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Poznań Town Hall

Poznań Town Hall (Polish: ratusz w Poznaniu) is a historic city hall in the city of Poznań, Poland, located at the Poznań Old Town in the centre of the Old Market Square. It used to serve as the seat of local government until 1939, and now houses a museum. The town hall was originally built in the late 13th century following the founding of the medieval city in 1253; it was rebuilt in roughly its present-day form, in mannerist style, with an ornate loggia, by Giovanni Battista di Quadro in 1550–1560. The display of mechanical fighting goats, played out daily at noon above the clock on the front wall of the building, is one of the city's main tourist attractions.

Poznań Town Hall
Main façade of the building with arcade loggia
General information
Architectural styleLate renaissance
Town or cityPoznań
CountryPoland
Coordinates52°24′31″N 16°56′3″E / 52.40861°N 16.93417°E / 52.40861; 16.93417
Construction started1550
Completed1560
Design and construction
Architect(s)Giovanni Battista di Quadro
Major reconstruction
Designated2008-11-28
Part ofPoznań – historic city center
Reference no.Dz.U. 2008 nr 219 poz. 1401[1]

History edit

The town hall was originally constructed as the administrative building of the city founded on the left bank of the Warta in 1253 (see History of Poznań). It was completed around 1300, during the reign of Wenceslaus II of Bohemia, and was first documented in Latin in 1310 as Domus Consulum.[2] It was a one-storey Gothic building built upon a raised quadrangle. The cellars remain from this period of construction. The building was extended in the 15th century, and at the turn of the century a tower was built at the north-western corner. The interior was remodeled between 1504 and 1508.

 
Town Hall about 1910, during the German rule

In 1536 Poznań suffered a major fire, which seriously damaged the town hall. Repair work was carried out in 1540–1542, particularly to the tower, but it remained unsafe. In 1550 the city council commissioned Giovanni Battista di Quadro to carry out major repairs. The work lasted until 1560. Di Quadro added an upper storey, extended the building towards the west, and added attic walls and a three-storey loggia.[3] A new clock (installed 1551) was made with three full faces and one half-face, and with goats added as a "comic element" (see next section).

In 1675 the tower, clock and goats were destroyed by lightning. The tower was rebuilt in 1690 to a height of 90 metres (300 ft). The top of the tower was destroyed by a hurricane in 1725. From 1781–1784, the building had a large renovation thanks to the efforts of the city's "Committee of Good Order", and it obtained the basic form which it presents today. A Classical-style tower roof was designed by Bonawentura Solari, topped by a white eagle with a two-metre wingspan. On the eastern elevation Franciszek Cielecki painted Jagiellonian kings, and under the central turret a cartouche was placed with the king's initials: SAR (Stanislaus Augustus Rex).

The next major renovation lasted from 1910–1913 (during the period of German rule), when black rustication was used to give the building a more "northern German" style.[4] The original late renaissance polychromy was destroyed.[4] An additional storey was added[5] and the goats, which had been absent since 1675, were restored to the tower in 1913. In October 1943 the Town Hall was the scene of Heinrich Himmler's Posen speeches. Following major damage in the Battle of Poznań (1945), the Town Hall was again rebuilt in 1945–1954, when the Renaissance character of the elevations was restored (and extracts from the constitution of the Polish People's Republic were added to the text displayed on the attic wall). The eagle, which had been kept hidden during the war, was returned to the tower in 1947. The mechanism that drives the goats was replaced in 1954, and again at the end of the century. Renovation carried out in 1992–2002 largely restored the building to its post-1784 appearance.

The goats and bugle call edit

 
The mechanized goats, which butt heads daily at noon

Today the mechanical goats' butting display is performed daily at noon, preceded by the striking of the clock and the playing of a traditional bugle call (hejnał). At other hours between 7 am and 9 pm the same call is played on a carillon, installed in the tower in 2003. The daily appearance of the goats is one of Poznań's best-known tourist attractions.

