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					Skalka, Krakow's Oldest Shrine. 
                 
                  
                Poland's second 
				holiest sanctuary after the Jasna Gora monastery of Czestochowa 
				lies mostly undisturbed by visitors a five minutes' walk down 
				the Vistula river from the Wawel Royal Castle which swarms with 
				tourists.  
					
  
					
                Here, on a rocky hillock called Skalka, once stood a 
				rotunda church, where king Boleslav II the Bold put to death 
				Krakow bishop Stanislav in 1079. The king was exiled and the 
				late bishop worshiped as a martyr who had exposed excesses of 
				the tyrannical monarch. In 1253 bishop Stanislav was canonized 
				to become the chief patron saint of Poland. Throughout the 
				Middle Ages his cult was pivotal in forming both Polish nation 
				and the country's political culture with its tradition of the 
				accountability of those in power. And Poland’s kings-elects had 
				to come to the Skalka Sanctuary on their coronation to atone for 
				the sins of the predecessors.  
					
  
					
                The present splendid Baroque 
				church of the mid 18th century is the fourth on the site. 
				Nevertheless visitors can still see three dark spots of St. Stanislav's blood on the church wall. Since the 1880s some 
				Polish most illustrious luminaries were posthumously awarded 
				with ceremonial burial in its crypt that is open to the public. 
				The church adjoins a 17th-century Pauline monastery modeled on 
				a Renaissance castle. 
					
                Every year on St. Stanislav’s day, May 8, 
				major religious procession led by Krakow bishops gathers Polish 
				notables and immense crowds of the faithful when the saint’s 
				relics are carried from the Skalka sanctuary to the 
				Wawel Cathedral. 
					
                   
					
                The 14th-century 
					stained-glass window depicts St. Stanislaw  
					
                
				Krakow Skalka sanctuary for large screen  
					 
                  Sanctuary of 
					Divine Mercy 
                Humble nun’s visions in the 1930s gave rise to a 
				world-wide spiritual movement inside the Catholic Church, ever 
				stronger nowadays, with the center in her Krakow convent.  
					
					
					John 
					Paul II sanctuary 
                	 
                Tyniec Abbey 
                Hilltop monastery-fortress dates from the 11th century. 
                Bielany Monastery 
                Magnificent 17th-century Baroque hermitage complex atop 
				the Silver Mountain hovers over Krakow. 
                St. Norbert's Convent 
                Vast fortified complex on the Vistula river is home to 
				Krakow’s once powerful Premonstratensian Sisters since the 12th 
				century.  
                
				Cistercian Abbey of Mogila 
                   Mogila Abbey dates back to 
				1225 and counts among Krakow's most interesting monasteries.
                   
                	 
                Czestochowa 
                Jasna Gora Sanctuary in Czestochowa is the holiest 
				place of Poland and one of the world’s most important 
				destinations for pilgrims. 
                Kalwaria 
                With its 42 Baroque churches and chapels of all shapes 
				and sizes in addition to the central basilica and the Franciscan 
				monastery, the Kalwaria Zebrzydowska sanctuary is Europe's 
				biggest Calvary shrine. 
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				Krakow churches 
                Krakow numerous churches are architectural gems, art 
				hoards, and spiritual hubs
                
				Pilgrimage 
				sites in Krakow 
				
				Wawel Cathedral 
                Poland's impressive national shrine dates from the 14th 
				century and shelters plenty of superb church art. The Sigismund Chapel is a masterpiece of the 
				Renaissance art and architecture. Giant Zygmunt bell of 1520 ranks with the world's largest. Most Polish kings are buried here together with the greatest 
				national heroes.  
                 
                Basilica of the Virgin Mary's 
                Immense Gothic church, the city of Krakow's principal 
				temple since the 13th century, boasts the world's greatest Gothic sculpture among its many excellent works of art. 
				Huge stained-glass widows of the chancel date from the 14th 
				century.  
                 
                In the footsteps of Pope John Paul 
				II 
                 
                Roman Catholic Church 
                Sunday Masses 
                 
                 
                 
                 
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