Villa architecture after 1914 comprises a diverse and extensive group of buildings. The lack of a system of valuating them leads to their analyses being a time-consuming and complex process. Their justification can refer primarily to architectural and urban planning tendencies, including: the impact on the space of previously built estates, the assessment of the quality of their architecture in the landscape context and the continuity of design traditions, contemporary interventions associated with renovation work. The protection of villas from the interwar period, appears to be particularly important. Their cultural value and the quality of the landscape, that they co-create with their accompanying gardens is highly significant to the identity of the city.
The subject-matter of the article is the lost cultural heritage of the Jewish minority in Przemyśl and the present-day development of the historic quarter. In the article, the question of revitalization of this part of Przemyśl is outlined. The significant part of the research is the an alysis of maps and historical plans by means of indicating changes and comparison to the current outline of the city. In the last chapter of the article, the characteristics of Jewish houses based on the study on the discovered fragments of walls was conducted.
This is account of the first auction of rare magazines and newspapers organized at the Warsaw Academic Antiquarian Bookshop (Magazines and Newspapers) of the Publishing House Dom Książki in 1984. It offered over two thousand items, published in Poland and abroad, from the 18th until the 20th century.