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  1. Elisabeth of Wrocław (Polish: Elżbieta wrocławska) (c. 1232 – 16 January 1265), also known as Elisabeth of Poland, was a daughter of Henry II the Pious and his wife, Anna of Bohemia. She was a member of the House of Piast and was Duchess consort of Greater Poland by marriage.

  2. The church was initially in the hands of the Crusader Order with the red star (Hospital Brothers),who ran the St.Elisabeth Hospital,and then it became one of the two parish churches (except St.Maria Magdalena church) in the city.

  3. The Parish Church of St. Elizabeth of Thuringia in Wrocław (until 1945 Breslau) is located next to the north-western corner of the market square, on the site of an older late Romanesque hall church, erected ca. 1230–57, initially dedicated to St. Lawrence and at least since 1253 to St. Elizabeth.

  4. Elisabeth of Wrocław, also known as Elisabeth of Poland, was a daughter of Henry II the Pious and his wife, Anna of Bohemia. She was a member of the House of Piast and was Duchess consort of Greater Poland by marriage.

  5. The church of St. Elizabeth is one of the most valuable sacral monuments of Wrocław, a model solution of the Silesian school of Gothic architecture, drawing on the achievements of Alsatian and Upper Rhineland architects.

  6. St. Elizabeth's Church ( Polish: Bazylika św. Elżbiety) of the Catholic Third Order of Saint Francis is a Gothic church in Wrocław, Poland. It is one of the most iconic structures of the city's Old Town panorama.

  7. Among the oldest churches in Wrocław and the tallest buildings in the Old Town, St. Elizabeth's is unmistakable. A church has stood on this site since the 12th century, but the current Gothic structure dates to the 14th and 15th centuries.