In architecture, Renaissance and Mannerism prevailed (see Renaissance in Poland, Mannerist architecture and sculpture in Poland), with best examples being the Sigismund's Chapel of the Wawel Cathedral, tenement houses, churches and town halls in Poznan, Krakow, Zamosc, Kazimierz Dolny, Lublin, Lwow, Gdansk and other cities, as well as castles (Pieskowa Skala, Krzyztopor, Krasiczyn, Baranow Sandomierski and others).
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During the Golden Age, several renowned writers and thinkers lived in Poland: Andrzej Frycz Modrzewski, Piotr Skarga, Jan Kochanowski, Jan Dantyszek, Mikolaj Rej, Lukasz Gornicki and Stanczyk.
Bronze Age | Polish language | Iron Age | Age of Enlightenment | Golden Gate Bridge | New Age | Viking Age | The Age | Second Polish Republic | Queens of the Stone Age | Golden Gloves | Golden Eagle | The Golden Girls | Golden Globe Award | Golden Gate Park | Polish Navy | Golden Book of Cycling | Polish Academy of Sciences | Stone Age | Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth | Golden Jubilee | Polish people | Ice Age | Order of the Golden Fleece | Golden Vale | Golden Age | Polish resistance movement in World War II | Solidarity (Polish trade union) | IAAF Golden League | California Golden Bears |
The next stage was building a GEDCOM database of all people related genealogically to the icons of the Golden Age of Polish culture: Jan Kochanowski and Mikołaj Rej.