Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Museum of the Polish Army (Polish: Muzeum Wojska Polskiego) is a museum in Warsaw documenting the military history of Poland.Established in 1920 under the Second Polish Republic, it formerly occupied a wing of the building of the Polish National Museum and now occupies a building of its own at the Warsaw Citadel, as well as several branches in Poland.
The museum is located in a former Russian fortress which is divided by Powsińska Street in two parts, the larger part being the museum and the smaller part being Szczubełka Park. In the 1990s, with the retirement of obsolete military equipment, the Polish Army Museum built a warehouse, which later opened as an outdoor exhibition branch of the ...
Muzeum Katyńskie w Warszawie is a museum in Warsaw, Poland. The museum was established in 1993. It is located in the Polish Army Museum. Objects, documents and personal effects from the site of the Katyn massacre can be seen in the museum. [1] In 2017 museum was nominated for European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture award.
Polish Army Museum; S. Silesian Museum (Katowice) W. Warsaw Citadel; White Eagle Museum This page was last edited on 6 November 2024, at 20:53 (UTC). ...
Polish Aviation Museum, Kraków; Polish Air Force Museum , Dęblin; Other museums with aerospace exhibits: Polish Army Museum, Warsaw (large collection) Museum of Polish Military Technology, Warsaw (large collection)
Muzeum Zamku i Szpitala Wojskowego na Ujazdowie is a museum in Warsaw, Poland which opened in 1994.It is located in the Ujazdów Castle, in one of the rooms belonging to the Centre for the Contemporary Art, in the north-west tower of the castle.
Military Ordinariate of Poland: ul. Długa 13/15 3. Museum at the Cemetery in Palmiry: Palmiry, Gmina Czosnów: 4. Museum of Praga: ul. Targowa 50/52 5. Museum of Wola: ul. Srebrna 12 6. Janusz Korczak Research and Documentation Centre ul. Jaktorowska 6 7. Warsaw Museum of Printing ul. Trębacka 3 8. Warsaw's Old Town Heritage Interpretation ...
Organisation of the Polish People's Army in 1985 [2] Land Forces Headquarters, in Warsaw. Polish Front Command, in Warsaw (would have formed the Warsaw Pact’s Northern Front with an authorized strength of 205,620 soldiers in wartime) [citation needed] 6th Pomerania Air Assault Division, in Kraków (reduced to 6th Pomorska Airborne Brigade in ...