In the interwar period (between WWI and WWII), the artistic milieu of Poland’s capital city bustled with unprecedented ... favored by such technological advances as cinema and radio. As Warsaw ...
After Lublin’s stint as capital, Warsaw began to serve that role once more and remained Poland’s capital throughout the Interwar period. During World War II, Poland yet again disappeared from the map ...
The Muranów and Wola neighborhoods, like many areas in Poland, have a dark past. In the 1930s, the area housed the bulk of Warsaw's Jewish population. By late 1940, the Nazis (who occupied Poland ...