Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Warsaw Old Town Market Place, Barrs Side, photograph of 1945 [1] Warsaw's Old Town Market Place (Polish: Rynek Starego Miasta, pronounced [ˈrɘ.nɛk staˈrɛ.ɡɔ ˈmjas.ta]) is the center and oldest part of the Old Town of Warsaw, Poland. Immediately after the Warsaw Uprising, it was systematically blown up by the German Army. [2]
The Michelin Guide originally started reviewing restaurants in Poland in 1997, [1] starting in Kraków and Warsaw as a part of its Main Cities in Europe guide, before expanding to other areas of Poland for a standalone guide starting in 2023. [2] The first Michelin star to be awarded in Poland was to ateller Amaro in the 2013 guide. [3]
Rococo tenement portal depicting a galleon at Świętojańska Street, early 18th century [10] Old Town during the Warsaw Uprising in 1944 Ruins of the Old Town in 1945. Until 1817, the Old Town's most notable feature was the Town Hall which was built before 1429. In 1701 the square was rebuilt by Tylman Gamerski, and in 1817 the Town Hall was ...
Café Adria was founded in 1930 at Moniuszki Street 10 by entrepreneur Franciszek Moszkowicz and its restaurant opened in February 1931. It occupied the basement and ground floor of a large office building that had been built in 1928 for the Italian insurance company Riunione Adriatica di Sicurtà [], which presumably inspired the café's name.
Reconstruction began in July 2013 and the building reopened in May 2018 [7] with a 106-room hotel managed by Raffles Hotels & Resorts as Raffles Europejski Warsaw, 3,000 m 2 of retail space on the ground floor, and 6,500 m 2 of Class A office space on the top two floors, [8] 4,000 m 2 of which [9] is operated by WeWork as shared office space.
In the 1920s and early 1930s, he was the owner of a small restaurant on Rynkowa Street (formerly known as Gnojna) 7 in the Jewish district of Warsaw. His tavern was a beloved place for Warsaw's rich and poor [1].
When a new owner took over in 1960, he said the restaurant had “old world charm.” It expanded with more dining rooms and tried to keep all the menu items under $5, then $10, then $20.
The liquidation of the insurgent hospitals in Warsaw's Old Town was the massacre of wounded Warsaw insurgents taken prisoner in the Old Town by the units of Heinz Reinefarth and Oskar Dirlewanger. The massacre took place on 2 September 1944, and its victims included nearly 1,000 wounded prisoners and several thousand civilians (altogether up to ...