The Franciscan Church and monastery is a Romanesque Revival church and monastery complex located in Sanok, Poland.
The complex is under the administration of the Franciscan . The monastery is situated in Sanok's district at 7 , overlooking a steep escarpment that rises from in the western part of the district. The Franciscan Church adjoins the monastery on its northern side, with the main entrance located at the southeastern corner of Sanok's Market Square.
Following the establishment of the Franciscan Order in 1209, its members began arriving in Poland in the early 13th century, including in the Subcarpathian region, with a presence in Przemyà Âl by 1237. Sanok became the second location in the region for their settlement. The Franciscan Church and monastery were founded on 27 February 1377, under a privilege issued by Duke Vladislaus II of Opole, then the governor of Red Ruthenia. The duke instructed the Archbishop of Lviv, Maciej, and the Sanok burgrave, also named Maciej, to endow the Franciscans with a manor and construct a church outside the city walls. Construction occurred between 1372 and 1376, resulting in the erection of the , which was assigned to the Minorite Franciscans from Lviv. This church was located near the present-day Tadeusz Koà Âciuszko Street, close to , in the area now known as . The organization of the church and diocese was overseen by . The initial church and monastery buildings were wooden and located outside the city walls, now part of the district.
In 1384, Elizabeth of Poland, sister of Casimir III the Great and mother of King Louis I of Hungary, granted permission to relocate the Franciscan seat within the city walls. On land donated by Princess Elizabeth, and after acquiring additional city plots, the Franciscans built a wooden monastery and church with a brick sacristy. The church's erection act and donation are dated 5 July 1384. The new church was dedicated to the Finding of the Holy Cross. In 1384, the rector of the Church of St. Michael attempted to seize the monastery, but Queen Elizabeth of Bosnia, wife of Louis I and mother of Queen Jadwiga of Poland, ordered the starosta, council, and citizens to protect the Franciscans, who were moved inside the city. In 1387, Chartman Ghyr, a cleric and public notary, reaffirmed in Krosno the documents approved by Duke Vladislaus II and Queen Elizabeth in the presence of Bishop . Over the centuries, Sanok suffered multiple fires (1457, 1470, 1514, 1566), with the church surviving the 1566 fire. A fire in 1604, caused by Tatars, destroyed the church. Reconstruction was completed in 1606, led by Sanok chamberlain , resulting in a single-nave, brick Baroque church.
Later, the church's title changed from the Finding of the Holy Cross to the Exaltation of the Holy Cross (celebrated on 14 September), reportedly after the Second Vatican Council. During the PolishâÂÂLithuanian Commonwealth, the monastery hosted sejmiks for the Sanok Land in 1612. Another fire in 1632 destroyed the church and monastery. Between 1632 and 1640, a reconstruction using quarried stone established the current form of the complex. During this period, new wooden monastery buildings were erected, and from 1717, they were replaced with a uniform brick structure. Additional wings of the monastery quadrangle were built between 1722 and 1747 and between 1758 and 1775. Further fires occurred in 1676 and 1743. Between 1846 and 1847, the monastery was renovated, adding an upper story. In 1766, the Brotherhood of St. Ivo was established. In 1790, a transverse monastery wing was added.
In the meantime, after the parish burned down on 30 September 1782, the monastic church served as the parish church (the parish was transferred to the Franciscan Church, although its administration was not handed over to the Franciscan friars) until 19 December 1886, when the was established (during that period, the guardians of the monastery simultaneously held the office of parish priest).
During the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the authorities under Joseph II repurposed part of the monastery as a prison (due to the lack of a city jail) and a county court, confiscating some church property. On 1 November 1851, at 5:30 AM, Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria attended Mass at the church during his journey through Galicia and the Duchy of Bukovina.
On the night of 9âÂÂ10 May 1872, a devastating damaged the church, destroying nearly a third of the city. Reconstruction followed, with the vaults and roof rebuilt, but the church lost its Baroque style, including the tower's Baroque helmet and a domed side chapel. Painter Tabià Âski from Rzeszów decorated the church interior, with his work preserved until 1935. Reconstruction was completed in 1886, including the vaults and roof. The Baroque vault was lowered, windows were bricked up, and an entrance to a chapel was created. By autumn 1895, the church tower, damaged in the fire, was rebuilt under the design of architect , with as the contractor, nearly doubling its height. Previously, the tower had a domed shape. In 1896, a small turret for the sanctus bell was added. Further restorations occurred in 1905, when two tower stories and a new helmet were constructed.
