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Detailed Information
  • Place Types Museum
  • Address Marszałka Józefa Piłsudskiego 2, 16-100 Sokółka, Poland
  • Coordinate 53.4057762,23.4968335
  • Website Unknown
  • Rating 5
  • Compound Code CF4W+8P Sokolka, Poland
Openning hours
  • Monday 8:00 AM – 4:00 PM
  • Tuesday 8:00 AM – 4:00 PM
  • Wednesday 8:00 AM – 4:00 PM
  • Thursday 8:00 AM – 4:00 PM
  • Friday 8:00 AM – 4:00 PM
  • Saturday 10:00 AM – 2:00 PM
  • Sunday Closed
Photos
Muzeum Ziemi Sokólskiej
Muzeum Ziemi Sokólskiej
Muzeum Ziemi Sokólskiej
Muzeum Ziemi Sokólskiej
Muzeum Ziemi Sokólskiej
Muzeum Ziemi Sokólskiej
Muzeum Ziemi Sokólskiej
Muzeum Ziemi Sokólskiej
Muzeum Ziemi Sokólskiej
Muzeum Ziemi Sokólskiej
Reviews
traveller 00 (06/30/2019)
Small but intresting Museum, have 2 rooms about polish Tatars
Kudłata (09/08/2020)
A small but worth visiting museum introducing you to the world of local areas. It's definitely worth it.
Anetta (08/19/2020)
A very nice museum, although the collections may not be huge, but presented in a thoughtful and interesting way. Lots of Tatar memorabilia and information about the history of these areas. Unfortunately, difficult topics are omitted. It's worth seeing, but don't expect miracles.
Maciej Stefanowski (07/22/2020)
Worth a visit. You can learn a lot about the culture of Islam. There are also many ethnographic collections.
Maciej Borski (08/06/2020)
A very interesting museum presenting the past of the Sokólska Region in terms of culture and religion. The exhibits are gathered in the following sections: historical, ethnographic, and Tatar. During the 20 years of its existence, it has managed to collect nearly 2,000 exhibits and documents depicting the history of the Sokółszczyzna. The first floor of the building is dedicated to the ethnographic department. The collected collections illustrate the everyday life of villages in the suburbs. You can find here everyday folk crafts (including agricultural tools) and folk art (including double warp fabrics, embroidery). The Tatar department recalls the history of Tatar settlement in the Republic of Poland and Lithuania, introduces the customs of Polish Tatars, their traditions and the interpenetration of Polish and Tatar cultures. On the ground floor, there is a historical department, established in 1984, which, thanks to the collected exhibits, illustrates the history of Sokółka and the surrounding area from 1524, when King Sigismund I the Old handed over these areas to his wife, Queen Bona. In the rooms there are exhibits depicting the Siberian Golgotha, the fights of the Home Army forest units in the Sokolsk region and the fights of the inhabitants of the Sokólszczyzna on the European Fronts in World War II.
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