http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poland
Region: Eastern Europe
Area total: 312,685 km²
Coast line: Baltic Sea
Capital: Warsaw
Malbork Castle
Malbork Castle - Ruins of the castle after the WWII
Jaroslaw
The Orsetti family tenement house, in the market square, built in the 16th c. Now there is a city museum inside.
Night time view of Torun
Frombork Cathedral
Copernicus' tower at Frombork, where he lived and worked; rebuilt recently
Copernicus' 2010 grave, Frombork Cathedral
Copernicus' remains were reburied in the same spot in Frombork Cathedral where part of his skull and other bones had been found.
A black granite tombstone now identifies him as the founder of the heliocentric theory and also a church canon.
The tombstone bears a representation of Copernicus' model of the solar systema golden sun encircled by six of the planets
Casket with Copernicus' remains, St. James' Cathedral Basilica, Olsztyn, March 2010
Wooden Church in Haczow
Church of the Assumption of Holy Mary and St. Michael's Archangel, the oldest wooden gothic temples in Europe,
erected in the 14th century, on the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites since 2003.
Age market in Szczecin
Szczecin
Monument to Polish Endeavor, dedicated to three Generations of Poles in Zachodniopomorskie: the pre-war Poles in Szczecin,
the Poles who rebuilt the city after World War II and the modern generation
Szczecin
Monument by Czesùaw Dêwigaj to the workers killed during the 1970 anti-communist protests, known as the "Angel of Freedom"
The East Wall - The Miædzyrzecz Fortification Region
The Miædzyrzecz Fortification Region is a fortified military defence line in Western Poland, between Oder and Warta rivers.
Built in 1934-1938, it was the most technologically advanced fortification system of Nazi Germany, and remains one of the largest and the most interesting systems of this type in the world today. It consists of around 100 concrete defence structures partially interconnected by a network of underground tunnels. Some of the forts and tunnels are available for visiting.
The design works of the fortified defence line started in Germany in 1932. The first stage, until 1935, included constructing of water obstacles and 12 light bunkers. Adolf Hitler visited the construction site in the end of 1935. The end of works was scheduled for 1951.
When the Soviet army reached the defence line in the course of the VistulaOder Offensive in January, 1945, its advance was so rapid that the Germans did not have enough time to man the line adequately. It took only 3 days for it to be broken.