March 30, 2009

Long and Yellow

This building is situated in the very center of Nowy Sacz, just one minute walking from the town square. On the left there is the Square of May 3rd (it commemorates the day of May 3rd, 1791 - establishing of the first Polish constitition - it's worth to know that it was first constitution in Europe and second in the world - just four years after the American one).

12 comments:

VP said...

This "yellow" theme is bouncing around the blogs, maybe in advance for the next Theme Day.
This building is charming, I love the turrets and, as a Polish history buff, aware of the value of the Polish constitution of 1791.
I can see a statue on this square, someone famous?

Fio said...

Gdy przeczytałam tytuł byłam pewna, że na zdjęciu będzie autobus :D
No własnie, czyje to popiersie?

PAK said...

O, widzę, że masz coś 'mocnego' na środę :)

W kwestii formalnej -- wcześniej w Europie była Korsyka i Szwecja.

joo said...

to też poznaję i tez pięknie odnowione:)

crocrodyl said...

This is the statue of Stanislaw Malachowski. He was (inter alia)the Marshal of the Four-Year Sejm (1788–1792) and starosta (prefect) of Nowy Sacz's region. He was co-author of the Constitution of 3rd May.
PAK - yes, we have found that in 1755 it was the Corsican Constitution but we haven't found that the Sweden one was before Polish Constitution of 3rd May:)

PAK said...

Chodzi mi o szwedzką konstytucję z 1772 roku.

Unknown said...

Gorgeous building!

cieldequimper said...

Beautiful building and I'm with Vogon Poet here, early for the April theme? :-)

crocrodyl said...

For the April Theme we have sth more yellow:)

Cezar and Léia said...

Beautiful yellow building!
Hello m-m
Nowy Sacz is so lovely!Great pictures here! :-)
Kind Regards
Léia :-)

Lowell said...

I like the building, but especially thankful for your commmentary...I had no idea that the Polish constitution was the first in Europe or 2nd in the world.

Amazing!

Thanks again!

Juergen Kuehn said...

The building has a comely architectural style and looks very noble. Thanks for the well founded history.