pixelpusher
7 Mar 2009
History / The restoration of Polish cities from WW2 destruction [123]
Jelenia Gora wasn't ruined at all. It gets even more interesting: what you see today are reconstructions! More or less the complete old town was dismantled until the 60s and later rebuilt. Todays rynek is a reconstruction in more simple forms. Pure madness, if you think about it.
Legnica looked like this after the war and before it was dismantled (the old quarter was a rare example of Frederician baroque):
wroclaw.hydral.com.pl/33964,foto.html
Today it looks like this:
wroclaw.hydral.com.pl/21916,foto.html
But you don't have to stop here. Warsaws churches were destroyed too. When these churches were rebuilt churches from former German territory provided the interiors. The most prominent example is Lubiąż, which provided more than 30 paintings for Warsaw, whereas the stalls are in Stężyca now. That's why the church looks like this today:
wroclaw.hydral.com.pl/98369,foto.html
Jelenia Gora wasn't ruined at all. It gets even more interesting: what you see today are reconstructions! More or less the complete old town was dismantled until the 60s and later rebuilt. Todays rynek is a reconstruction in more simple forms. Pure madness, if you think about it.
Legnica looked like this after the war and before it was dismantled (the old quarter was a rare example of Frederician baroque):
wroclaw.hydral.com.pl/33964,foto.html
Today it looks like this:
wroclaw.hydral.com.pl/21916,foto.html
But you don't have to stop here. Warsaws churches were destroyed too. When these churches were rebuilt churches from former German territory provided the interiors. The most prominent example is Lubiąż, which provided more than 30 paintings for Warsaw, whereas the stalls are in Stężyca now. That's why the church looks like this today:
wroclaw.hydral.com.pl/98369,foto.html