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plague
Boleslaus I
Mieszko I
University of Kraków
Złoty Wiek
Sigismund II
Sigismund III
Tatar invasion
Wawel Cathedral
Katedra Wawelska
Bolesław I the Brave
Bolesław I Chrobry
Congress of Gniezno
Akt von Gnesen
Smok Wawelski
Casimir III
Polska
Poland
Kraków
Polen
Krakau
Hanse
Wawel
Krakus
Hanseatic League
Holy Lance
Otto III
Bolesław the Chaste
Mongol invasion
Spear of St. Maurice


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Kraków - Katedra Wawelska

Kraków - Katedra Wawelska
A legend attributes Kraków's founding to the mythical ruler Krakus, who built it above a cave occupied by a dragon, Smok Wawelski. The first written record dates to 965, when Kraków was described as a notable commercial center captured by a Bohemian duke Boleslaus I in 955. The first ruler of Poland, Mieszko I, took Kraków from the Bohemians.

In 1038, Kraków became the seat of the Polish government. By the end of the 10th century, the city was a center of trade. Brick buildings were constructed, including the Royal Wawel Castle. The city was sacked and burned during the Mongol invasion of 1241. It was rebuilt and incorporated in 1257 by Bolesław V the Chaste who introduced city rights. In 1259, the city was again ravaged by the Mongols. The third attack in 1287 was repelled thanks in part to the newly built fortifications.

The city rose to prominence in 1364, when Casimir III founded the University of Kraków, the second oldest university in central Europe. But after Casimir´s death in 1370 the campus did not get completed.

As the capital of the Kingdom of Poland and a member of the Hanseatic League, the city attracted craftsmen from abroad, guilds as science and the arts began to flourish. The 15th and 16th centuries are known as Poland's "Złoty Wiek" (Golden Age).

After childless King Sigismund II had died in 1572, the Polish throne passed to Henry III of France and then to other foreign-based rulers in rapid succession, causing a decline in the city's importance that was worsened by pillaging during the Swedish invasion and by an outbreak of bubonic plague that left 20,000 of the city's residents dead. In 1596, Sigismund III of the House of Vasa moved the capital of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth from Kraków to Warsaw.
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The Wawel Hill has been the seat of secular and ecclesiastical power since the early Middle Ages. Mieszko I the first historical ruler and creator of the Polish state, chose the hill as the site of one of his residences. His baptism in 966 brought Poland into the orbit of Western culture.

The Wawel Cathedral (officialy "Bazylika archikatedralna św. Stanisława i św. Wacława w Krakowie") is for about 1000 years part of the Wawel Castle Complex. The current Gothic cathedral is the third edifice on this site, the Cathedral of St. Wenceslas from 1020 was destroyed in 1038 by the Czech prince Břetislav, the Romanesque cathedral, consecrated in 1142, with the tomb of the holy Stanislaus, burnt down in 1305.

A few years later the construction of a Gothic cathedral, started. This was completed in 1346. Since Krakow was Poland's capital until 1609 and the royal castle stood on Wawel Hill, the cathedral also served as the court church, and Poland's kings were buried in the crypt.

The Sigismund Bell Tower, built in the second half of the 14th century as part of the fortifications, houses the most venerable bell in Poland, called "Sigismundus". Poland's holy queen Jadwiga (Hedwig of Poland) was buried in the cathedral in 1399.

After the Middle Ages, several chapels were added to the cathedral. There are examples of Romanesque, Gothic, Romanesque, Baroque, Neoclassical, and Neogothic elements in the Cathedral's façade and interior.

The Congress of Gniezno ("Akt von Gnesen") was a meeting between Mieszko I´s son Bolesław I the Brave and Emperor Otto III, which took place at Gniezno in Poland in March 1000.

After 997 Adalbert of Prague had been killed by pagan Prussian tribes, Adalbert was quickly canonized by the common effort of Bolesław I and Emperor Otto III. Thus, Adalbert became the first Slavic bishop to become a saint. His body was put into a tomb at Gniezno Cathedral, which became the ecclesiastical center of Poland.

Otto III, who had been a friend of Adalbert committed to a pilgrimage from Italy to St. Adalbert's tomb in Gniezno; in his attempt to extend the influence of Christianity in Central and Eastern Europe.

During the Congress of Gniezno Otto invested Bolesław with the title "Frater et cooperator Imperii" ("Brother and Partner of the Empire").

Otto III gave Bolesław a replica of his Holy Lance, part of the Imperial Regalia, and Bolesław presented the Emperor with a relic, an arm of St. Adalbert in exchange.

The Holy Lance is kept in the treasury of the cathedral, but - strange - it is "named "Spear of St. Maurice".
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