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  1. Mannerist architecture and sculpture in Poland dominated between 1550 and 1650, when it was finally replaced with baroque. The style includes various mannerist traditions, [1] which are closely related with ethnic and religious diversity of the country, as well as with its economic and political situation at that time.

  2. List of mannerist structures in Northern Poland. The mannerist architecture and sculpture in Poland have two major traditions – Polish/Italian and Dutch/Flemish, that dominated in northern Poland. [1] The Silesian mannerism of South-Western Poland was largely influenced by Bohemian and German mannerism, while the Pomeranian mannerism of North ...

    Place
    Building
    Date Of Construction
    Style And History
    1616–1618
    Dutch mannerism (architect Abraham van ...
    English House
    1568–1570
    Flemish/Southern German mannerism ...
    Ferber House
    1560
    Dutch mannerism. It was built for the ...
    Golden House
    1609–1618
    Dutch mannerism (architect Abraham van ...
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  4. Golden Gate (Gdańsk) Jesuit Church, Warsaw. List of mannerist structures in Central Poland. List of mannerist structures in Northern Poland. List of mannerist structures in Southern Poland. Palace of the Kraków Bishops in Kielce. Preachers' House, Gdańsk. Tykocin Synagogue. Categories: Renaissance architecture in Poland.

  5. Poland [ edit] See also Mannerism in Poland and Category:Mannerism in Poland. Mannerist architecture, Artus Yard, Gdańsk. Mannerist sculpture, Neptun Monument, Gdańsk. Mannerist reliefs, Market Square Kazimierz Dolny. Mannerist Sgraffito, Castle Krasiczyn. "Lublin Renaissance", Town hall Zamość.

  6. English: Late Renaissance Mannerist art and design — in Poland. See also (english text): Mannerist architecture and sculpture in Poland.

  7. English: Late Renaissance Mannerist architecture — in Poland. See also (english text): Mannerist architecture and sculpture in Poland.

  8. The mannerist architecture and sculpture have two major traditions: Polish-Italian and Netherlandish (Dutch-Flemish), that dominated in northern Poland. The Silesian mannerism of South-Western Poland was largely influenced by Bohemian and German mannerism, while the Pomeranian mannerism of North-Western Poland was influenced by Gothic tradition ...