World Youth Day in Poland brings this to mind. We don't know if the kids would be close to this area, but it's a good history lesson about our Pope Saint John Paul II's homeland.
Deep
underground in
Poland lies
something
remarkable but
little known
outside
Eastern Europe
.
For centuries,
miners have
extracted salt
there, but
left behind
things quite
startling and
unique.
Take a look at
the most
unusual salt
mine in the
world.
From the
outside,
Wieliczka Salt
Mine doesn’t
look
extraordinary.
It looks
extremely well
kept for a
place that
hasn’t minded
any salt for
over ten years
but apart from
that it looks
ordinary.
However, over
two hundred
meters below
ground it
holds an
astonishing
secret. This
is the salt
mine that
became an art
gallery,
cathedral
and
underground
lake.
Situated in
the Krakow
area,
Wieliczka is a
small town of
close to
twenty
thousand
inhabitants.
It was founded
in the twelfth
century by a
local Duke to
mine the rich
deposits of
salt that lie
beneath. Until
1996 it did
just
that but the
generations of
miners did
more than just
extract. They
left behind
them a
breathtaking
record of
their time
underground in
the shape of
statues of
mythic,
historical and
religious
figures. They
even created
their own
chapels in
which to pray.
Perhaps their
most
astonishing
legacy is the
huge
underground
cathedral
they left
behind for
posterity.
It may feel
like you are
in the middle
of a Jules
Verne
adventure as
you descend in
to the depths
of the world.
After a one
hundred and
fifty meter
climb down
wooden stairs
the visitor to
the salt mine
will see some
amazing sites.
About the most
astounding in
terms of its
sheer size and
audacity is
the Chapel of
Saint Kinga.
The Polish
people have
for many
centuries been
devout
Catholics and
this was more
than just a
long term
hobby to
relieve the
boredom of
being
underground.
This was an
act of
worship.
Amazingly,
even the
chandeliers in
the cathedral
are made of
salt. It was
not simply
hewn from the
ground
and then
thrown
together;
however, the
process is
rather more
painstaking
for the
lighting.
After
extraction
the rock salt
was first of
all dissolved.
It was then
reconstituted
with the
impurities
taken out so
that it
achieved a
glass-like
finish. The
chandeliers
are what many
visitors think
the rest of
the cavernous
mine will
be like as
they have a
picture in
their minds of
salt as they
would sprinkle
on their
meals!
However, the
rock
salt occurs
naturally in
different
shades of grey
(something
like you would
expect granite
to look like )
...
Still, that
doesn’t stop
well over one
million
visitors
(mainly from
Poland and its
eastern
European
neighbours )
from visiting
the mine to
see, amongst
other things,
how salt was
mined in the
past.
For safety
reasons less
than one
percent of the
mine is open
to visitors,
but even that
is still
almost four
kilometres in
length – more
than enough to
weary the
average
tourist after
an hour or
two. The mine
was
closed for two
reasons – the
low price of
salt on the
world market
made it too
expensive to
extract here.
Also, the mine
was slowly
flooding –
another reason
why visitors
are restricted
to certain
areas only.
The religious
carvings are,
in reality,
what draw many
to this mine –
as much for
their amazing
verisimilitude
as for their
Christian
aesthetics.
The above
shows Jesus
appearing to
the apostles
after the
crucifixion.
He
shows the
doubter, Saint
Thomas , the
wounds on his
wrists.
Another
remarkable
carving, this
time a take on
The Last
Supper. The
work and
patience that
must have
gone into the
creation of
these
sculptures is
extraordinary.
One wonders
what the
miners would
have thought
of their work
going on
general
display? They
came to be
quite used to
it, in fact,
even during
the mine’s
busiest period
in the
nineteenth
century. The
cream of
Europe ’s
thinkers
visited the
site – you can
still see
many of their
names in the
old visitor’s
books on
display.
These reliefs
are perhaps
among some of
the most
iconographic
works of
Christian folk
art in the
world and
really do
deserve to be
shown. It
comes as
little
surprise to
learn that the
mine was
placed on the
original list
of UNESCO
World Heritage
Sites back in
1978.
Not all of the
work is
relief-based.
There are many
life sized
statues that
must have
taken a
considerable
amount of time
– months,
years – to
create. Within
the confines
of the mine
there is also
much to be
learned
about the
miners from
the machinery
and tools that
they used –
many of which
are on display
and are
centuries old.
A catastrophic
flood in 1992
dealt the last
blow to
commercial
salt mining in
the area and
now
the mine
functions
purely as a
tourist
attraction.
Brine is,
however, still
extracted from
the mine – and
then
evaporated to
produce some
salt, but
hardly on the
ancient scale.
If this was
not done, then
the mines
would
soon become
flooded once
again.
Not all of the
statues have a
religious or
symbolic
imagery
attached to
them. The
miners had a
sense of
humour,
after all!
Here can be
seen their own
take on the
legend of Snow
White and the
Seven Dwarves.
The
intricately
carved dwarves
must have
seemed to some
of the miners
a kind of
ironic
depiction of
their own
work.
The miners
even threw in
a dragon for
good measure!
Certainly,
they may have
whistled while
they did it
but
the conditions
in the salt
mine were far
from
comfortable
and the hours
were long –
the fact that
it was
subterranean
could hardly
have added to
the excitement
of going to
work each
morning.
To cap it all
there is even
an underground
lake, lit by
subdued
electricity
and candles.
This is
perhaps where
the old
legends of
lakes to the
underworld and
Catholic
imagery of the
saints work
together to
best leave a
lasting
impression of
the mine.
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1 comment:
WOW !!!!!!
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