June 20, 2019
We had gotten to our Gdansk hotel in the wee hours of the morning, but we had plans already in place for our first day in Poland, so we got up after about four hours of sleep, grabbed a piece of toast from the breakfast buffet, and met our guide in the lobby. Her name was Barbara (pronounced bar-BAR-uh), but she told us to call her Basha. We hopped in her car and drove about 40 miles to Malbork Castle, where another guide specific to the castle was waiting for us.
Thank you, Google Maps |
Located 20 miles from the Baltic Sea on the Nogat River, Malbork Castle was one of about twenty castle fortresses built by the Teutonic Knights in Northern Prussia:
Malbork Castle is one of those places that I can't believe I had never heard of or seen pictures of.
•It is the largest castle in the world if measured by land area.
•It is constructed of 10 million bricks.
•It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
•It was built by the Teutonic Knights (German-Catholic knights--think Crusades), with the first phase begun in the 13th century.
•It was the spiritual, military, and administrative center of the Teutonic Kingdom of Prussia.
•It is the most heavily fortified castle of the Middle Ages.
•About 500 monks lived here at any given time.
•It was restored three times: in the 19th century, in the early 20th century, and after World War II.
Why was it restored twice in the 20th century? Because THIS is what it looked like at the end of World War II: