The Flickr Zamkowa Image Generatr

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This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

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Lublin (Poland) by robert1stepien

© robert1stepien, all rights reserved.

Lublin (Poland)

view of Zamek Lubelski (Lublin Castle) from the arcade viaduct on Zamkowa (Castle) Street

The Lublin Castle (Zamek Lubelski) is a medieval castle in Lublin, Poland, adjacent to the Old Town district and close to the city center. It is one of the oldest preserved royal residencies in Poland, initially established by High Duke Casimir II the Just. Its contemporary Gothic Revival appearance is largely due to a reconstruction undertaken in the 19th century.

The hill it is on was first fortified with a wood-reinforced earthen wall in the 12th century. In the first half of the 13th century, the stone keep was built. It still survives and is the tallest building of the castle, as well as the oldest standing building in the city. In the 14th century, during the reign of Casimir III the Great, the castle was rebuilt with stone walls. Probably at the same time, the castle's Chapel of the Holy Trinity was built as a royal chapel.

In the first decades of the 15th century, King Władysław II Jagiełło commissioned a set of frescoes for the chapel. They were completed in 1418 and are preserved to this day. The artist was a Ruthenian, Master Andrej, who signed his work on one of the walls. Because of their unique style, mixing Western and Eastern Orthodox influences, they are acclaimed internationally as an important historical monument.

Under the rule of the Jagiellon dynasty the castle enjoyed royal favor and frequent stays by members of the royal family. The sons of King Casimir IV Jagiellon were brought up in the castle under the tutelage of Jan Długosz. In the 16th century, it was rebuilt on a grandiose scale, under the direction of Italian masters brought from Kraków. The most momentous event in the castle's history was the signing in 1569 of the Union of Lublin, the founding act of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

As a consequence of the wars in the 17th century (The Deluge), the castle fell into disrepair. Only the oldest sections, the keep and the chapel, remained intact. After Lublin fell under Russian rule following the territorial settlement of the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the government of Congress Poland, on the initiative of Stanisław Staszic, carried out a complete reconstruction of the castle between 1826 and 1828. The new buildings were in the English neo-Gothic style, completely different from the structures they replaced, and their new purpose was to house a criminal prison. Only the keep and the chapel were preserved in their original state.

The castle was a prison for the next 128 years: as a Tsarist prison from 1831 to 1915, in independent Poland from 1918 to 1939, and most infamously during the Nazi German occupation from 1939 to 1944. Under Tsarist Russia prisoners included Polish resistance members, one of the most notable being writer Bolesław Prus. When between 40,000 and 80,000 inmates, many of them Polish resistance fighters and Jews, passed through. During World War II, the Castle Chapel was the location of a German court. Many prisoners were sent from the castle to concentration camps, including nearby Majdanek. Just before withdrawing on 22 July 1944, the SS and German prison officers massacred over 300 of the remaining prisoners. After 1944, the castle continued as a prison of the Soviet secret police and later of the Soviet-installed communist regime of Poland and, until 1954, about 35,000 Poles fighting against the new communist government (especially cursed soldiers) passed through it, of whom 333 died.

In 1954, the castle prison was closed. Following reconstruction and refurbishment, since 1957 it has been the main site of the National Museum.

Lublin (Poland) by robert1stepien

© robert1stepien, all rights reserved.

Lublin (Poland)

view of the old town, Brama Grodzka/Brama Żydowska (Grodzka Gate/Jewish Gate) and Zaułek Władysława Panasa (Władysław Panas's alley) from the arcade viaduct on Zamkowa (Castle) Street

Lublin, administrative centre of the voivodeship and the capital of the Lublin Region, with a population of 336 000 Lublin is the ninth-largest city in Poland. Lublin and its surrounding municipalities are associated under the Lublin Metropolitan Area with the total population of more than 700 000 inhabitants. The location of the town atop loessial rolling hills of the Lublin Upland in the valley of the Bystrzyca river and its tributaries is one of its geographical assets. First settlements started to develop on the future site of Lublin in the sixth to seventh centuries. During the early Middle Ages Lublin grew in numbers, and by 1317 Lublin was granted municipal status. In 1474 Lublin became the capital of the voivodeship, a role it has continuously played to this day. During the years of the first Republic, Lublin, centrally located on the route between the two capitals of the Polish - Lithuanian Commonwealth, was an important political and trade spot, inhabited by different nationalities and religious denominations that constituted a diverse and multicultural community.

In the past, Grodzka Gate guarded a passage in the city’s curtain walls. It was also a link between the Christian and Jewish towns, therefore it was often referred to as “the Jewish Gate”. Originally, the structure was quadrilateral-shaped, bore a dome and featured a subsequently added foregate (like the Krakowska Gate). At the end of the 18th century, upon the instruction of the Good Order Committee (Boni Ordinis), it was remodelled in the Neoclassical style and its defensive features were removed. This is commemorated by the date MDCCLXXXV and SAR monogram (Stanislaus Augustus Rex – King Stanisław August) placed on the gate on the side of the Old Town. After 1944, the Gate housed the High School of Fine Arts, and then the Lublin Theatre Studio.

8988 Wohnhäuser, Geschäfte an der Zamkowa - Fotos von Wolin, namensgebender Ort auf der Insel Wolin in der polnischen Woiwodschaft Westpommern. by stadt + land

© stadt + land, all rights reserved.

8988 Wohnhäuser, Geschäfte an der Zamkowa  - Fotos von Wolin, namensgebender Ort auf der Insel Wolin  in der polnischen Woiwodschaft Westpommern.

