Naturally, when you read the title of this post, you say to yourself immediately, "Ah, this is about Krakow, Poland." Or maybe you say "Ah, this is about strange experiments combining static electricity, geology, chemical reactions, and kinematics." Or maybe you say, "Is this the modern equivalent of the four elements of the ancient world?"
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Sculpture at the base of City Hall Tower |
If the sentence you said was the first of my suggestions, good job! If you said the second, I like how you think. If you said the third, well, hard to argue with you, but it wasn't what I had in mind.
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Church of the Holy Trinity in Stare Miasto |
We have now been in Krakow for two days and we've seen a lot. We went to Stare Miasto, which means Old Town. Here we saw several beautiful buildings, plazas, and museums. In the heart of Old Town is Rynek Główny, the central square. This is the big market square and it includes a market. In the center of it is the Sukiennice, or the Cloth Hall. Beside one end of the Cloth Hall is the City Hall Tower. And across the square on the other side of the Cloth Hall is St. Mary's Basilica. That's a lot in one square.
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I'm a lonely tower. Where's my City Hall? |
The tower is sort of a lonely figure. It was part of a much bigger city hall, but when the Austrians conquered Krakow, they destroyed the building, mostly to demoralize the Krakovians. However, they left the tower.
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The Two Towers (but not the Tolkien book) |
St. Mary's Basilica had its foundation laid in the 13th century, but wasn't finished until the 14th. It opened in the year 1347. When you look at the front of St. Mary's, you are immediately struck by its asymmetric towers. Why is one taller than the other? So this is interesting. The taller tower belonged to the city and was used as a watch tower. The shorter tower belonged to the church. I guess that is a good way to share resources.
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The Sukiennice |
The Sukiennice is a long building that has been used and is still used as a market. Today, inside, you find stalls selling many crafts. But in its heyday, this was the site of major trade. Since it is called the Cloth Hall, you might guess much of that trade was in cloth. And it was. But surprisingly, the cloth wasn't generally made in Krakow. It was passing through. This trading stop was a major connector for Hungary, Central Asia (present day Syria and Iraq), and Germany. So for many items, Krakow wasn't a producer, but a middle step. There was one item though that Krakow was famous for. More on that below.
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Wawel Royal Castle |
Beneath the Sukiennice is a huge museum. It was actually an archaeological site. While digging in the square to put in infrastructure, they found artifacts and old cobblestones from a much earlier central square. This began a dig which led to many discoveries. Now you can go several meters below the surface and explore. You can see some of the old cobbled streets and layers of foundations that were found in the dig. Also displayed are many of the items they found. In addition to all this, the museum gives a fascinating history of Krakow as a city of trade. One thing I learned: Do you know the purpose of cobblestone streets? It is to help with traction. In cities with lots of rain, or that have frequent floods (Krakow had frequent floods) paving the streets with cobblestones made them less slippery when wet. Krakow also built the streets so at intersections, many streets have a jig, you have to move a bit left or right to connect to the continuation of the street. This was to slow down floodwaters from just rushing through the city.
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Stari Synagogue (note Stari means Old) |
We got accidentally lucky in visiting Rynek Underground (as the museum is called in English.) Unbeknownst to us, the museum is free on Tuesdays and we happened to be there on a Tuesday. Bonus!
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Seal of the Wieliczka Salt Mine |
On Wednesday, we rode the bus to Wieliczka, a town a bit southeast of Krakow. This is a great place, for here is where you find the Wieliczka Salt Mine. Remember how I teased that Krakow was a producer of one of the goods in its market. Salt, that's the one I mean. We learned that at many points in Krakow's history, a kilogram of salt was worth as much as a kilogram of gold.
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These are dwarves, made of salt, mining salt |
This all began about 13.5 million years ago, which is pretty recent in terms of geology. The Carpathian mountains were in the early stages of their uplift and there was a basin at the foot of them. The ocean levels rose and excess salt water flowed into this basin. But as the sea levels fell again, the basin was left with a giant salty lake. The water slowly evaporated (like over 200,000 years) making the lake more and more saline. There was a lot more evaporation than precipitation in the region, and the lake dried completely, leaving enormous salt deposits.
