

Wroclaw, a city with over thousand years of tradition, is the gem of the south-western Poland, rediscovered by tourists from Poland and from abroad. Here the history meets the modernity, and Wroclaw is currently the most often selected as the place of meetings between people of culture, science, business, as well as by students and tourists. The process of Europe unification, proceeding in the last several decades, allows the residents of our continent to rediscover the long-forgotten – and sometimes inaccessible, until recently – gems of the European culture.
In Wroclaw, the history interweaved the lots of Poles, Czechs, Jews, Hungarian, Austrians and Germans. Nations, religions and cultures blended so much, that today it is sometimes difficult to say who created what. After the Second World War, the fate brought together residents from various regions of Poland. They created the present, unique character of the city, especially those coming from Lviv, which currently belongs to Ukraine.
Wroclaw is also one of the most important places of meetings between the creators of contemporary culture, Polish and European. Museums, cinemas, numerous cultural centres, large and small galleries, festivals, exhibitions and performances are the evidence of the rich cultural life of Wroclaw, and their continuously changing offers allow to make oneself familiar with the latest trends in art.
The contemporary Wroclaw is vibrant with life, it is a modern industrial and cultural centre, which strongly influences the development of the Lower Silesia and of this part of Europe. Thanks to its location on the Oder river, it has many picturesque small islands, and over two hundred bridges. Countless number of small cafes, pubs and restaurants makes both the citizens of Wroclaw and the tourists who visit the city leave their homes or hotel rooms to meet their friends or family in the city.
Constantly increasing hotel and congressional-recreational basis is the reason why Wroclaw is more and more often selected as a meeting place for people of science and business. This is an evidence that the capital of the Lower Silesia has become an integral part of the map of the most dynamically developing cities in this part of Europe.
Wroclaw is not an anonymous city – the local monuments are remembered forever, and the magical places, like the Market Square or Ostrów Tumski always make the guests want to come back again.

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"Wroclaw-Info souvenirs"
9.00 do 19.00
Sukiennice 12, 50-107 Wroclaw
tel. + 48 ( 71 ) 342 01 85 ; fax + 48 71 342 28 98
e-mail: wroclaw-info@itwroclaw.pl