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  • The Palace (then called the Morsztyn Palace) was purchased in 1714, by Augustus II, the first of Poland’s two Saxon kings. Rebuilding of the palace was completed in the reign of his son Augustus III in 1748. In the early 19th Century it housed the Warsaw Lyceum where Frederick Chopin’s father taught.
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  • The Saxon Palace (Polish: pałac Saski w Warszawie) was one of the most distinctive buildings in Warsaw, Poland before World War II.
  • A unique symbol of this common European heritage is the Kutno Travel Palace (Postal Palace) of King Augustus III, commonly referred to as the Saxon Palace.
  • walking-warsaw The Saxon Palace was one of the largest palaces in Warsaw. Unfortunately, it did not survive the Second World War.
  • The official website for the process of rebuilding the Saski Palace, the Brühl Palace and three townhouses in Warsaw.
  • The Saxon Palace was one of the central features of the Saxon Axis, an 18th-century urban development that also included a representative public square...
  • Tragically destroyed during the Nazi offensive in World War II, the 17th century Saxon Palace in Warsaw is a prominent historical site.
  • ‘Frontispiece: Northampton, Saxon Palace Complex’, in An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in the County of Northamptonshire, Volume 5...
  • The Palace (then called the Morsztyn Palace) was purchased in 1714, by Augustus II, the first of Poland’s two Saxon kings.
  • Like several other palaces, the Saxon Palace of Poland holds a part of lived history and most importantly the ruins of the palace are due to World War II.
  • The Saxon Palace is located in Warsaw, Poland, with construction beginning in 1661 by Jan Andrzej Morsztyn.