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St. Bartholomew in Poręba Wielka (Lesser Poland Voivodeship) is a historic, wooden temple erected in the 16th century. The church, although erected at the beginning of the Renaissance, is characterized by the late Gothic style. The building has a three-sided presbytery and a main nave, which is slightly higher and wider than it. The church was made in the carcass construction technique, i.e. with horizontally arranged boards connected at the ends (corners or corners), it was also covered with a gable sheet metal roof. The most important, however, is the fact that since the 16th century, i.e. the moment of its erection, it has changed to a minimal extent and has not been significantly rebuilt. The only significant change was the addition of a tower, covered with a high cupola, in 1644. The interior of the church is more eclectic, because it has - for example - both polychrome from the period of Young Poland, i.e. the turn of the 20th century, and a Rococo pulpit. St. Bartłomiej is located on the Wooden Architecture Trail of the Lesser Poland Voivodeship, and is currently a Roman Catholic parish church.
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