polish victory over the Teutonic Knights in 1410, and a collection of Egyptian art, which is unique in Europe. Unusually, there are also galleries of Polish and European decorative arts. Frequent temporary exhibitions bring prized international works (from Andy Warhol to Caravaggio) to Warsaw.
Aleje Jerozolimskie 3
Tel: (022) 621 1031.
Website: www.mnw.art.pl
Opening hours: Permanent galleries Tues-Sun 1000-1600; temporary galleries Tues-Wed 1000-1600, Thurs-Fri 1000-2000, Sat-Sun 1000-1700.
Admission charge; free on Saturdays
Katedra Św Jana (St John's Cathedral)
St John's is claimed to be the oldest church in Warsaw. Although a major church in the Mazovian gothic style, completed in the 15th century, St John's was only upgraded from a parish church to a cathedral in 1798. Destroyed during WWII, it has been reconstructed in its original style and features major gothic art works by Wit Stwosz. The cathedral was used in 1764 for the coronation of the last Polish king (Stanislaw II) and for the swearing in of the Sejm (Polish parliament) after the constitution of 1791. The covered footbridge connecting it to the Royal Palace was the result of a failed assassination attempt on King Zygmunt III.
Ulica Świętojaęska 8
Tel. (022) 831 0289.
Opening hours: Mon-Sat 1000-1800, Sun 1400-1800 (cathedral); daily 1000-1300 and 1500-1730 (crypt).
Free admission to cathedral; admission charge for the crypt.
Getto Żydowskie (Jewish Ghetto)
What is markedly absent from Warsaw contributes as much to its history as anything that has been preserved or reconstructed. Pre-war Warsaw had a Jewish population second only to New York. After the Nazi invasion, some 380,000 Jews were rounded up and forced into the city's Jewish ghetto. A 3m- (10ft-) high wall encircled the area, from the Palace of Culture and Science to the Umschlagplatz monument, corner of Ulica Stawki and Ulica Dzika. This stark monument, erected in the late 1980s, marks the place from where Jews were despatched by train to the Treblinka concentration camp, following the Ghetto Uprising of 19 April 1943. The centre of the ghetto is marked by the Monument to the Ghetto Heroes, Ulica L Zamenhofa, which was erected on a sea of ruins in 1948. Other memorials are the Monument of the Killed and Murdered in the East, Ulica Muranowska, and the 1944 Warsaw Uprising Monument, Plac Krasinskich. Only three sections of the actual ghetto wall remain.
You can pick up the ‘Jewish Warsaw' leaflet from tourist centres; it highlights places of interest that connect to Jewish history. Notable points include: the Nożyk Synagogue, which is the only existing Warsaw synagogue to have survived the war, possibly because it was used as a Nazi warehouse; the Jewish Historical Institute, which includes artwork exhibits and library and photographic archives; and the Jewish Cemetery, founded in 1806 and still used. There are also plans for the Museum of the History of Polish Jews (website: www.jewishmuseum.org.pl) opposite the Ghetto Heroes monument, which will be funded by Jewish groups around the world.
Nożyk Synagogue
Ulica Twarda 6
Tel: (022) 620 4324.
Website: www.warszawa.jewish.org.pl
Opening hours: Mon-Fri 0900-1700, Sun 1100-1800 (May-Sep); Mon-Fri 0900-1700, Sun 1100-1600 (Oct-Apr).
Admission charge.
Jewish Historical Institute and Ronald S Lauder Foundation Genealogy Project
Ulica Tłomackie 3/5
Tel: (022) 827 9221.
Website: www.jhi.pl
Opening hours: Mon-Wed and Fri 0900-1600, Thurs 1100-1800.
Admission charge.
Jewish Cemetery
Ulica Okopowa 49/51
Tel: (022) 838 2622.
Opening hours: Mon-Thurs 1000-1600, Fri 0900-1300, Sun 0900-1600.
Admission charge.
Warsaw Rising Museum
This is a must-see museum for those with any interest in history and tales of bravery. In order to get a taste of what life in Warsaw must have been like for all Poles during WWII, this thoroughly comprehensive museum shows examples of how residents resisted the German forces through film footage, photographs, recorded interviews, life-size dioramas, soundscapes and informative plaques, written in both Polish and English. Cityscape pictures pinpointing the handful of buildings that survived WWII are located on the museum's elevated viewing platform; they are a grim reminder of the destruction wrought by the Nazis on the city.
Ulica Przyokopowej 28
Tel: (022) 539 7905.
Website: www.1944.pl
Opening hours: Mon, Wed and Fri 0800-1800, Thurs 0800-2000, Sat-Sun 1000-1800. Closed Tues.
Admission charge.
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