Mława poviat - Powiat mławski

Mława poviat - poviat in Poland, in Mazowieckie voivodship, created in 1999 as part of an administrative reform. His seat is Mława.

Coat of arms of the Mława poviat

An administrative division

The poviat consists of:

   municipalities: Mława rural municipalities: Dzierzgowo, Lipowiec Kościelny, Radzanów, Strzegowo, Stupsk, Szreńsk, Szydłowo, Wieczfnia Kościelna, Wiśniewo cities: Mława

Neighboring poviats:

   Przasnysz powiat Ciechanów powiat Płońsk powiat Żuromin powiat Działdowski powiat (Warmińsko-Mazurskie) Nidzica powiat (Warmińsko-Mazurskie)

Worth seeing

in Mława

Monuments Art Nouveau tenement house, Old Market Square Żwirki, an Art Nouveau tenement house, ul. Reymonta (currently the seat of one of the banks) Modernist banking building (1930s), ul. Lelewela 6 A modern department store

   The parish church of st. Trinity - probably built in 1477 [8]. originally in gothic style [note needed]. After a fire in 1692, it was renovated in the Baroque style in 1712–1719 [note needed]. Enlarged and completely rebuilt in the years 1882–1886 in the neo-baroque style by adding side aisles and front towers [30]. The remains of the original Gothic layout are the walls of the chancel with a window above the altar, a rainbow arch separating the presbytery from the nave and the external buttress visible behind the side altar in the right nave, now inside the temple. Church of st. Wawrzyńca - in 1786 on a cemetery hill, late baroque with a classicist front elevation. Earlier than the church, the barrel-cross vaulted sacristy was built in the second half of the 19th century. The sixteenth century, founded by the burghers of Mława Zagórny brothers: Marcin and Andrzej, the canon of Gniezno. In 1550, another wooden church was built, and in 1786, the present one was made of brick [31]. Town Hall - rebuilt at the end of the 18th century [8]. Every day at 12:00 the bugle call of Mława is played from the town hall tower [32] [33] The 18th-century wooden “Lelewelówka” granary, the only remnant of starost's buildings, sometimes commonly called the castle Tenement houses with elements of Art Nouveau decorations from the beginning of the 20th century. Monument to the Defenders Mławy commemorating the Battle of Mława in 1939. Mława Rank - a line of Polish fortifications built on the eve of World War II. The facility includes 55 reinforced concrete bunkers, remains of earth and wooden structures and trenches. The position of Mławska was the main arena of the battle of Mława. The district prison was built in 1889, currently the seat of the branch of the State Archives in Warsaw. Market Hall from 1912 built according to the design of the city architect Stefan Usakiewcz Civic Granary at Długa Street, built in the 1860s, now a supermarket and a department store. Dąbrowszczaków, established in 1897 as a walking garden, was created from the expansion of the garden at the Orthodox Church. Called the "Salon of Mława" by the townspeople. After World War II, named after J. Stalin, and from 1956 to today them. Dąbrowszczaków. In the park, it is worth seeing a bronze fountain designed by Andrzej Borcz, depicting four stove fitters, the city's legendary founders and Muława from whom the city derives its name, the Józef Piłsudski monument, the Independence Oak with a commemorative plaque and an old postcard, the only remnant of the church housing the State Office Civil. Bank at 6 Lelewela Street (1930s) - an outstanding example of modernist architecture in the country, implementation of the diploma thesis of a graduate of the Faculty of Architecture of the Warsaw University of Technology, Wacław Olszewski (alleged authorship of the project) [34]. A two-story wooden house at 51 Warszawska Street

outside Mława