Discover the best top things to do in Mazovia Province, Poland including Muzeum Pozytywizmu w Golotczyznie, Ratusz Jacek, Mausoleum of Struggle and Martyrdom, Willa Aida, Zamek Krolewski w Warszawie - Muzeum, Museum of King Jan III's Palace at Wilanow, POLIN Muzeum Historii Zydow Polskich, Katyn Museum, Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego, Museum of the Mazovian Countryside.
Restaurants in Mazovia Province
5.0 based on 1 reviews
4.5 based on 344 reviews
I was very impressed with this small museum and especially its informative little screens that provide a lot of information in multiple languages, much of it very detailed and not easy to find outside the museum. I really appreciated the one where you can see different victims and their personal stories. The pictures and explanations of graffiti written by the prisoners on the cell walls were very interesting. The museum is small, but not very expensive and does a good job of making the most of its space. The lights available to help you read the signs in this dark basement were also very much appreciated. It is kind of hard to find with no signs until you reach the museum door itself, so look for the large, grand entrance pictured here on TripAdvisor and then turn left just inside those gates.
4.5 based on 2,642 reviews
The Royal Castle in Warsaw (Polish: Zamek Królewski w Warszawie) is a castle residency that formerly served throughout the centuries as the official residence of the Polish monarchs. Initially the complex served as the residence of the Dukes of Masovia, and since the sixteenth century, the seat of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth: the King and Parliament. In its long history the Royal Castle was repeatedly plundered and devastated by the invading Swedish, Brandenburgian, Prussian and Tsarist armies. Burned and looted by the Nazi Germans following the Invasion of Poland in 1939 and almost completely destroyed in 1944 after the failed Warsaw Uprising, the Castle was completely rebuilt and reconstructed. Reconstruction of the castle carried out in 1971–1984 was led by the Civic Committee, responsible for the reconstruction of Warsaw. In 1980, the Royal Castle, together with the Old Town was registered as a protected UNESCO World Heritage Site.
An excellent effort to rebuild and return Warsaw and it's royal history to its former glory. Museum is worth a visit, although recommend not bringing kids under 12 years old. An audio guide is very helpful to have, otherwise it's difficult to decipher alot of the meaning and history of what you're seeing. Unfortunately, many of the royal treasures were looted and lost during World War II, but they've done a fantastic job reenacting every room. It's right in the center of Castle Square and when you're done there are plenty of places to get a meal or sit in the shade and relax.
4.5 based on 1,777 reviews
Well preserved French type of country palace surrounded with beautiful French garden and English type park at the pond. Furniture and paintings make walk in the palace truly of époque and gives real feeling of it. Best time to visit Wilanów Jan the 3rd Sobieski summer residence is late spring and summer when it blooms and smells with multiple flowers covered with carpet of colors and shades. Visitors may have a rest at cafes and restaurants located next to this place.
4.5 based on 4,125 reviews
The POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews is the first and only museum dedicated to restoring the memory of the civilization created by Polish Jews in the course of a millennium.Museum's building faces the Monument to the Ghetto Heroes in Warsaw. The Museum completes the memorial complex. At the monument, we honor those who perished by remembering how they died. At the museum, we honor them, and those who came before and after, by remembering how they lived. As a museum of life, POLIN Museum engages with the present and opens out to the future. As an educational and cultural institution, the museum is dedicated to stimulating dialogue in the spirit of mutual understanding and respect. Museum's core exhibition is a journey through the 1000-year history of Polish Jews. Enter this theater of history where the story unfolds in acts and scenes as you walk. Immerse yourself in the story. Encounter those who lived in each period - their words are quoted throughout the exhibition. Enter the scene - a salon, tavern, home, church, synagogue, or schoolroom. There are surprises in drawers you can open, screens and objects you can touch, and much that you can see - artifacts, photographs, documents, and films. Each visit to the museum will be different. There will always be something new to inspire you!
This is am amazing museum that truly enables the visitor to feel like they have lived in Poland through the many centuries depicted: the impact of Polish Jews with regard to culture, arts and religion, the rise and fall of the Nazis and the Communists. Very well thought out designed so that visitors move from space to space. Truly well done!!
4.5 based on 71 reviews
This museum is a memorial to the thousands of Polish reserve officers killed by the Soviets and buried in the Russian forest of Katyn.
4.5 based on 7,390 reviews
The Warsaw Rising Museum was opened on the 60th anniversary of the outbreak of fighting in Warsaw. The Museum is a tribute of Warsaw’s residents to those who fought and died for independent Poland and its free capital. The exhibition depicts fighting and everyday life during the Rising, keeping occupation terror in the background. Complexity of the international situation at the time of the Rising is portrayed, including the post-war years of the Communist regime and the fate of Insurgents in the People’s Republic of Poland (PRL). With the total area of more than 3000 m2, 800 exhibition items, approximately 1500 photographs, films and sound recordings, history of the days preceding the Rising is told. Visitors are guided through the subsequent stages of the Rising until the time when the Insurgents left Warsaw. Their further fate is also portrayed.
This museum is a great museum that provides incredible detail about the Warsaw Uprising of 1944. It is so amazing that they were able to find so much to display and so many pictures. Take the time to see the 3-D movie. I went on a Sunday and it was free.
4.5 based on 89 reviews
Hitherto typical for post-enfranchisement Mazovian village – row village was recreated within the area of the Museum of the Mazovian Countrywide in Sierpc. It comprises 11 peasant farmhouses from north-western Mazovia. Cottages surrounded by vegetable and flower gardens or apiaries and animals living here make an impression of a village that is still teeming with life. Buildings interiors are adjusted to their functions, they change with calendar pieces of paper torn. Cottages furnishing and the appearance of farmhouses themselves indicates financial diversity of their owners. Next to affluent flats, there are poor cottages furnished only with the most indispensable appliances. Such background turns out to be excellent for presentation of everyday village farm and domestic activities.
I am at a loss for words to describe how impressed I was with what the Museum of the Mazovian Countryside has on display! Just look at some sample photos enclosed and judge yourself whether on not it is a must-see!
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