Wolin is the largest Polish island. It is here that the summer capital of Poland is located, as they sometimes say about Miedzyzdroje. It was there that the legendary castle of Vineth was swallowed up by the sea due to the crimes of the inhabitants. Today the island is one of the most beautiful places in Poland. Wolin Island is located in northwestern Poland. It is separated from the mainland by the Dzivna Strait and the Szczecin Bay, and from Uznam Island, which lies on the border between Poland and
Polish beach is one of the safest in Europe “Paradise on Earth”
European Best Destination – has created a list of the safest beaches in terms of the risk of coronavirus infection. Third place on the list was taken by a beach on the Hel Peninsula. Only the beaches in Portugal and Greece were safer. The list was created based on many criteria. When it was created, the number of people infected with coronavirus across the country, the size of the beaches and the number of square meters available to each person were taken into account. They were also chosen in terms
Summer capital of Warmia and Mazury
What connects Ostroda with Sopot? Why are the Days of the Sea celebrated in the Masurian town and why can you take a boat trip on the grass? And how did it happen that the image with Ostruda hangs in the Louvre? Poland is not only large, popular cities. There are also many small towns that can delight no less than the most famous ones. NAME: Ostroda LOCATION: Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, Masurian Voivodeship, Ilawa Lakes. Ostroda is located near the lake Drventskie. The Drvenka River flows through the city. EXISTS:
Palace and park complex in Strzelec
Strzelce was first mentioned in written sources in 1370. In the 17th and 18th centuries, the city belonged to the Potulitsky family, and then to the Grudzinsky family, who also owned Chodziez. At the end of the 18th century, the city was bought by Krzysztof von Zach. His son, Ferdinand Zach, replaced the burned-out wooden manor with a palace built in 1844 by the famous Berlin architect Friedrich August Stuler. The following owners of the palace were: in 1878, the banker Dagobert Friedlander from Bydgoszcz; in 1895 Wilhelm von Morner;