 
Poznań bugle call

A legend behind the original addition of the goats to the clock mechanism states that a cook, while preparing a banquet for the voivode and other dignitaries, had burnt a roast deer, and attempted to replace it by stealing two goats from a nearby meadow. The goats escaped and ran up the town hall tower, where they attracted the attention of the townspeople when they began to butt each other (according to some versions, this drew attention to a fire which might otherwise have done significant damage). Because of the entertainment provided, the voivode pardoned both the cook and the goats, and ordered that two mechanical goats be incorporated into the new clock being made for the building.

 
Retired Koziołki in the Museum of History of Poznań City

Another legend is associated with the hejnał. This says that Bolko, son of the tower's trumpeter, once took care of a raven whose wing had been shot through. The boy was then awoken at night by a gnome wearing a crown and purple cape, who thanked the boy for his kindness and handed him a small gold trumpet, telling him to blow it when in danger. After these words the gnome transformed into a raven and flew away. Years later, after Bolko had taken his father's place as trumpeter, when an attacking army was scaling Poznań's walls, Bolko remembered the present, ran to the top of the tower and began to play the trumpet. Dark clouds began to gather on the horizon, which turned out to be an enormous flock of ravens that fell upon the attacking army and forced it to retreat. The trumpet was lost when Bolko dropped it in his astonishment, but the call which he played is still performed.

 
The goats bumping heads in Christmas costumes on New Year's Eve 2023

Rooms edit

The interior of the town hall consists of cellars, a ground floor and two upper storeys. The building currently serves as a Museum of the History of the City of Poznań (Muzeum Historii Miasta Poznania), a subdivision of the National Museum in Poznań.

Cellars and ground floor edit

The cellars were built between the 13th and 14th centuries. There was originally one large room with a supporting column in the centre; this was later divided into four rooms. Keystones feature the coat of arms of Poznań (crossed keys) and the Bohemian coat of arms (white lion with double tail) dating from the times of Wacław II Czeski. Until the 17th century the cellars were used to store goods, and in the 17th and 18th centuries they contained a prison and torture chamber. In the 19th century they were in use as a restaurant. They were later used as museum rooms, and are currently being renovated.

The ground-floor rooms were originally built in Gothic style, but rebuilt in Renaissance style by G. B. di Quadro; only one room retains the original vault. The architect also added two rooms with lunette vaults. One of the original uses of these rooms was for the town archives.

Upper floors edit

The second floor of the building was originally used for utility functions; following World War II damage it was rebuilt as exhibition space, with ceilings modelled on those from the houses on the Old Market Square. However the first floor contained the grandest rooms, used for official purposes by the city's authorities – these include the Great Hall (Vestibule), the Royal Hall and the Courtroom, described below.

Great Hall edit

 
Renaissance stucco decorations in the Great Hall

The Great Hall or Vestibule is designed in Renaissance style by G. B. di Quadro. It was originally used for important sittings of the city court. Over the entrance is a quotation from Aristotle's Politics, and on the hall side a quotation from the Third Psalm. The hall retains its original vaults with lunettes, supported by two columns and by corbels. The coffers and columns are ornamented (the ornamentation on the ceiling is sgraffito). The coffers in the northern part of the room have polychrome stucco decoration showing Hercules and Samson, David and Goliath, and Marcus Curtius. The lower coffers show the coats of arms of Poland, Lithuania, the House of Sforza (Bona Sforza was Polish queen consort to 1548), the Habsburgs (Catherine Habsburg was queen consort from 1553) and Poznań, as well as an angel holding a board with the date 1555, the year the work was completed. Artists' signatures, house marks and representations of their tools can also be found. The southern part contains representations of animals and legendary creatures (elephant, lion, leopard, eagle, rhinoceros, griffin, Pegasus) and deities signifying heavenly bodies (the sun, the moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn in the Ptolemeic system. Also in cross-shaped coffers are the heads of Moses and of Christ, the latter accompanied by another house mark.

