Wrocław: Cemetery
Places and attractions in the Cemetery category
Categories
- Museum
- Church
- Bridge
- Gothic architecture
- Shopping centre
- Shopping
- Monuments and statues
- Art Nouveau architecture
- Architecture
- Art museum
- Park
- Cemetery
- Sacred and religious sites
- Theater
- Concerts and shows
- Memorial
- Specialty museum
- Historical place
- History museum
- Square
- Tree
- Art gallery
- Universities and schools
- Arenas and stadiums
- Neighbourhood
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Mountain
- Natural attraction
- Nature
Old Jewish Cemetery
The Old Jewish Cemetery of Wrocław, situated in the heart of the city, is a poignant testament to the rich Jewish heritage that once thrived within this historical Polish city. Established in the mid-19th century and spanning several acres, the cemetery is a solemn...
Osobowice Cemetery
The Osobowice Cemetery is a large municipal cemetery in Wrocław, Poland. It is located along Osobowicka 47-59 Street. It covers the area of 52 hectares. Famous people buried at cemetery include Adolf Anderssen among hundreds of others.
Cmentarz Żołnierzy Włoskich
Italian Soldiers' Cemetery - necropolis in Wrocław, Poland, where Italian citizens are buried, primarily soldiers - prisoners taken prisoner by the Germans after Italy lost the Battle of Caporetto on October 24, 1917.
Nowy Cmentarz Żydowski
New Jewish Cemetery in Wroclaw - the fifth largest cemetery in Poland, covering an area of about 11 ha. Currently the cemetery of the Jewish Community in Wroclaw.
Cmentarz Brochowski
Brochowski Cemetery - a Catholic cemetery located on Brochowska Street in Wroclaw.
Cmentarz Grabiszyński
Grabiszyn Cemetery - next to Osobowicki Cemetery, Holy Family Cemetery, and St. Lawrence Cemetery, one of the largest necropolises in Wroclaw. The cemetery in its current boundaries is one of three parts that in the first half of XX century...
Cmentarz Żołnierzy Radzieckich na Skowroniej Górze
Cemetery of Soviet Soldiers on Skowronia Góra - a Wroclaw war necropolis of Red Army soldiers who died or died of wounds and diseases during the siege of Wroclaw in 1945. About 7.5 thousand soldiers, mainly from the 6th Army of the 1st Ukrainian...
Cmentarz Kiełczowski
Psie Pole Communal Cemetery - a cemetery in Wroclaw, founded in 1996 on the Psie Pole housing estate. Due to its official name it is often called Kiełczowski Cemetery or Cemetery on Kiełczowska Street.