place

Franciszkańska Street, Warsaw

Poland road stubsStreets in WarsawWarsaw geography stubs
Ulica Franciszkańska przy Ciasnej 2019
Ulica Franciszkańska przy Ciasnej 2019

Franciszkańska (Franciscan Street) is a street in the centre of Warsaw, linking the New Town with Nalewki street. In the 19th century it was inhabited primarily by Jews, who converted the street into a large open-air marketplace. The name itself was derived from the Church of Saint Francis owned by the Franciscans. The street was destroyed during World War II, along with most of the New Town and Old Town. The Franciscans were able to rebuild their church, as well as the adjoining monastery. The church was finally finished with the completion of the main altar in the mid-1970s. The street itself was rebuilt in 1949, with most of the buildings, constructed in what was at the time a "model" socialist housing style, occupied in 1950. (There was one exception: an apartment building that survived the war and, although dilapidated, remained occupied until the late 1970s, when it was torn down and a new building put in its place.) The new buildings were occupied by workers of the PWPW, the state printing concern a few blocks over, where money was being printed before the war as well after. Ironically, because the PWPW was built to include the government bunkers in case of war, it was literally impossible to tear down after the war. Today, Franciszkańska is a residential street in a very desirable part of town.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Franciszkańska Street, Warsaw (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Franciszkańska Street, Warsaw
Franciszkańska, Warsaw Śródmieście (Warsaw)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Franciszkańska Street, WarsawContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.252222222222 ° E 21.003333333333 °
placeShow on map

Address

Franciszkańska 14
00-214 Warsaw, Śródmieście (Warsaw)
Masovian Voivodeship, Poland
mapOpen on Google Maps

Ulica Franciszkańska przy Ciasnej 2019
Ulica Franciszkańska przy Ciasnej 2019
Share experience

Nearby Places

State Tribunal (Poland)
State Tribunal (Poland)

The State Tribunal (Polish: Trybunał Stanu) of the Republic of Poland is the judicial body, which rules on the constitutional liability of people holding the highest offices of state. It examines cases concerning the infringement of the Constitution and laws or crimes committed by the President, members of the government, the President of the Supreme Chamber of Control, the President of the National Bank of Poland, heads of central administrative offices and other senior state officials.In Poland, referral to the State Tribunal is used instead of the process of impeachment, which is traditionally used in some other nations as a way of addressing similar allegations against persons holding analogous offices. The State Tribunal is empowered to rule for the removal of individuals from public office, to impose injunctions on individuals against their appointment to senior offices, to revoke an individual's right to vote and to stand for election, to withdraw previously awarded medals, distinctions and titles of honour, and in criminal cases to impose penalties stipulated in the criminal code. The composition of the State Tribunal is established at the first sitting of each new Sejm and is binding for its term (with the exception that the head of the office is Chief Justice, appointed by President for a six-year term). His two deputies and 16 members of the State Tribunal are chosen from outside the Sejm. Members of the State Tribunal must hold Polish citizenship, may not have a criminal record or have had their civic rights revoked, nor may they be employed in the state administration.