The name comes from the nearby Church of St Florian. It was the main gate of the seven leading into the city situated in the line of defence walls. Its other name was Porta Gloriae, that is “the gate of glory”, as it opened the royal route (Via Regia). It was through this gate that kings would enter the city after victorious battles, it was also used for ceremonial reasons by diplomats, and famous personages visiting Kraków. Similarly, the route of royal coronation and funerary processions, led through the gate.The gate was built around 1300, and received its brick storey with projecting machicolated battlements (shooting galleries) supported on stone consoles in the 15th century. Its care was entrusted to furriers. It defended the city from the north, where Kraków could make use of no natural obstacles in the form of marshes and boggy flood plains. It was connected by a fortified passageway – the so-called “neck” – to the Barbican completed in 1499. After the damage following the Swedish invasion, in 1657 the gate received a new baroque spire which survives to this day. There has always been an eagle over the entrance, today it is the eagle of the House of Piast as designed by Jan Matejko in 1882. From the city side, the gate is decorated with a baroque bas relief, portraying St Florian. I
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