Gothic Revival architecture was developed in Poland mainly after the country was partitioned between Prussia, Austria and Russia. It was popular especially in the Prussian partition of Poland. Gothic Revival architecture In Poland often has certain features, derived from the characteristic Polish Brick Gothic architecture style. Churches, schools, post offices, government buildings and palaces were often built in this style. Notable authors of the Polish Gothic Revival style are Jan Sas Zubrzycki, Feliks Księżarski, Józef Pius Dziekoński, and Enrico Marconi.[1]
Gallery
- Churches and chapels

Blessed Bronisława Chapel, Kraków
Białystok Cathedral, Białystok
Łódź Cathedral, Łódź
Holy Family Church, Tarnów.jpg.webp)
Karl Scheibler's Chapel, Łódź
St. John Church, Sokołów Małopolski
St. Francis of Assisi Church, Gdańsk
Ełk Cathedral, Ełk
St. George Church, Sopot
Immaculate Heart of St. Mary Church, Grudziądz
- Post offices
Main Post Office, Toruń
Main Post Office, Bydgoszcz
Main Post Office, Chorzów
Main Post Office, Olsztyn
- Town halls




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- Houses

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- Other buildings

Gothic House, Czartoryski palace complex, Puławy
Palace, Sulisław
Castle, Kamieniec Ząbkowicki
See also
References
- ↑ Bowe, Nicola Gordon, ed. (1993). Art and the national dream: the search for vernacular expression in turn-of-the-century design. Blackrock, Co. Dublin, Ireland: Irish Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-7165-2491-5.
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