Wieliczka arose as a settlement where salt was mined. I have read there was evidence of salt works here as early as appr. 3500 B.C. For sure salt was already mined here when the Polish state was created in the 10th century A. D. However salt springs were exhausted in the middle of the 13th century and search for new sources began. Rock salt deposits were discovered. According to a legend the discovery of salt here is connected with St. Kinga.
Wieliczka was originally called Magnum Sal. In 1290 it got priviledges of a town.
Wieliczka Salt Mine is very old and very huge. It belongs to the oldest and the most well known salt mines of the world. It consists of 2,000 excavated chambers, some of them really huge, looking like vast salt caves. The oldest part of the mine has been turned into an unique museum which we are about to visit. Walking appr. 3.5 km, even deeper than 100 m under the surface, we will see 20 of those chambers chizeled out in rock salt during our tour. Many of them were even turned into beautiful chapels.
The tour starts by descending 380 wooden steps, divided in many uniform shorter flights and we just monotonously go down and down, in many uniform squares. Thus you we the depth of 64 m. Then we walk along rock salt corridors, rock salt steps and through various rock salt chambers. Beautiful statues decorate many of them. We can even admire saline lakes.
The most magnificent of all chambers we can see today – St. Kinga Chapel – takes our breath away. You are stunned when you first stand in the upper part of it and you take in the sight. Descending to its floor you notice the decorations carved out of rock salt. Lit chandeliers made of salt, too, look as if they were made of crystal. To say that this chapel looks brilliant is no eggageration.
Princess Kinga was the daughter of King Bela IV of Hungary. She married the future King Boleslaw V (the Chaste) of Poland at the age of 16. According to the legend, when she was due to leave Hungary before her wedding, she threw her gold ring into a salt mine there. She was bringing salt from her home to Poland as a present, as Poland had no salt. Following her wedding in Krakow she went to Wieliczka and she ordered a well to be dug there. At the depth of 101 meters the diggers came across a rock salt stone miraculously containing the very same gold ring Kinga had thrown into the Hungarian salt mine. Thus salt deposits were discovered in Wieliczka and the miners presented the rock salt lump containing Kinga´s ring to her.
What we saw was amazing, don´t you think so? And we just saw 1 % of the mine itself!