On the western wall are two portals dating from 1508, which combine Gothic and Renaissance features. Gold-plated doors contain the Bohemian coat of arms, possibly dating from the time of Wacław II Czeski. Notable exhibits include a Venetian globe (1688), and busts of Roman emperors from the third and fourth centuries, excavated in Italy in the 18th century.

The hall is currently used for concerts and for special weddings.

Royal Hall edit

The Royal Hall (Sala Królewska) was once richly decorated similarly to the Great Hall, and was used for meetings of the city council. It was partly restored in 1954 following war damage. Its name derives from the portraits of kings which once decorated the hall (the portraits on display today come from the National Museum's collections). The hall features a Renaissance sandstone fireplace (1541), moved here from the adjoining weighing house when that building was demolished in 1890 (it was rebuilt in its original style after World War II). There is also a portal dating from 1536, moved from a house on the Old Market Square (Stary Rynek 87).

Courtroom edit

The sala sądowa (courtroom) was used for minor court hearings. It retains Renaissance "mirror vaults", with polychrome decoration dating from between the late 16th and early 19th centuries. On the northern wall are personifications of four continents. On the wall to the right of the entrance is the painting Aeropagus Maioris Poloniae by Wacław Graff, which alludes to a court of 1726. Opposite the entrance is a marble statue of king Stanisław II Augustus, dating from 1783.

 
Fireplace in the Royal Hall
 
Poniatowski's statue in the Courtroom
 
Aeropagus Maioris Poloniae
 
The Great Hall (reception)

External features edit

 
View of the building from the north-east

The front of the building, facing east, features an ornately decorated, three-storey loggia. Between the arcade columns on the ground floor are five pairs of female figures, the first four pairs representing virtues: patience (paciencia), with a lamb and prudence (prudencia) with a mirror; charity (charitas) with two children and justice (iusticia) with scales and a sword; faith (fides) with a chalice and sword and hope (spes) with a thurible and the sun; and courage (fortitudo) with a broken column and temperance (temperancia) pouring water from a vase into a bowl. The last pair is of two famous women from the Ancient World: Lucretia (Lucrecia) with a spear through her own breast, and Cleopatra (Cleapairi), with snakes twisted around her arms.

Between the ground and first floors runs a fresco in Latin text serving as a warning to judges. Below the first floor there is a series of medallions with figures from the Ancient World: the brothers Gaius Gracchus and Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, Lucius Junius Brutus, Archimedes, Vitruvius, Virgil, Homer, Justinian I, Horace, Spartacus, and the tyrannicides Harmodius and Aristogeiton.

Above the loggia is an attic wall, which features a list of rulers of the Jagiellonian Dynasty from Władysław II Jagiełło and Jadwiga of Poland to Sigismund II Augustus. In the centre is a small tower, at the foot of which the goats appear for their daily display. Below this is a clock, connected with the mechanism that controls the goats. Below that is the monogram of Stanisław II Augustus ("SAR").

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Rozporządzenie Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 28 listopada 2008 r. w sprawie uznania za pomnik historii "Poznań - historyczny zespół miasta", Dz. U. z 2008 r. Nr 219, poz. 1401
  2. ^ "Town Hall" Poznań Tourism, undated, retrieved on 2008-06-11.
  3. ^ "Town Hall". www.poznan.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2009-12-28.
  4. ^ a b Polish: Zniszczono starą polichromię i, ażeby gmachowi nadać „poważny charakter miast północno-niemieckich", pokryto go boniowaniem w czarne kwadraty nieproporcjonalnie wielkie w stosunku do delikatnych form architektury.
    English: Old polychromy was destroyed and in order to give the edifice a "serious appearance of the North German cities", it was covered with a rustication in black squares disproportionately large in relation to the delicate forms of architecture.
    Franciszek Jaśkowiak (1972). Poznań: przewodnik (in Polish). Sport i Turystyka. p. 63.
  5. ^ www.poznan.pl

External links edit

  • Poznań: The Town Hall, retrieved on 2008-06-11.

poznań, town, hall, polish, ratusz, poznaniu, historic, city, hall, city, poznań, poland, located, poznań, town, centre, market, square, used, serve, seat, local, government, until, 1939, houses, museum, town, hall, originally, built, late, 13th, century, foll. Poznan Town Hall Polish ratusz w Poznaniu is a historic city hall in the city of Poznan Poland located at the Poznan Old Town in the centre of the Old Market Square It used to serve as the seat of local government until 1939 and now houses a museum The town hall was originally built in the late 13th century following the founding of the medieval city in 1253 it was rebuilt in roughly its present day form in mannerist style with an ornate loggia by Giovanni Battista di Quadro in 1550 1560 The display of mechanical fighting goats played out daily at noon above the clock on the front wall of the building is one of the city s main tourist attractions Poznan Town HallMain facade of the building with arcade loggiaGeneral informationArchitectural styleLate renaissanceTown or cityPoznanCountryPolandCoordinates52 24 31 N 16 56 3 E 52 40861 N 16 93417 E 52 40861 16 93417Construction started1550Completed1560Design and constructionArchitect s Giovanni Battista di Quadro Major reconstructionHistoric Monument of PolandDesignated2008 11 28Part ofPoznan historic city centerReference no Dz U 2008 nr 219 poz 1401 1 Contents 1 History 2 The goats and bugle call 3 Rooms 3 1 Cellars and ground floor 3 2 Upper floors 3 2 1 Great Hall 3 2 2 Royal Hall 3 2 3 Courtroom 4 External features 5 See also 6 Notes 7 External linksHistory editThe town hall was originally constructed as the administrative building of the city founded on the left bank of the Warta in 1253 see History of Poznan It was completed around 1300 during the reign of Wenceslaus II of Bohemia and was first documented in Latin in 1310 as Domus Consulum 2 It was a one storey Gothic building built upon a raised quadrangle The cellars remain from this period of construction The building was extended in the 15th century and at the turn of the century a tower was built at the north western corner The interior was remodeled between 1504 and 1508 nbsp Town Hall about 1910 during the German ruleIn 1536 Poznan suffered a major fire which seriously damaged the town hall Repair work was carried out in 1540 1542 particularly to the tower but it remained unsafe In 1550 the city council commissioned Giovanni Battista di Quadro to carry out major repairs The work lasted until 1560 Di Quadro added an upper storey extended the building towards the west and added attic walls and a three storey loggia 3 A new clock installed 1551 was made with three full faces and one half face and with goats added as a comic element see next section In 1675 the tower clock and goats were destroyed by lightning The tower was rebuilt in 1690 to a height of 90 metres 300 ft The top of the tower was destroyed by a hurricane in 1725 From 1781 1784 the building had a large renovation thanks to the efforts of the city s Committee of Good Order and it obtained the basic form which it presents today A Classical style tower roof was designed by Bonawentura Solari topped by a white eagle with a two metre wingspan On the eastern elevation Franciszek Cielecki painted Jagiellonian kings and under the central turret a cartouche was placed with the king s initials SAR Stanislaus Augustus Rex The next major renovation lasted from 1910 1913 during the period of German rule when black rustication was used to give the building a more northern German style 4 The original late renaissance polychromy was destroyed 4 An additional storey was added 5 and the goats which had been absent since 1675 were restored to the tower in 1913 In October 1943 the Town Hall was the scene of Heinrich Himmler s Posen speeches Following major damage in the Battle of Poznan 1945 the Town Hall was again rebuilt in 1945 1954 when the Renaissance character of the elevations was restored and extracts from the constitution of the Polish People s Republic were added to the text displayed on the attic wall The eagle which had been kept hidden during the war was returned to the tower in 1947 The mechanism that drives the goats was replaced in 1954 and again at the end of the century Renovation carried out in 1992 2002 largely restored the building to its post 1784 appearance The goats and bugle call editMain article Poznan Goats nbsp The mechanized goats which butt heads daily at noonToday the mechanical goats butting display is performed daily at noon preceded by the striking of the clock and the playing of a traditional bugle call hejnal