Poland, June 12 - 15, 2014
“From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic an iron curtain
has descended across the Continent.”
Yes, Winston, we visited that Stettin, now
called Szchecin but no longer behind the Iron Curtain. We drove there from Berlin in two hours
with no formalities at the Polish border, which was even less visible than the
Utah border when we enter from Idaho.
Szczecin was a Prussian/German city before
1945, Berlin’s principal port. Despite considerable destruction in World War II, its architecture is
still primarily German. The most
imposing monuments are St. James's Cathedral and the Palace of the Pomeranian Dukes
(antedating Prussian rule). It is a pleasant city, but not one that
would merit a visit unless tourists needed a break, as we did, between Berlin
and Gdansk.
St. James's Cathedral, whose post-war restoration reduced the height of its tower by 50 percent
Palace of the Dukes of Pomerania
The drive from Szczecin to Gdansk is long and
tedious, passing through innumerable small towns with low speed limits. However, somewhere en route we spotted
a small church whose parishioners were clearly ecstatic about the canonization
of John Paul II. The sign reads in
translation. “St. John Paul II, pray for us.”
We spent the night in Gdansk and drove south
the next day to Malbork, the headquarters of the Teutonic Knights who
dominated much of northeastern Europe during the 14th and 15th
centuries. Originally founded to
fight the Muslim “infidels,” the order left the Holy Land when their situation
there became precarious and came north to fight the pagan tribes in the lands
bordering the Baltic Sea. An
unusual fusion of knights and monks, all from high-born German families,
they took vows of poverty, chastity, obedience, but were also ready to slay
non-Christians—and some Christians, too, if circumstances required. To subdue the area, they
established a patchwork of fortresses within a day’s march of each other.
The knights’ headquarters were at Marienburg
(now Malbork), the largest brick fortress in Europe and the largest in area,
encompassing 21 hectares (53 acres) within its outer walls. Never captured in medieval warfare, the
fortress was badly damaged in World War II but has been largely restored. “Huge” doesn’t begin to describe it.
Malbork Fortress
Wall of Middle Castle with "dansker" tower, designed to serve as both last redoubt and lavatory
Grand Master's Palace in Middle Castle
Statues of significant grand masters
Drawbridge leading to Middle Castle
Gdansk's old harbor with 14th century crane in background
Green Gate, formal entrance to Gdansk from the harbor and residence for visiting royalty
Ulica Długa, historic Gdansk's main street, with tower of 14th/15th century town hall
Houses on Ulica Długa
View of St. Mary's Cathredral, which dominates historic Gdansk
Part of Gdansk shipyards, where Solidarity movement was born
14th century Great Mill
Other mill buildings on Kaduna Canal with St. Catherine's Church in background
Monument recalling heroic resistance of Gdansk postal workers during first days of World War II
14th century Oliva Cathedral with Baroque interior
Interior of Oliva Cathedral with wedding in progress
Danziger Goldwasser, the city's signature drink, an herbal liqueur with flakes of "gold"
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