'''Nowa Huta''' is a district of Krakow in Poland. It is situated in the east of the town north of the Vistuale River. It is the largest Krakow district by area. Nowa Huta recently became one of the top tourist destinations in Krakow as a post-communist district with very typical socrealistic architecture.
Understand
The area of Nowa Huta was a fertile countryside landscape in the Middle Ages. In the 6th century a mound was erected there by the Vistula People, one of the Polish tribes. In the 12th century the monks erected a monastery in Mogila. After Poland was liberated and occupied by the Soviet Union the communists built the biggest European steelmill called Nowa Huta (New Steelmill) from 1949 to 1955. The new district was built around the Square Plac Centralny (Central Square) and the Allee Aleja Roz (Alley of Roses). It is one of the best examples of Socrealist architecture in Europe. Nowa Huta became the first atheist district in Poland, and it was not until the 1970s when the first church was built there and sanctified by then-Cardinal Karol Wojtyla, later Pope John Paul II.
See
Churches
The Church of St Venceslaus - was built in 1266 by the bishop Prandota for the Cistercians who came to Mogila in 1220 invited by duke Leszek the White and bishop Iwo Odrowaz. The crossway was founded by Casimir the Great in the 14th century. The interior is painted by Stanislaw Samostrzelnik, considered to be the best Polish Renaissance painter, who himself was a Cysterian. It also has beautiful stained glass windows and a late gothic altar form 1514 by Szczodrowa. The stalls have fine baroque portraits. Inside the early baroque chapel of Stefan ?o?kowski is the wonderful gothic Cross of Mogila. The fascade is late baroque.
St. Bartholomew's Church stands opposite to the Cistercian Abbey. It is one of the oldest surviving examples of Polish wooden sacral architecture from the 15th century.
Finding and Rising of the Holy Cross's Church - was built of wood in the 16th century in Renaissance style.
Nowa Huta
Nowa Huta was a model city built by the Communist authorities to attract people from lower socioeconomic backgrounds to the region as a counterweight to the middle class of Krakow who had decisively rejected Communism in the 1946 Polish People's Referendum. Nowa Huta, which means 'New Steel Mill', became the largest steel mill in Poland next to modern (for the time) apartments built in a way which mixed the Renaissance style with Soviet Realism. The steel mill had little economic rationale : coal had to be imported from Silesia and iron ore from the Soviet Union, while most of the finished steel was shipped elsewhere as there was little local demand. The original complex of apartment buildings is built on spokes which radiate out from the central square (Plac Centralny) which was renamed Ronald Reagan Central Square in 1984. Buildings constructed in Nowa Huta after 1956 are Modernist while those built in the 1970's and 1980's are mainly 'plattenbau', a technique which used pre-fabricated concrete plates and was common in East Germany.
Cemeteries
Do
If you looking for profesional private tours of the former Communism District. Take the Communism Guided Tour [http://www.communismtour.pl] of Nowa Huta in an original, car from the communist times. Is the best and chippest tour of Nowa Huta that you can find.
With the reference of the Historical Museum of The City of Cracow and official Guides of Cracow.
Take the NOWA HUTA TOUR by Communist Cars [http://www.nowahutatour.com] in an original, polish historical cars: Syrena, Warszawa, Fiat 126p, 125p. Audio-guide in your language, driver from Nowa Huta, many places and buildings. Some points of tour: Underground Propaganda Cinema, Communist Club, Museum of Nowa Huta, Commie Milk Bar, Road Control of Polish Milicja, Driving Lesson etc. Check our recommendations on our website. See you soon !
Or check Crazy Guides [http://www.crazyguides.com], these guys were rated by BBC, they simply rock :)
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