header | Home | Set as homepage | Add to favorites | | TravelsTalk forums
Search the Site   Advanced Search »
Sections
Newsletter
Subscribe to newsletter:

Poll: Baggage Theft
On how frequent flights you have to claim for theft?
1 of 3 voyages
1 of 10 voyages
1 of 20 flights
Poll results | Old polls


email Email to a friend | print Print version | comment Comments (0 posted)

Gdansk Travel Guide

By news desk on September 03,2007

image

On September 1, 1939, the Nazis invaded Gdansk, triggering off the Second World War. A little over seven hundred years earlier, the city had been invaded by the Teutonic Knights; in the 17th century by the Swedes; and in the 18th century by Peter the Great of Russia. A series of invasions, all of which have left scars on a city which ranks as one of those which seems to go from one major historical event to another.  

Gdansk, ever since it was founded a thousand years ago, has been in the news. A major port, a prosperous industrial city, an educational town with the second oldest university in all of Europe. This is the city which, clinging to the rim of the Baltic, has had changes of fortune as abrupt and unpredictable as the city’s weather. Gdansk has been rich and it has been poor; it has been free and it has been captive. It has seen the glories of the Renaissance and it has seen the horrors of the Jewish holocaust.

Modern Gdansk is an amalgam of all its past. A city of towering medieval cathedrals and old gates; of museums, bridges and bustling markets. Of drab shipyards and busy factories, of quaint gabled houses and cobbled streets. A city where vodka and jazz are as highly appreciated as a good performance at the opera. A city which welcomes visitors as whole-heartedly as it has fought invaders over the years.

 


150 times read

Did you enjoy this article?

1 2 3 4 5 (total 0 votes)
comment Comments (0 posted)
Most Popular