Wohnhäuser, Geschäfte an der Zamkowa - Fotos von Wolin, namensgebende Ort auf der Insel Wolin in der polnischen Woiwodschaft Westpommern. © www.christoph-bellin.de Als Wikingerstadt wurde der Ort Julin genannt, danach Wollin - der südöstliche Zipfel der Insel war bereits seit dem Ende der Steinzeit besiedelt. Im 9. Jahrhundert war Julin / Wolin einer der wichtigsten Handelsplätze der Ostsee und hatte im 10. Jahrhundert bereits um 8000 Einwohner.
1264 erhielt Wolin das lübische Stadtrecht. In den letzten Wochen des Zweiten Weltkriegs wurde die Stadt 1945 fast vollständig zerstört. Wolin hat auf einer Fläche von 14,4 km² ca. 4 700 EinwohnerInnen.

Będzin by sergei.gussev

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Będzin

Silesian Voivodeship, Poland - May 2024

Sosnowiec by sergei.gussev

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Sosnowiec

Silesian Voivodeship, Poland - May 2024

Będzin by sergei.gussev

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Będzin

Silesian Voivodeship, Poland - May 2024

Sosnowiec by sergei.gussev

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Sosnowiec

Silesian Voivodeship, Poland - May 2024

Sosnowiec by sergei.gussev

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Sosnowiec

Silesian Voivodeship, Poland - May 2024

Sosnowiec by sergei.gussev

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Sosnowiec

Silesian Voivodeship, Poland - May 2024

Ulica Zamkowa. Kielce by eM.Wr.

© eM.Wr., all rights reserved.

Ulica Zamkowa. Kielce

[PL] Ulica Zamkowa w Kielcach.

[ENG] Zamkowa Street in Kielce. [Poland]

Ulica Górna. Będzin by eM.Wr.

© eM.Wr., all rights reserved.

Ulica Górna. Będzin

{PL] Ulica Górna w Będzinie. Widok w kierunku Kościoła Św. Trójcy i Zamku.

[ENG] Górna street in Będzin, Poland. View towards St Trinity church and Royal Castle.

MAN NL222 #079 by FGKM3

MAN NL222 #079

This photo belongs to the FGKM archives.
For the new stuff go to the main FGKM profile on Flickr flickr.com/fgkm.

Ikarus 415.14D #049 by FGKM3

Ikarus 415.14D #049

This photo belongs to the FGKM archives.
For the new stuff go to the main FGKM profile on Flickr flickr.com/fgkm.

Uitbreiding by Tim Boric

© Tim Boric, all rights reserved.

Uitbreiding

De laatste netuitbreiding van het Opper-Silezische tramnet is van 1982: lijn 15 van Sosnowiec naar de oostelijke buitenwijk Zagórze. De voorgenomen verdere verlenging kwam niet tot stand door de steeds diepere malaise waarin het trambedrijf verviel.

Nu er eindelijk wel geld is, mede dankzij EU-subsidie, komt die verlenging er alsnog. Maar eerst moest de intussen verwaarloosde lijn worden vernieuwd. Toen dat klaar was, kon het werk aan de 3 km lange verlenging (gereed in 2023) beginnen. Daardoor kreeg de lijn tijdelijk een kopeindpunt en moest er tweerichtingmaterieel heen worden gedirigeerd. Hiertoe is lijn 15 tijdelijk vervangen door een kortere lijn 35 waarop deze Moderus Beta's MF16AC (genaamd 'Skarbek') dienstdoen: trams op klassieke draaistellen met alleen in de middenbak een lage vloer.

Het neogotische kerkgebouw kwam tot stand in 1905-1952
___

The last extension of the Upper-Silesian tramway network dates from 1982: line 15 from Sosnowiec to the eastern suburb Zagórze. A further extension was intended, but did not materialize due to the severe crisis the company suffered from for decades.

Now more financial means are finally available, helped by subsidies from the EU, the existing, neglected line had to be renewed first. This being done, work on the new 3 km long extension has started to be ready in 2023. For this reason, the line got a temporary stub terminus, necessitating operation with bidirectional stock. Therefore route 15 is replaced on temporary basis by a shorter route 35, worked by these Moderus Beta MF16AC cars named 'Skarbek'. They consist of high-floor sections on traditional bogies with a low-floor section in between.

The church in neo-Gothic style was built in 1905-1952

Sielec, 3 Maja, Zamkowa

Solaris Urbino 12 #132 by FGKM2

Solaris Urbino 12 #132

This photo belongs to the FGKM archives.
For the new stuff go to the main FGKM profile on Flickr flickr.com/fgkm.

IMG_20190414_124138 by anand-maurya-px

© anand-maurya-px, all rights reserved.

IMG_20190414_124138

Arboretum w Kórniku

Kazimierz Dolny by night by radoslaw.tobolski

© radoslaw.tobolski, all rights reserved.

Kazimierz Dolny by night

Zamkowa street by night

Zamkowa, Kazimierz Dolny by Andrew Milligan sumo

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Zamkowa, Kazimierz Dolny

Zamkowa, Kazimierz Dolny

Zamkowa, Kazimierz Dolny by Andrew Milligan sumo

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Zamkowa, Kazimierz Dolny

Zamkowa, Kazimierz Dolny

Zamkowa, Kazimierz Dolny by Andrew Milligan sumo

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Zamkowa, Kazimierz Dolny

Zamkowa, Kazimierz Dolny