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Nicolas Copernicus was one of the first luminaries to visit the salt mine |
But the Carpathian Mountains weren't done growing. They bulldozed their way through the land, pushing the salt deposits into different shapes and lifting it up and placing it underground, but not so deep underground that it would never be found. How do we know? Because it was found!
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A very salty last supper (but seriously, look at the perspective!) |
People of this region have been mining salt for around 800 years. (That's like nothing in geological time.) For centuries, the salt mine was a huge source of wealth for Poland. It is almost an underground city. The miners didn't actually live underground, instead they worked in shifts so there were always people mining. But at the end of their shifts, they returned to the surface and to their families.
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Goethe, yes, the German poet, was also the minister of mines. Did you know that? |
For much of that time, ventilation wasn't ideal and the process of mining the salt would release methane gas. The methane would rise to the tops of chambers and if it mixed with oxygen from the air in just the right amounts, the miners, carrying open flame lanterns to see their way, could set off explosions! So there were some miners who "volunteered" to be the methane fighters. They got high pay for the job, and they had to be men without families. They wore wet clothing and crawled around carrying long torches with the flame well above their head. Then when the flame hit a pocket of methane, WHOOMPH!
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A sculpture, in salt, of the methane burners |
The miners build chapels underground too. At its peak there were forty chapels in the mine. Today, only eight remain. We got to see a few of these. They are beautifully decorated with sculptures carved from... salt! All these pictures are works in rock salt. That's impressive artistic work, right?
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They hold services here on Sundays. And you can rent this for weddings. |
Originally, all power in the mine was human power. There were winches that had to be turned by four people to bring the cylinders of salt to the surface (and beams of wood down to the mine. They needed the wood to stabilize the tunnels.) Eventually, horses were introduced to the area. But bringing them down into the mine involved putting ropes around them and lowering them. This was so stressful, so we were told, that a good number of the horses died of heart attacks during the descent. So once a horse did successfully make it down, it spent the rest of its life underground.
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The winches ran on horsepower. Literally. |
The mines continued to operate until 1996. By then electricity has replaced the horses as the source of power for the machinery. Today, they still get salt from the mine, but not by digging. Instead, they have systems set up to catch the water that flows through the ground and then to run it through flumes. This water has become saturated with salt. It is then brought to the surface and boiled away to collect the salt.
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The miners would carve the salt into cylinders so they could roll them |
But the big money of the mine today is in tourism. They have millions of tourists each year. In the summer season, they sometimes have as many as 100,000 people in a day. There is still a medicinal spa in the underground world where you can soak in the salty brine to help with asthma or other conditions.
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Jesus being born above and I guess people going to see the baby below. |
Speaking of (or typing of) tourists, we had a pretty unusual experience for tourists tonight. But it begins with a saint. Saint Joseph is the patron saint of carpenters and craftsman. He is also the patron saint of Krakow. His saint day, or the Feast of St. Joseph is today, March 19. Krakow celebrates this with St. Joseph's Fair each year. For about ten days, the Maly Rynek (or the small market square) in Old Town hosts a craft fair. Lots of small stalls are set up with craftsmen who work in wood, metal, glass, beads, jewelry, and amber. (Amber is big in Krakow.) There are also food stalls. And at the south end of the square, there is a stage. Each evening, there are performances on the stage of local musicians and dancers, again a local craft.
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The dancers in traditional costume |
Alrica and I went to the fair this evening. One of the featured performers was a dance troupe. They did a lot of traditional dances. But they came down off the stage and they were taking people from the crowd to join them. (They didn't force you. You had to agree to it.) Well, both Alrica and I partook in several dances. I tried to get pictures of Alrica dancing, but with the speed of the moving and the fact that her back was facing me when she was closest, I only got what I got. The lead dancer would explain things before we began each dance, but since I speak no Polish, the explanation did me little good. Still, I did my best, there was no judgment when we lay-people did poorly, and it was a lot of fun! Good cardio too. And now, Alrica and I are masters of a variety of Polish dances. (So long as you don't ask me to re-create any of them.)
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Alrica dancing in costume that is traditional for her. But maybe not for Poland. |