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Stop 4 of 17

Łobzowska

Łobzowska
Łobzowska Street in Krakow
Łobzowska Street in KrakowPhoto: Mach240390, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 4.0. Cropped & resized.

On your right, Łobzowska presents itself as a long paved corridor lined with pale stucco and brick townhouses, their tall rectangular fronts interrupted by the solid church mass further along the street.

Łobzowska has the rare gift of looking practical while carrying a rather intimate charge. At first glance it is simply a route: it runs from Garbarska toward Juliusza Słowackiego Avenue and beyond. But this line through the city is much older than the façades you see. It follows a suburban road known here from at least the fourteenth century, laid out beside the Rudawa and a branch of it called the Młynówka Królewska, the Royal Millstream that once powered mills and shaped settlement.

Like the bishops’ territory we touched earlier, this area stood outside the medieval core. It belonged to Garbary, one of Kraków’s old jurydyki, meaning a semi-independent suburb with its own legal life. In the Middle Ages people called this place Półwsie, and a record from fourteen fourteen already names the street. Later, a church changed the map of memory. In fourteen ninety-eight, Jan Wels, a professor at the Kraków Academy, funded the church of Saint Peter the Little here. He imagined it as a cemetery church for all Kraków, an ambitious plan that never quite came to life. The church suffered again and again: during Maximilian Habsburg’s invasion in fifteen eighty-seven, during the Swedish Deluge, and again in seventeen oh two in the Great Northern War. By eighteen oh one, people finally demolished it. Then the street shifted names as if shrugging on new identities: first the road behind Saint Peter’s church, then Saint Peter Street, and only in eighteen fifty-eight did it become Łobzowska.

That layering matters because this is also where Adam Asnyk settled. He moved here in eighteen seventy-one, into a suburban manor by the Rudawa, and remained until his death in eighteen ninety-seven. He was not merely a poet with a quiet address. In Kraków, Asnyk edited Reforma and later Nowa Reforma, served as a city councillor, and sat in the Galician parliament. So this street held his private life and his public voice at once.

The most telling trace is at number seven. The manor where he died disappeared, and in its place rose a Secession-style tenement designed by Władysław Kaczmarski in nineteen oh nine. Yet the site refused to let him go. A plaque with Asnyk’s head in shallow carved relief marks the façade there. Locals who know the street well like to note a small proof of continuity: a photograph from nineteen thirty-eight shows that plaque already in place before the war. Memory here did not arrive later as a neat correction. It was already attached to the stone.

If you glance at the image in the app, the run of façades shows how the street kept rewriting itself through the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries: historicist houses, Secession, then modernism, all on the track of an old road. And that is Łobzowska’s secret. A thoroughfare becomes personal, then political, simply because a life settled here and the city chose not to forget it. In a moment, we will follow that choice to a street that bears his name outright: Adam Asnyka Street.

Northward view along Łobzowska Street in Kraków, showing the street’s current urban character on the route that once followed an old path beside the Rudawa and Młynówka Królewska.
Northward view along Łobzowska Street in Kraków, showing the street’s current urban character on the route that once followed an old path beside the Rudawa and Młynówka Królewska.Photo: Igor123121, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 4.0. Cropped & resized.
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