More features:
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The New Face of Sopot
In between the wars the seaside resort of Sopot, or Zoppot as it is in German, gained a reputation as the Monaco of the Baltic, and became something of a magnet for the rich and famous....
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Forest Opera
Located in a forest valley this open-air amphitheater is one of Poland’s top concert venues, certainly it’s most picturesque....
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Sofitel Grand Sopot. Historical Hotel
Originally built in 1927 as the Kasino Hotel, this awesome structure was the jewel of Sopot in a time when the city was regarded as the Monaco of the Baltic....
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Sopot SPA
For most foreign visitors Gdańsk is the region’s calling card but it’s Sopot that has been the region’s primary attraction for visitors and for the best part of 200 years it was one of Europe’s premiere health and spa resorts....
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The return of the Resort House
For most foreign visitors Gdansk is the region’s calling card, and Walesa, Hitler and Hevelius have done much over the years to put it on the international map....
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Local Nutter
Technically German, but born in Sopot, Klaus Kinski is arguably the town’s most famous son. Born into poverty, Kinski found himself flirting with adventure from an early age when he was forced to steal to feed his family....
Monciak

One may wonder why Sopot’s main street, Bohaterów Monte Cassino (The Heroes of Monte Cassino), carries the name of an Italian town. The truth is that it commemorates one of the proudest achievements in modern Polish military history. In 1943 the Allies, after a successful invasion of Sicily, moved to the continent. It seemed nothing could stop them until they approached a mountain range on the way to Rome. The area was occupied by the Germans defending what was called the Gustav Line, at the heart of which lay Monte Cassino. The battle that followed was actually a series of four intense battles which took place between January 20 and May 18, 1944, culminating at a 1,300-year-old Benedictine monastery on the top of the 1,100 metre Monte Cassino. Involving British, US, French, North African, New Zealand, Ghurkha and Polish troops, fierce fighting raged against the Germans on a slow and brutal advance towards the monastery. At a cost of over 25,000 lives the final battle ended on the morning of May 18 when a reconnaissance group of soldiers from the Polish 12th Podolian Uhlans Regiment finally fought their way through to the completely devastated monastery. The Battle of Monte Cassino was won, the Gustav Line broken and the Allied advance on Rome continued. Today it is one of Poland’s most famous streets, frequently clogged in high season, and fondly known as Monciak (Mon-chack) to the locals.