Mielec is a city in Subcarpathian Voivodeship, located in the Sandomierz Basin on the Wisloka River. It is inhabited by 60,000 people, making it the second largest city in the province. In the 1990s the country's first Special Economic Zone was established there, an attractive investment area where thousands of people find employment and entrepreneurs have favorable conditions for conducting their business. Mielec is famous for its rich aviation traditions, multi-industry fairs and the Mielec Music Festival.
.What to see when visiting Mielec? It's best to start your sightseeing at the market square, since the city's inception a cultural and commercial center. Also noteworthy is the Oborski mansion and its surrounding park. This palace, built at the turn of the 19th century, is now the seat of the Regional Museum, where you can see interior furnishings and furniture from Mielec bourgeois houses, paintings or rich archaeological collections. The Museum of the History of Photography in Mielec is worth a visit, with more than 5,000 exhibits, including old cameras, negatives and photographs. For a walk and a rest amidst the greenery, it is best to go to the interestingly arranged Forest Park on Cyranowska Mountain.
.Miellec is located at the intersection of provincial roads 985 and 875, about 60 kilometers from Rzeszow. The A4 highway runs 30 kilometers south of it. The Mielec bus station is located on Kazimierza Jagiellończyka Street next to the train station, about a kilometer from Mielec's market square. A sports airport is located in the northern part of the city, which is also used for testing aircraft equipment manufactured by the Polish Aerospace Industries. If you want to visit Mielec, you can find a bus connection from your town on our website.
.Strasbourg is an important point on the map of Europe, both today and in the past. This particular town was actually fought over from the beginning. Until the twelfth year of our era, the town was ruled by the Gauls, but then it was forcibly captured by Roman legionaries. They erected a fort there for crossing the Rhine. For the next five centuries the Roman Empire successfully defended itself against barbarian attacks. However, in the year five hundred, they succumbed to the Germanic tribes, who, alongside the Asiatic Huns, captured the fort and renamed it from Argentoratum, a name they did not understand, to Stratœburgus, a town on the beaten road.
From then on, the city was ruled by the Franks. Or at least until the end of the seventeenth century. Then Louis XIV annexed Strasbourg to the Kingdom of France. Of course, this was not the end of the struggle for this particular town.
The rivalry between Strasbourg and the German town of Kehl, which competed for supremacy in the region, may be proof of this. It was only years later that cooperation was established and a bridge was erected between the cities. And it existed as a symbol of cooperation until World War II. And once the rumblings of the cannons ceased, it was erected anew, with European funds and the involvement of both sides. Since then, tens of thousands of cars a day have traveled over the bridge over the Rhine!
One of the best ways to get to Strasbourg, of course, in our opinion, is by bus. Our buses to Strasbourg stop at Place de l "Etoile. It's actually the very center, so leaving the deck of our bus in a quarter of an hour you can find yourself in the old town, admire the Notre Dame Cathedral and taste the local delicacies. And Strasbourg is famous for its amazing cuisine.
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