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History and Present of Warsaw Old Town (Turn on Subtitles/CC to read details about this place while watching the video. They start at 1:30 and update every 10-15 seconds) 1. Origins and Early Development Warsaw Old Town, or Stare Miasto, founded around 1300 by Bolesław II of Masovia, is Warsaw’s oldest district. Built near the Vistula River, it gained town privileges under Chełmno Law. Landmarks like St. John’s Cathedral, city walls, and the Barbican shaped its medieval layout. By the 15th century, with 4,500 residents, it expanded, leading to the New Town’s creation. 2. Capital City and Growth In 1596, King Sigismund III Vasa made Warsaw Poland’s capital, boosting the Old Town’s role. The 17th century saw Castle Square’s rise with Sigismund’s Column (1644) and a thriving Market Square. Baroque and Renaissance buildings, crafted by architects like Tylman van Gameren, flourished despite the Swedish Deluge (1655–1660). 3. World War II Destruction World War II devastated the Old Town. German bombings in 1939 damaged the district, and after the 1944 Warsaw Uprising, Nazi forces destroyed over 85% of it, including the Royal Castle. The Little Insurgent statue honors the uprising. By 1945, the historic core was rubble. 4. Post-War Reconstruction From 1945, Warsaw’s citizens rebuilt the Old Town, led by architects like Jan Zachwatowicz. Using archival documents and Canaletto’s paintings, they recreated its 18th-century look with salvaged materials. The Royal Castle was finished in 1984, marking the world’s first full historic city core reconstruction. 5. Modern Day Today, the UNESCO-listed Old Town in Śródmieście charms with colorful townhouses, the Royal Castle, St. John’s Archcathedral, and the Warsaw Mermaid statue. It hosts festivals, summer cafés, and winter lights. The Museum of Warsaw and pedestrian routes like Gnojna Góra highlight its vibrant history. 6. Global Recognition In 1980, UNESCO recognized the Old Town for its remarkable reconstruction, spanning the 13th to 20th centuries. In 2011, its Reconstruction Archive joined UNESCO’s Memory of the World Programme. A 1994 Polish National Historic Monument, it symbolizes Warsaw’s resilience. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🎥 Filming: 🕙 Time - Afternoon (3 PM) 📅 Date - Weekday, August 2025 ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ☕ Support the channel: Buy me a coffee - https://buymeacoffee.com/romanwalks ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ If you enjoyed this walk, don’t forget to like, comment, and subscribe for more relaxing city walks and hidden gems in Warsaw. Where should I walk next? Let me know in the comments! #Warsaw #TraktKrolewski #WalkingTour #SilentWalk #Poland