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POLAND :
Wroclaw
color="#0066cc WROCLAW
is the
capital of southwestern
Poland's
province
of
Lower
Silesia. The city is located on the
Oder
River
approximately 310
kilometers southwest of
Warsaw, 200
kilometers east of
Dresden,
Germany, and
120 km from the
Czech
Republic.
Wroclaw
originated in the
10th century AD at the crossroads of trade routes and was first
governed by the Polish Piast kings. In the following centuries it
was ruled at various times by the Germans,Bohemians, and Prussians.
In 1741
Frederick
II the Great of
Prussia changed its name to
Breslau.
During the Second
World War the city was heavily damaged. Gradually the old city was
restored to its beauty. Nearly all the monumental buildings were
preserved. Now it is a uniquely European city in present-day
Poland, with
its architecture echoing that in
Austria,
Bohemia,
or
Prussia.
Wroclaw's Gothic style is originally Silesian, its Baroque style
owes much to court builders of Habsburg Austria (Fischer von
Erlach, Ch. Tausch), and Wroclaw still has a number of buildings by
eminent modernist architects, such as Hans Poelzig or Max Berg, the
famous Jahrhunderthalle (Hala Ludowa) by Berg (1911-13) being the
most important.
The city with its
charming historical center, parks, good restaurants, hotels and
friendly people (700.000 inhabitants) is a pleasant place to visit
and to do business. As
Poland's
fourth largest city,
Wroclaw
is a
center of industry, communications, transport, education, and the
arts. The city has Poland's largest flour mills, electronics and
data-processing facilities, foundries, machinery plants, textile
mills, the Hutmen copper plant, and food-processing
facilities.
Wroclawprovides international rail connections, an
airport, and river transport. Eight educational institutions are
located in the city along with nine museums, several theaters and
music centers, and a botanical garden and
zoo.
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