Misplaced Pages

Blessed Bronisława Chapel

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Roman Catholic chapel in Kraków, Poland
Exterior of the Chapel, at the foot of Kościuszko Mound
Interior of the Chapel

Chapel of Blessed Bronisława is a neo-Gothic Roman Catholic chapel in Kraków, Poland, erected in 1856–61 within the walls of a military citadel constructed during the Austrian Partition of Poland by the Habsburg monarchy. The chapel was meant as a replacement for the Polish 18th-century church demolished by the Austrians in 1854 during the construction of the stronghold in the Zwierzyniec district.

The imperial "Kościuszko" citadel surrounded the ancient burial mound and Polish national monument called Kościuszko Mound. The actual mound was used as an observation point by the army. The new chapel, based on design by Feliks Księżarski, was a result of the determined requests for a replacement made by the Polish Committee for the Construction of the Tadeusz Kościuszko Monument.

Background

The chapel of Blessed Bronisława took its name from the 13th Century Norbertine nun, who had left the convent in order to lead a hermit's life in that exact place. Her abode still existed by the hill (known as Sikornik) in the 19th century, though already adorned by the shrine erected at the beginning of the 18th century. Norbertine Sisters from the Zwierzyniec convent donated the grounds on which the Mound and the chapel were erected.

See also

References

  1. About the Blessed Bronisława Chapel at the official webpage of Kraków
  2. Blessed Bronisława Chapel at the Kościuszko Mound homepage.

50°03′15″N 19°53′39″E / 50.0542°N 19.8943°E / 50.0542; 19.8943


Stub icon

This article about a Roman Catholic church building in Poland is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: