The palace is the eighteenth-century seat of one of the region's most influential families. In a building modeled on French palaces, you can admire interiors with full equipment from the 18th and 19th centuries. On the walls there are polychromes depicting Roman chiefs, hunting scenes and knightly duels. On the first floor of the palace there is an exhibition devoted to the life of the people of the basin in the nineteenth and early twentieth century and an archeological exhibition.
The Mieroszewski Palace located in the extensive park is a late Baroque building covered with a broken roof. The central part of the facade is a break with a columnar portico and a baroque gable. Inside, the original, en-suite arrangement of rooms with the hall open on two sides, the driveway and the garden, has been preserved.
The ground floor of the residence is primarily the interiors of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Furniture, dishes, decorative fabrics and carpets were collected here, as well as paintings and sculptures made by artists associated with Będzin. An original part of the interior design are discovered during the conservation works of the eighteenth-century polychrome decorating four rooms.
On the first floor there is an exhibition dedicated to the life of the rural population in Zagłębie. The appearance of the hut was recreated here, with a furnace, basic equipment and craft workshops such as weaving looms. In the next rooms there is an archeological exhibition. Objects from excavations were placed here not in showcases, but by blending them with scenes depicting the lives of the inhabitants of settlements and early medieval strongholds.
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Mieroszewski Palace - Museum of the Zagłębie Region
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(distance from the attraction)