Church of St. Bartholomew, Kraków-Mogiła
ul. Klasztorna 4, 31-979 Kraków
Tourist region: Kraków i okolice
tel. +48 126446992
The church has a three-nave spatial arrangement and is currently the only surviving wooden church of Gothic provenance in Poland which uses this interior division.
The temple was built in 1466 on the initiative of the abbot of a nearby Cistercian monastery. His signature can be found on the richly decorated south portal of the church, which survives to this day. The slender building is towerless, and the wooden bell tower with a domed cupola standing next to it, through which one enters the church grounds, has a later 18th-century metric. In the 18th century, side chapels and a two-storey sacristy were added to the church, slightly changing its simple medieval layout. The interior is decorated with 18th-century furnishings and polychromes. The church also contains elements from the time when it was built. Among other things, the sharp-arched inter-nave arcade and the carved portal have been preserved. The Rococo painting decoration of the ceilings and walls made around 1766 by an unknown artist depicts, among other things, medallions with portraits of popes, saints, scholars and the bishops of Kraków Iwona Odrowąż, Prandota and Zbigniew Oleśnicki. The most prominent scene shows the Adoration of the Blessed Virgin Mary by Saint Bernard of Clairvaux.
Most of the furnishings in the church date from the second half of the 18th century. The main altar, dating from 1770, contains an image of Saint Bartholomew, and the Baroque and Rococo side altars contain images of Saint Anne Samothrace and Saint Isidore, among others. The wooden pulpit is rococo, and the stone baptistery has Gothic reminiscences dating from the 16th or 17th century.
The church is located on the Wooden Architecture Route.