The Baroque All Saints’ Church in Dąbrowa Tarnowska was built in 1771 and funded by the Krakow canon Count Kajetan Potocki, the then-parish priest of Dąbrowa. The monumental structure, one of the largest wooden churches in Poland, is a log structure boarded on the outside and built on a longitudinal floor plan. It is an example of the use of a basilica design in wood, modelled on stone churches. Surrounding the cloister garth and, at the same time, the site of the first Dąbrowa cemetery, is a fence with a historical gate and a belltower with three arcades, built in 1866. The spacious three-nave interior contains elements of furnishings from previous churches, such as a late-Gothic Crucifix from the turn of the 15th/16th century, Baroque-Rococo altars, and a polychrome painting made in the 19th century. The church is one of several in the region to be included on the Wooden Architecture Trail, making it an undoubted tourist attraction in Małopolska.
All Saints’ Church, Dąbrowa Tarnowska
Beacon