At other hours between 7 am and 9 pm the same call is played on a carillon installed in the tower in 2003 The daily appearance of the goats is one of Poznan s best known tourist attractions nbsp Poznan bugle callA legend behind the original addition of the goats to the clock mechanism states that a cook while preparing a banquet for the voivode and other dignitaries had burnt a roast deer and attempted to replace it by stealing two goats from a nearby meadow The goats escaped and ran up the town hall tower where they attracted the attention of the townspeople when they began to butt each other according to some versions this drew attention to a fire which might otherwise have done significant damage Because of the entertainment provided the voivode pardoned both the cook and the goats and ordered that two mechanical goats be incorporated into the new clock being made for the building nbsp Retired Koziolki in the Museum of History of Poznan CityAnother legend is associated with the hejnal This says that Bolko son of the tower s trumpeter once took care of a raven whose wing had been shot through The boy was then awoken at night by a gnome wearing a crown and purple cape who thanked the boy for his kindness and handed him a small gold trumpet telling him to blow it when in danger After these words the gnome transformed into a raven and flew away Years later after Bolko had taken his father s place as trumpeter when an attacking army was scaling Poznan s walls Bolko remembered the present ran to the top of the tower and began to play the trumpet Dark clouds began to gather on the horizon which turned out to be an enormous flock of ravens that fell upon the attacking army and forced it to retreat The trumpet was lost when Bolko dropped it in his astonishment but the call which he played is still performed nbsp The goats bumping heads in Christmas costumes on New Year s Eve 2023Rooms editThe interior of the town hall consists of cellars a ground floor and two upper storeys The building currently serves as a Museum of the History of the City of Poznan Muzeum Historii Miasta Poznania a subdivision of the National Museum in Poznan Cellars and ground floor edit The cellars were built between the 13th and 14th centuries There was originally one large room with a supporting column in the centre this was later divided into four rooms Keystones feature the coat of arms of Poznan crossed keys and the Bohemian coat of arms white lion with double tail dating from the times of Waclaw II Czeski Until the 17th century the cellars were used to store goods and in the 17th and 18th centuries they contained a prison and torture chamber In the 19th century they were in use as a restaurant They were later used as museum rooms and are currently being renovated The ground floor rooms were originally built in Gothic style but rebuilt in Renaissance style by G B di Quadro only one room retains the original vault The architect also added two rooms with lunette vaults One of the original uses of these rooms was for the town archives Upper floors edit The second floor of the building was originally used for utility functions following World War II damage it was rebuilt as exhibition space with ceilings modelled on those from the houses on the Old Market Square However the first floor contained the grandest rooms used for official purposes by the city s authorities these include the Great Hall Vestibule the Royal Hall and the Courtroom described below Great Hall edit nbsp Renaissance stucco decorations in the Great HallThe Great Hall or Vestibule is designed in Renaissance style by G B di Quadro It was originally used for important sittings of the city court Over the entrance is a quotation from Aristotle s Politics and on the hall side a quotation from the Third Psalm The hall retains its original vaults with lunettes supported by two columns and by corbels The coffers and columns are ornamented the ornamentation on the ceiling is sgraffito The coffers in the northern part of the room have polychrome stucco decoration showing Hercules and Samson David and Goliath and Marcus Curtius The lower coffers show the coats of arms of Poland Lithuania the House of Sforza Bona Sforza was Polish queen consort to 1548 the Habsburgs Catherine Habsburg was queen consort from 1553 and Poznan as well as an angel holding a board with the date 1555 the year the work was completed Artists signatures house marks and representations of their tools can also be found The southern part contains representations of animals and legendary creatures elephant lion leopard eagle rhinoceros griffin Pegasus and deities signifying heavenly bodies the sun the moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter