Toruń Sights

  1. Bridge Gate

    Following the old city walls east around from the castle, you'll come to the first of three surviving city gates, the Bridge Gate . A 700m-long bridge was built here between 1497 and 1500 and survived for over three centuries.

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  2. Cathedral of SS John the Baptist & John the Evangelist

    Of the historical buildings outside the museum's administration, the largest and most impressive is the giant Gothic Cathedral of SS John the Baptist & John the Evangelist. Work started around 1260 and was only completed at the end of the 15th century, by which time the church dominated the town's skyline, as it still does today. Its massive tower houses Poland's second-largest historic bell (after the one in the Wawel Royal Cathedral of Kraków), the Tuba Dei (God's Trumpet).

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  3. Ethnographic Museum

    In a park just to the north of the Old Town is the Ethnographic Museum. It focuses on traditional fishery, with all sorts of implements, boats and nets. Admission also lets you visit the small but good skansen in the grounds, which contains examples of the traditional rural architecture of the region and beyond.

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  4. Explorers' Museum

    The Explorers' Museum is an institution to be placed on every die-hard traveller's itinerary. It contains artefacts from the collection of inveterate wanderer Antonio Halik, comprising hats, travel documents, and souvenirs of his journeys - including a vast array of hotel keys!

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  5. Fountain

    West of the town hall, opposite the post office, is an intriguing small Fountain built in 1914. Bronze-cast frogs sit on its rim, admiring a statue of a violin-playing boy known as Janko Muzykant, Toruń's very own answer to the Pied Piper story. Legend has it that a witch once came to the town, but wasn't welcomed by the locals. In revenge, she invoked a curse, and the town was invaded by frogs.

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  6. Gingerbread Museum

    A street away is another facility focused on the same subject, the Gingerbread Museum . Here you can learn about gingerbread's history and create even more of the stuff, under the enlightened instruction of a mock-medieval gingerbread master. If you're feeling sated with gingerbread by this point, the Regional Museum presents less sugary exhibitions inside several interesting old houses.

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  7. House of Nicolaus Copernicus

    Copernicus pops up in the Regional Museum's second big attraction, the brick Gothic House of Nicolaus Copernicus. Unfortunately it's an institution suffering from an identity crisis, unsure of whether its exhibits should focus on old furniture, astronomy, or Copernicus' life story. As there's only sporadic English captioning, amid scholarly doubt over whether the great man was really born in this house, the museum is less interesting than it should be.

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  8. House of the Esken Family

    The Gothic House of the Esken Family, set behind the cathedral, was converted into a granary in the 19th century. It's worth persevering past the dry city history displays on the first floor, to encounter the second floor collection of medieval weaponry and archaeological exhibits from the Iron and Bronze Ages, including a human skeleton buried in the distant pre-Poland past.

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  9. House Under the Star

    The House Under the Star, the most richly decorated house on the main square, showcases a small but elegant collection from Asia, including Japanese swords, Indian statues and Chinese pottery from the Tang dynasty. The building's ornate Baroque fittings include striking polychrome ceilings and a statue of Minerva.

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  10. Leaning Tower

    At the far western end of the old city walls are a few medieval granaries and the Leaning Tower.

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  12. Monastery Gate

    Follow the old city walls to find the Monastery Gate.

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  13. New Town Square

    North of the castle lies the New Town, centred on the New Town Square. The building in the middle is a former Protestant church, erected in the 19th century after the town hall was pulled down. It's a quieter, more tourist-free part of town, and the square hosts irregular art and craft markets.

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  14. Old Town Hall

    The Old Town Hall was built at the end of the 14th century and hasn't changed that much, though some Renaissance additions lent an ornamental touch to the sober Gothic structure.

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  15. Old Town Market Square

    The usual starting point on Toruń's Gothic trail is the Old Town Market Square, dominated by its massive redbrick town hall and lined with fine restored houses, many graced by intricate decorative façades.

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  16. Planetarium

    Aspiring astronomers can see what Copernicus was on about at the Planetarium , which usually has two daily shows in English.

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  17. Regional Museum

    The Old Town Hall is occupied by the main branch of the Regional Museum. Displays within its original interiors include a collection of Gothic art (painting, woodcarving and stained glass), a display of local 17th- and 18th-century crafts, and a gallery of Polish paintings from around 1800 to the present.

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  18. Ruins of the Castle

    History buffs should take the opportunity to check out the remnants of the town's original medieval fortifications. To the east, in a triangle squeezed between the Old and New Towns, are the Ruins of the Castle, built by the Teutonic Knights. It was destroyed by the town's inhabitants in 1454 as a protest against the order's economic restrictions (they must have been really ticked off - those Teutonic castles were solidly built).

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  19. Sailors' Gate

    Follow the old city walls to find the Sailors' Gate.

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  20. St Mary's Church

    The third great Gothic structure in the old town is St Mary's Church, erected by the Franciscans at the end of the 13th century. Austere and plain from the outside, it has a lofty interior with tall, intricate stained-glass windows and a prominent golden altarpiece, framed by a wooden archway depicting a complete crucifixion scene.

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  21. Statue

    On the opposite side of the Rynek, you'll find another curious critter-related Statue at knee-level, depicting a dog and umbrella. The pooch's name is Filus, and he starred in a famous long-running Polish comic strip as the pet of brolly-wielding Professor Filutek.

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  23. Statue of Copernicus

    The square at the Old Town Hall is also furnished with a number of interesting items of statuary. A few steps from the town hall entrance is a Statue of Copernicus, one of the oldest monuments dedicated to the stargazer and a regular feature in holiday snaps.

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  24. Tower

    You can go up the Old Town Hall Tower for a fine panoramic view.

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  25. World of Torun's Gingerbread

    The third element of the House of Nicolaus Copernicus museum is the extravagantly titled World of Torun's Gingerbread, which offers insights into the arcane art of pierniki creation. Visitors are guided by a costumed medieval townswoman and given the chance to bake their own. A combined ticket to any two of the three attractions costs 18/11zł.

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  26. Wozownia Art Gallery

    The Wozownia Art Gallery has changing displays of contemporary art.

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