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Categories: Almere
Categories: Auschwitz-Birkenau
Categories: Borgholm
The town is known for the famous Paulite monastery of Jasna Góra that is the home of the Black Madonna painting, a shrine of the Virgin Mary. Every year, thousands of pilgrims from all over the world come to Czestochowa to see it.
Categories: Czestochowa
Enter Gdansk (English for Gdingen) from its gateway port of Gdynia and discover one of the oldest, most important, and most beautiful cities in the Baltic. Myriad architectural styles co-exist in the heart of Old Town, including Gothic, Renaissance a...
Categories: Gdynia (Gdingen)
Located 28 mi/45 km northeast of Poznan and inhabited since the eighth century, Gniezno was once Poland's capital. Gniezno's beautiful cathedral was the site of royal coronations for 300 years during the Middle Ages. Although the church was desecrate...
Categories: Gniezno
Categories: Jasna Gora
Located on the banks of the Vistula 57 mi/92 km southeast of Warsaw, Kazimierz Dolny, Poland, is one of the country's most charming towns and a favorite of Poles. It was never scarred with ugly Soviet-style buildings (which makes it a popular movie l...
Categories: Kazimierz Dolny
Top attraction and the premier tourist destination in Poland, Krakow (dated English spelling ‘Cracow’) is a vibrant city, proud of its long and glorious history, rich heritage, and architectural beauties. For centuries Krakow was the capital of the P...
Categories: Krakow
In southeastern Poland near the town of Rzeszow and about 105 mi/170 km east of Krakow, Lancut is worth a detour to see its beautiful baroque palace and its rare collection of period coaches, as well as the impressive Orchid House on the grounds. The...
Categories: Lancut
Located 35 mi/60 km northwest of Gdynia, the resort of Leba (pronounced WAY-ba), Poland, has tall, Sahara-like sand dunes and long, broad, pretty beaches. Much of the area is within the Slowinski National Park, where you can walk, bicycle or take a c...
Categories: Leba
Categories: Lelystad
Lodz, Poland, a large industrial city 75 mi/120 km southwest of Warsaw, is undergoing a revitalization—many of its older buildings (the opulent palaces of textile-mill magnates) have been restored, and many new business and residential complexes have...
Categories: Lodz
Located 95 mi/155 km southeast of Warsaw, Lublin, Poland, is an ancient city with an old town center dating from the Middle Ages. The atmosphere around the Rynek (marketplace) is especially intriguing. There you can visit the castle, the City History...
Categories: Lublin
In a small town in Poland rests the largest brick castle, the Malbork Castle. It is the epitome of glorious and the classic example of a medieval fortress. Built by the Teutonic Knights, the castle was completed in 1406 and was named Marienburg or Ma...
Categories: Malbork
Set in the center of the lovely Great Mazurian Lake District 110 mi/175 km north of Warsaw, picturesque Mikolajki, Poland, affords many opportunities for camping and invigorating hikes in the surrounding forests. May-September, lake boats depart the ...
Categories: Mikolajki
Located 80 mi/130 km southeast of Gdansk, Olsztyn, Poland, is associated with the astronomer Copernicus. Visit the 14th-century Brama Gorna, which is an old, defensive gate structure that marks the entrance to the Old Town, St. Jakuba Wiekszego Cathe...
Categories: Olsztyn
Set on the banks of the Warta River 165 mi/270 km west of Warsaw, 1,000-year-old Poznan, Poland, blends Gothic and baroque in much of its architecture. Highlights of this industrialized city include the 10th-century Cathedral of St. Peter and St. Pau...
Categories: Poznan
This small hilltop town 115 mi/185 km southeast of Warsaw, Sandomierz, Poland, is a nice stop en route to Krakow from Warsaw. Guided tours are available for the burghers' houses on the main square, the 14th-century town hall and the 15th-century cell...
Categories: Sandomierz
Sopot, Poland's most elegant seaside resort in eastern Pomerania, 180 mi/290 km northwest of Warsaw, is close enough to Gdansk (13 mi/20 km) to allow for spontaneous sightseeing and shopping trips. In the first years of the 20th century, Sopot was a ...
Categories: Sopot
Categories: Swinoujscie
Categories: Szczawnica
Szczecin is the largest seaport located in northwestern Poland and was one of the most powerful in the German world for thousands of years; it is as well the capital of the West Pomeranian Voivodeship. The city has a population of 405,944 inhabitants...
Categories: Szczecin
Torun is Poland’s oldest city. The medieval quarter was named a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1997, and in 2007 the town was named among Poland’s “Seven Wonders”. Gothic architecture lines the banks of the river Vistula here, and history is found aro...
Categories: Torun
Warsaw is not the cold and dead city it used to be under communism rule. Today with bustling Polish economy and freedom from communist rule - the city has undergone a huge transformation process. Many old communist buildings gave way to modern sky sc...
Categories: Warsaw
Categories: Wieliczka
Categories: Wolin
After capital Warsaw - Wroclaw is the second largest financial center of Poland.
The city is traditionally believed to be named after a person called Wrocis?aw/Vratislaw, often believed to be Duke Vratislav I of Bohemia. It is also possible that the...
Categories: Wroclaw
Several hours from Krakow sits Zakopane, a town known for its unique architecture and the role it played in WWII as a staging point between Hungary and Poland. Now, however, it is a mecca for lovers of the outdoors, particularly in winter. Zakopane h...
Categories: Zakopane
Categories: Ziegenort
Oland is an island of windmills and beautiful flora 175 mi/280 km south of Stockholm. There are also remnants of Viking history, including a Viking grave reminiscent of Stonehenge. Free Oland
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This isn't to say that Olanders are stuck in the past—the bridge that connects Oland to the mainland at Kalmar is an engineering marvel: At 4 mi/6 km, it's one of the longest in northern Europe.
Bike rentals are the preferred way to travel this island, but you have to be in good shape if you want to see it all.
Those with an interest in Vikings will want to visit the archaeological site of Eketorp, an ancient fort where Viking excavations are under way. It was built in three different stages between AD 300 and 1300 and has been reconstructed using ancient building methods. https://www.eketorpsborg.se.
Everyone should see Solliden, the summer residence of the Swedish royal family. Its gardens are lovely in the summer. https://sollidensslott.se.
Other distinguished structures include a medieval church at Gardslosa, the remains of Borgholm Castle, just a few miles/kilometers north of Solliden (https://www.borgholmsslott.se) and the Lange Jan (Long John) Lighthouse on the southern tip of the island—getting there requires a long, hard bike ride.
For more information, visit https://visitsweden.com/where-to-go/southern-sweden/oland.