June 27, 2019
Old Town Market Square, where we were staying in Warsaw, is only a block from the beginning of Castle Square, which is the starting point for the Royal Route, a 7-mile road that leads from the Royal Castle to King Jan III Sobieski's 17th-century personal residence. A main artery of the city, it is chock-full of things to see.
The first thing we noticed when we entered Castle Square was a 72-foot-tall column topped by a statue of King Sigismund II of Vasa, who moved Poland's capital from Krakow to Warsaw in 1596. The column was erected in 1664 and has the distinction of being the first secular monument in column form in modern history. You'll notice, however, that although the king has a sword in one hand, he is carrying a cross in the other hand. Not much separation between church and state in those days.
Sigismund made it through the 1939 Nazi invasion of Poland, but on September 1, 1944, during the Warsaw Uprising, the column was demolished in bombing raids. Miraculously, the figure of Sigismund more or less survived.
Photo from Wikipedia |
Sigismund had some reconstructive surgery after the war and was re-elevated to the top of a new granite column in 1949. Today the column is a popular gathering site. Every time we were near it, there was a busker of some sort playing on the steps and dozens of people languishing on or near its base.
To the right of the column is a huge red brick building. This is the Royal Castle, once the home of Polish monarchs (including Sigismund, the dude on the column) and now a Polish art and history museum. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The castle's clock tower is almost 200 feet tall, and its base dates to the mid-14th century. The castle was hit by bombs during the initial invasion of Warsaw in September 1939, which destroyed the roof and turrets. Immediately after the Germans seized the city, they cleaned out everything that was valuable from the building, sending some items to Germany and giving others to Nazi officials living in Warsaw. However, some of the art was secretly smuggled out by Polish museum staff at great risk to their lives. The Nazis dynamited what was left of the 600-year-old building in 1944 in retribution for the Warsaw Uprising.