Abstract

So began the 1816 appeal of Teofil Wolicki, archdeacon of the Poznan cathedral, calling on Poles to ‘repay the debt of gratitude and love of the fatherland’ by contributing generously to the building of a memorial to two revered leaders from the tenth and early eleventh centuries. Over the twenty-five years that followed, the sentiments set in motion by this appeal eventually manifested in the Chapel of the Polish Kings, one of the more notable architectural achievements in the Polish territories in the nineteenth century.

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