St. Martin' Peace Pole - Krakow, Poland
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Metro2
N 50° 03.351 E 019° 56.291
34U E 423991 N 5545380
Located at the entrance to Krakow's St, Martin's church.
Waymark Code: WMQ17A
Location: Małopolskie, Poland
Date Posted: 11/27/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member adgorn
Views: 12

St. Martin's is a Lutheran church.
The peace pole reads: "Niech bedzie pokoj na ziemi" Polish for Let there be peace on Earth on one side and another side is in German. The other two sides were not captured in my photos. Access was blocked by a gate since the church was not open.

As for the church, this website (visit link) informs us:

"Early baroque with a modest façade (attributed to Giovanni Trevano) in the form of Rome’s Il Gesù, the church was built in 1637-1640 for the Order of Discalced Carmelite Nuns. It replaced an earlier, 12th-century Romanesque church. A memorial and at the same time a testimony to the mediaeval pedigree is the characteristic setting of the façade – at an angle to the street – resulting from the precise orientation (i.e. positioning of the church’s chancel directly to the east: towards Christ’s grave) of the plan of the original church.

The church is entered through a portal with a Latin inscription Frustra vivit, qui nemini prodest (In vain lives he who brings assistance to none). The interior of the church is also modest, and consists of a single space, proper for the canons of Carmelite architecture, which promoted austere forms, and gave up domes and towers. The tunnel vaulting with lunettes received a geometrical panelled decoration. The empty arcaded niches in the bays reinforce the planned impact of the space and the austere climate. The high altar, situated in the chancel enclosed with a straight wall, is adorned with a painting of Christ Silencing the Storm by a leading representative of Polish academism, Henryk Siemiradzki. A Gothic crucifix transferred from the old church and dating from about 1380, is situated high above the altar. It is considered miraculous, as a legend claims that it spoke out to one of the sisters. Towards the end of the 18th century, after the Carmelite sisters moved to a convent in today’s ul. Kopernika, the church and its nunnery were deserted until in 1816 the city authorities transferred it to the Lutheran congregation, and earmarked it as their parish church."
Languages: Polish, German

Made of: Wood

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Recent Visits/Logs:
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castorka visited St. Martin' Peace Pole  -  Krakow, Poland 02/12/2023 castorka visited it
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Metro2 visited St. Martin' Peace Pole  -  Krakow, Poland 09/19/2015 Metro2 visited it

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