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Royal Castle in Warsaw

Royal Castle
Zamek Królewski
Warsaw 07-13 img04 Palace Square.jpg
View from the Castle Square
Royal Castle, Warsaw is located in Poland
Royal Castle, Warsaw
Location within Poland
General information
Type Castle residency
Architectural style Mannerist-early Baroque
Country Poland
Coordinates 52°14′52″N 21°00′51″E / 52.24778°N 21.01417°E / 52.24778; 21.01417
Construction started 1598, 1971
Completed 1619, 1984
Demolished 1655–1656
(Swedish Army),
10 – 13 September 1944
(German Army)
Client Sigismund III Vasa
Owner
Height 60 metres
Design and construction
Architect G. B. Trevano
Website
Official Website
Official name Historic Centre
Type Cultural
Criteria ii, vi
Designated 1980 (4th session)
Reference no. [1]
UNESCO region Europe

The Royal Castle in Warsaw (Polish: Zamek Królewski w Warszawie) is a castle residency that formerly served throughout the centuries as the official residence of the Polish monarchs. It is located in the Castle Square, at the entrance to the Warsaw Old Town. The personal offices of the king and the administrative offices of the Royal Court of Poland were located there from the sixteenth century until the Partitions of Poland.

Initially the complex served as the residence of the Dukes of Masovia, and since the sixteenth century, the seat of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth: the King and Parliament (Chamber of Deputies and Senate). In its long history the Royal Castle was repeatedly plundered and devastated by the invading Swedish, Brandenburgian, Prussian and Tsarist armies. The Constitution of 3 May 1791, the first of its type in Europe and the world's second-oldest codified national constitution after the 1789 U.S. Constitution, was drafted here by the Four-Year Sejm. In the 19th century, after the collapse of the November Uprising, it was used as an administrative centre by the Tsar and was re-designed for the needs of the Imperial Russian administration. During the course of World War I it was the residence of the German Governor-General. In 1920-1922 the Royal Castle was the seat of the Polish Head of State and between 1926 and World War II the building was the residence of the Polish president, Ignacy Mościcki.

Burned and looted by the Nazi Germans following the Invasion of Poland in 1939 and almost completely destroyed in 1944 after the failed Warsaw Uprising, the Castle was completely rebuilt and reconstructed; in 1965 the surviving fragments of the castle and the Royal Library, the adjacent Copper-Roof Palace and the Kubicki Arcades were registered as historical monuments by the government. Reconstruction of the castle carried out in 1971-1984 was led by the Civic Committee, responsible for the reconstruction of Warsaw. It was afforded by mainly US donations. In 1980, the Royal Castle, together with the Old Town was registered as a protected UNESCO World Heritage Site. Today it is a historical and national monument, and is listed as a national museum visited by over 500,000 people every year.


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