Legnickie Pole Monastery
Reconstruction of the Benedictine church and the monastery at Legnickie Pole in the place of its former foundation was initiated by Abbot Othmar Zinke in the first quarter of the 18th century. According to his intentions the new monastery was supposed to be a provostship of subjugated Czech convents in Prague-Brevnov and Broumov. The design of the church was drawn up by the Czech architect Kilian Ignacy Dientzenhofer. The monastery was built first (1723-1726), next the church - construction started on 25 August 1727 and lasted 4 years. This was coordinated by Chrystian Bobersacher of Legnica. The sculptures were made by Karol Józef Hiernle between 1728-1731. The frescoes, painted in 1733, were made by Kosma Damian Asam and the paintings in the side altars by Wacław Lorenz Reiner. The solemn consecration of the church was celebrated on 7 October 1731. It received the invocation of the Holy Cross and St. Hedwig of Silesia. The finishing works were to last until 10 October 1733 with the consecration taking place in the presence of Abbot Zinke in 1738. After 1810, when the Prussian King Frederic William III issued a decree of secularization, its buildings were commandeered by the Prussian army. Between 1836–1841 two higher buildings were annexed on the extensions of the monastery’s northern and southern wing. The garden elevation of the convent (on the eastern side) was rebuilt in a neo-baroque style between 1894–1898 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel. During the Second World War a prisoner of war camp was housed there and in the 1960s and 1970s the monastery underwent general repair work. The church was restored between 1932-1935, in 1976 and in 1990. Since 1991 the monastery has been the seat of the State Welfare Centre. On 1 May 2004 the whole post-Benedictine complex of buildings (with its garden pavilion and the nearby Church of the Holy Cross) was granted the status of being a Monument of Polish History. In 2014 the Benedictine temple was raised to the rank of minor basilica.