• Tragically destroyed during the Nazi offensive in World War II, the 17th century Saxon Palace in Warsaw is a prominent historical site.
  • Sienkiewicz, addressing the significance of the Saxon Palace, stated, "This is the Altar of the Fatherland, the last great post-war wound of Warsaw.
  • Saxon Palace was a prominent building located on Saxon Axis – an 18th-century development that also includes Saxon Garden and Piłsudski Square.
  • Archaeologists conducting reconstruction works at the Saxon Palace have made new discoveries into palace life.
  • Poles also decided to allocate the Saxon Palace to the army. Życie Polskie was the seat of the General Staff, and then, from 1928, of the General Staff of the Army.
  • During the Anglo-saxon period and at least until the Norman period, palaces were basically enlarged versions of the hall and home model of the rural hamlets.
  • The Saxon Palace (Polish: pałac Saski w Warszawie) was one of the most distinctive buildings in prewar Warsaw, Poland.
  • Saxon Palace was a prominent building located on Saxon Axis – an 18th-century development that also includes Saxon Garden and Piłsudski Square.
  • Viewing the Saxon Palace through a mobile device is a fascinating journey in time, during which the voice of the narrator will guide you through three chapters of the...
  • The representative Saxon Palace, an emblematic symbol of Warsaw before the Second World War, is poised to return to the map of Poland’s Capital City.