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Main Market Square (Rynek Glówny)
Dating from 1257, the Central Market Square was one of the largest squares in Medieval Europe, and is the social heart of Krakow today. Surrounded by historic buildings, museums and magnificent churches, the impressive expanse of flagstones is a hub of commercial and social activity. Flower sellers, ice-cream vendors, musicians, pigeons, students and groups of tourists fill the square. Occupying the center of the square is the splendid medieval Cloth Hall, a covered arcade with a soaring vaulted interior where merchants once sold their wares;
today it is filled with lively market stalls. The upstairs art gallery houses a collection of 19th century Polish paintings and sculptures. Along the outside walls of the building are elegant terrace cafes. Most famous of these is the Noworolski, which was the center of Krakow social life before the war, with Lenin a notorious regular. The cafe has now regained its reputation as the prime cake and coffee venue in the city. The most striking church on the square is St Mary's, an impressive twin-spire Gothic structure. Every hour a mournful bugle sounds from the tallest church spire in memory of the lone watchman whose trumpeted warning of an invasion was cut off mid-note by a Turkish arrow in the throat. Within is the famous carved wooden altar, a majestic piece of Gothic art.

Wawel
Overlooking the city is Wawel, a hill topped with the castle complex, including Wawel Castle and beside it, the gothic Cathedral. It was here that the Polish kings of the 14th to the 17th centuries were crowned and buried and it lies at the heart of Polish history. The Renaissance-style Royal Castle is now a museum and the historic interior houses an astonishing collection of treasures from the Polish monarchy, including tapestries, period furniture and paintings. Visitors can see the Royal Private Apartments, Crown Treasury, Armoury, and the State Rooms. The Royal Cathedral was the coronation and burial site of all of Poland's monarchs, many of whom are interred in the Royal Tombs. Of the many royal chapels, the golden-domed Renaissance Chapel of King Sigismund is the finest. The bell tower can be climbed for views over the city and to see the enormous 11-tonne bell.
Phone Number: (0)12 422 1697 or 422 5155 ext 291
Email Address: zamek@wawel.edu.pl
Website: www.wawel.krakow.pl
Transport: Tram 10 or a short walk from the Main Square, Rynek Glówny
Hours: Wawel Hill: open daily from 6am until dusk. The various castle attractions are open on Mondays from 9.30am to noon; Tuesday and Friday 9.30am to 4pm; Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday 9.30am to 3pm; Sunday 10am to 3pm. The Royal Private Apartments are closed on Mondays. The Cathedral is open Monday to Saturday 9am to 5pm, and Sunday from 12.15pm
Admission: Castle attractions range from 3 zl to 20 zl. The Cathedral is 10 zl. Concessions available

Kazimierz District and the Old Synagogue
Once a separate town and now an inner suburb of Krakow, the Kazimierz quarter was the center of Jewish religion, culture and learning and the home of the city's large Jewish population before the war. Badly damaged during the Nazi occupation, with most of the residents either killed or deported to the nearby death camps of Auschwitz and Birkenau during the Holocaust, today it has been rebuilt so visitors can admire the restored historical architecture and experience daily Jewish life. Its renewed interest was brought about by Spielberg's film Schindler's List that was set in Kazimierz, and the Jewish culture of the area is being livened up by art galleries, kosher restaurants and specific cultural events. The Old Synagogue is part of the Historical Museum of the City of Krakow, and houses a permanent exhibition, 'Tradition and Culture of Polish Jews', where the collection of physical memories from the Kazimierz Jewish community is kept.
Address: Old Synagogue: Ulica Szeroka 24
Phone Number: (0)12 422 0962
Transport: Tram 3, 9, 11 or 13
Hours: Old Synagogue: Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday 9am to 3.30pm; Friday 11am to 6pm; closed Mondays
Admission: 6 zl, concessions available

