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  1. The history of Lower Silesia is a captivating tale that spans over 1,200 years. Over the centuries, it has been a part of numerous empires and kingdoms, including Great Moravia, the Medieval Kingdom of Poland, the Crown of Bohemia, the Habsburg monarchy of Austria, Prussia, the German Empire, and eventually, modern Poland post-1945.

  2. A recipe for an unforgettable vacation – the beauty of nature, unique monuments, mysterious places. Lower Silesia is a region that offers a lot – from vast ponds in the north to the oldest mountains in Poland in the south. It hides many secrets and priceless buildings. Here is our list of 10 things worth doing in Lower Silesia in the summer.

  3. 3 de may. de 2024 · This area held three-quarters of Silesia’s coal production and nearly two-thirds of its steelworks. Lower Silesia, meanwhile, was left entirely to Germany. Nazi Germany reacquired Upper Silesia with its conquest of Poland in 1939. The Germans killed or deported many educated Silesian Poles during World War II and filled the area with German ...

  4. You can easily find its traces by following the trail of numerous castles, strongholds and fortresses (there are over 100 of them in Lower Silesia, the biggest number in Poland), crossing the corridors of mysterious and unexplored adits in Walim or Gluszyca (the Underground City of Osowka), or exploring, already known to the media around the world, the ‘Golden Train’, in which, as some say ...

  5. 26 de abr. de 2024 · History. Lower Silesia has a long and interesting history and you will find remnants of old times all over the region. From the 7th century, it has been under Slavic influence and eventually became part of Poland shortly after the country was established at the end of the 10th century (that’s why you will find some of the oldest Polish towns and cities in this area).

  6. Colonization affected the mountains in the south of Lower and Middle Silesia, the Lower and Middle Silesian regions to the right of the Oder and Upper Silesia. During the time many Polish places received German law, often with the help of German settlers. Silesia within Poland in the early 14th century