and Saturn in the Ptolemeic system Also in cross shaped coffers are the heads of Moses and of Christ the latter accompanied by another house mark On the western wall are two portals dating from 1508 which combine Gothic and Renaissance features Gold plated doors contain the Bohemian coat of arms possibly dating from the time of Waclaw II Czeski Notable exhibits include a Venetian globe 1688 and busts of Roman emperors from the third and fourth centuries excavated in Italy in the 18th century The hall is currently used for concerts and for special weddings Royal Hall edit The Royal Hall Sala Krolewska was once richly decorated similarly to the Great Hall and was used for meetings of the city council It was partly restored in 1954 following war damage Its name derives from the portraits of kings which once decorated the hall the portraits on display today come from the National Museum s collections The hall features a Renaissance sandstone fireplace 1541 moved here from the adjoining weighing house when that building was demolished in 1890 it was rebuilt in its original style after World War II There is also a portal dating from 1536 moved from a house on the Old Market Square Stary Rynek 87 Courtroom edit The sala sadowa courtroom was used for minor court hearings It retains Renaissance mirror vaults with polychrome decoration dating from between the late 16th and early 19th centuries On the northern wall are personifications of four continents On the wall to the right of the entrance is the painting Aeropagus Maioris Poloniae by Waclaw Graff which alludes to a court of 1726 Opposite the entrance is a marble statue of king Stanislaw II Augustus dating from 1783 nbsp Fireplace in the Royal Hall nbsp Poniatowski s statue in the Courtroom nbsp Aeropagus Maioris Poloniae nbsp The Great Hall reception External features edit nbsp View of the building from the north eastThe front of the building facing east features an ornately decorated three storey loggia Between the arcade columns on the ground floor are five pairs of female figures the first four pairs representing virtues patience paciencia with a lamb and prudence prudencia with a mirror charity charitas with two children and justice iusticia with scales and a sword faith fides with a chalice and sword and hope spes with a thurible and the sun and courage fortitudo with a broken column and temperance temperancia pouring water from a vase into a bowl The last pair is of two famous women from the Ancient World Lucretia Lucrecia with a spear through her own breast and Cleopatra Cleapairi with snakes twisted around her arms Between the ground and first floors runs a fresco in Latin text serving as a warning to judges Below the first floor there is a series of medallions with figures from the Ancient World the brothers Gaius Gracchus and Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus Lucius Junius Brutus Archimedes Vitruvius Virgil Homer Justinian I Horace Spartacus and the tyrannicides Harmodius and Aristogeiton Above the loggia is an attic wall which features a list of rulers of the Jagiellonian Dynasty from Wladyslaw II Jagiello and Jadwiga of Poland to Sigismund II Augustus In the centre is a small tower at the foot of which the goats appear for their daily display Below this is a clock connected with the mechanism that controls the goats Below that is the monogram of Stanislaw II Augustus SAR See also editList of mannerist structures in Central Poland Museum of the History of PoznanNotes edit Rozporzadzenie Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 28 listopada 2008 r w sprawie uznania za pomnik historii Poznan historyczny zespol miasta Dz U z 2008 r Nr 219 poz 1401 Town Hall Poznan Tourism undated retrieved on 2008 06 11 Town Hall www poznan pl in Polish Retrieved 2009 12 28 a b Polish Zniszczono stara polichromie i azeby gmachowi nadac powazny charakter miast polnocno niemieckich pokryto go boniowaniem w czarne kwadraty nieproporcjonalnie wielkie w stosunku do delikatnych form architektury English Old polychromy was destroyed and in order to give the edifice a serious appearance of the North German cities it was covered with a rustication in black squares disproportionately large in relation to the delicate forms of architecture Franciszek Jaskowiak 1972 Poznan przewodnik in Polish Sport i Turystyka p 63 www poznan plExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to City hall in Poznan Poznan The Town Hall retrieved on 2008 06 11 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Poznan Town Hall amp oldid 1213544257, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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