Wieliczka Salt Mine
The Salt Mine at Wieliczka is a unique underground complex that has been in continuous use since its construction in the Middle Ages and is a UNESCO World Cultural Heritage Monument. The series of labyrinthine tunnels, chambers, galleries and underground lakes are spread over nine levels and reach a depth of more than 1,000ft (304m), but visitors are restricted to a tour of three levels. Following winding passageways, hand-hewn between the 17th and 19th centuries, visitors are guided to magnificently carved chapels, past salt sculptures created by previous mine workers and through huge crystalline caverns. Among the chambers is the oldest creation in the mine, the 17th century solid salt Chapel of St Anthony. The highlight of the tour is the Blessed Kinga Chapel, dedicated to the patron saint of Polish mine workers. Everything in this huge ornate chapel is carved from salt, including the altar and chandeliers, and the walls are covered in beautiful sculptured pictures. A dark, clanking lift whisks visitors back to the surface at the end of the guided tour. The world's first subterranean therapeutic sanatorium is situated 656ft (200m) below the surface and makes use of the saline air for the treatment of asthma. There is also a Salt-Works museum that documents the history of the mine and the local geological formation with primitive mining tools and machines on display.
Address: Ul. Danilowicza 10, Wieliczka
Phone Number: (12) 278 7302
Email Address: turystyka@kopalnia.pl
Website: www.kopalnia.pl
Transport: Buses and minibuses leave from outside the train station, or there is the local Krakow-Wieliczka train
Hours: Daily 7.30am to 7.30pm (April to October), and 8am to 5pm (November to March). Closed on 1 January, Easter Sunday, 1 November, and 4, 24, 25 and 31 December
Admission: 46 zl, concessions available. Guided tours only. A 10 zl fee is charged for taking photos and filming

Auschwitz Memorial Museum
The Auschwitz concentration camp is actually made up of three camps - Auschwitz I, Auschwitz II-Birkenau and Auschwitz III. Together the complex forms the largest cemetery in the world preserved as a sombre memorial to the victims of the Holocaust, commemorating the hundreds of thousands of people exterminated there by the Nazis during the Second World War. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum was established in 1947 and visitors have access to both camps and can wander freely around the structures, ruins and gas chambers, and visit the exhibits displayed in the surviving prison blocks at Auschwitz I. The hushed atmosphere is one of shock and revulsion from the moment visitors enter the barbed-wire compound through the iron gate, ironically inscribed with the words 'Arbeit Macht Frei' (Work Makes Free). The buildings contain displays of photographs and horrific piles of personal articles of the victims, including battered suitcases, and thousands of spectacles, hair and shoes collected from the bodies. The experience is vivid and disturbing. There are also general exhibitions dedicated to the Jews and their history as well as an interesting documentary film screened in the museum's cinema. Birkenau sees far fewer tourists as it has less visitor facilities and much of the camp was destroyed by the retreating Nazis, but it is here that the sheer scale of the tragedy can be experienced, with a viewing platform to give some perspective over the vast fenced in area stretching as far as the eye can see. Birkenau was the principal camp where the extermination of millions took place, a chillingly efficient set-up with rows of barracks and four colossal gas chambers and ovens. Purpose-built railway tracks lead through the huge gateway, terminating in the camp, by means of which victims were transported from the ghettos to the camp in crowded box-like carts, often being led straight into the gas chambers upon arrival.
Address: Ul. Wiezniow Oswiecimia 20
Phone Number: +48 (0)33 843 2022/844 2077
Email Address: muzeum@auschwitz.org.pl
Website: www.auschwitz-muzeum.oswiecim.pl
Transport: There are regular coach and rail services from Krakow (one-hour journey), and a shuttle bus runs between Auschwitz I and Birkenau from mid-April to October
Hours: Daily 8am to 3pm (December to February), 8am to 4pm (March and November), 8am to 5pm (April and October), 8am to 6pm (May and September), 8am to 7pm (June, July and August)
Admission: Free. Documentary film is 2 zl

Galicia Jewish Museum
Situated in the heart of Kazimierz, the Jewish Quarter of Krakow, the Galicia Jewish Museum houses a permanent photographic exhibition, "Traces of Memory", documenting the history of the Jewish people in the villages and towns of Poland. This poignant museum also hosts a range of special events, lectures and Jewish music concerts and has a well-stocked bookshop.
Address: Ul. Dajwor 18
Phone Number: (12) 421 6842
Email Address: info@galiciajewishmuseum.org
Website: www.galiciajewishmuseum.org
Hours: Daily 9am to 7pm in the summer and 9.30am to 5.30pm in the winter, closed on Yom Kippur
Admission: 7 zl (adults) and 5 zl (students)


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