On 25 August 1900, the monastery was visited by Leon Pinià Âski, the Governor of the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria. On 18 May 1914, a landslide affected the hill on which the church stands. In 1920, the church's chapels were raised. From 1935 to 1939, Sanok painter decorated the church interior with polychrome paintings:
In the 1930s, Lisowski repainted the side altars in a rosewood color. In 1898, Sanok painter WÃ Âodarski created paintings in the church porch, including a depiction of St. Francis in prayer and the Polish emblem on the ceiling. In the late 1930s, engineer advised on renovations, including plastering the church facade facing the Market Square and retaining "rustic stone" on the chancel's eastern garden side.
In the 19th century, the monastery buildings were listed under number 16 in the city. On 16 September 1889, Father was found guilty of ecclesiastical offenses and sentenced to lose his parish in Kulików and undergo six weeks of retreat at the Sanok monastery.
In the early years of the Second Polish Republic, from 1921 to 1923, the monastery housed a Minor Franciscan Seminary. Around 1920, a "soup kitchen" operated on the monastery's ground floor, providing meals. Until the early 1930s, the Sanok monastery, like other Franciscan convents in the Subcarpathian region, was under the , before being transferred to the . In 1931, the Franciscan convent owned property at 30 (originally conscription number 998).
During World War II under the German occupation, and for a year after the war, the monastery housed the Polish Commercial School (Polnische ÃÂffentliche Handelsschule). After the Eastern Front passed in 1944, the complex's roofing was damaged and repaired by Kazimierz Niemiec.
On 3 October 1946, the Sanok guardian was arrested and taken to Rzeszów, accused of allowing meetings of the illegal Home Army at the monastery. He was released after four days and requested a transfer, leaving Sanok in November. In the post-war years, the monastery suffered under communist authorities, who confiscated the monks' fuel allowance. In 1950, the state nationalized the Franciscans' 34-hectare farm at 10 Zagrody Street, leaving them with approximately 2 hectares. In 1973, part of the remaining land was purchased by the state, where a high school was built, and Franciscans served as catechists there until 1984. A public chapel, later the Chapel of St. Maximilian Maria Kolbe, was established on the remaining land and transferred to the Przemyà Âl diocese in 1984.
In 1945, a Franciscan Minor Seminary was established at the monastery. However, from 1950, its graduates were barred from further education at the state-run Sanok Gymnasium. On 3 July 1952, the seminary was shut down by communist authorities, who also seized part of the monastery, later reclaimed by the Franciscans. In 1954, relics of the Holy Cross and the icon of Our Lady of Grace were transferred from the nearby Greek Catholic cathedral, which had been unused since Operation Vistula in 1947.
On 3 May 1956, the Secretariat of the Polish Episcopal Conference designated the church's second title as Our Lady of Consolation, alongside the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, and set the second Sunday of May as the indulgence feast. On 1 July 1969, Bishop Ignacy Tokarczuk re-established the Parish of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross and Our Lady of Consolation under Franciscan administration. Franciscans from Sanok also served as priests in nearby MiÃÂdzybrodzie and Trepcza.
Painter Wà Âadysà Âaw Lisowski restored the church's altars after World War II (1946) and in later years (1961, 1962). In 1972, the Franciscan complex, including the church, monastery, a mid-19th-century barn with a stone and wooden treadmill, and an 18th/19th-century monastery fence, was added to Sanok's updated register of monuments. On 6 January 1976, a fire broke out in the church but was quickly extinguished.
In 1887, Ferdynand Majerski crafted a wooden balustrade in the chancel. In 1888, Jakub Zandonelli from Jasà Âo laid the original church floor in red, black, and white-gray colors. In 1948, a new armored tabernacle, crafted by Karol Baranowicz, replaced the previous wooden one. In 1965, paneling was installed in the church at a height of 142 cm by Nieznaà Âski.
In 1977, the church's polychrome, church porch, and garden chapel were restored by Jan Pà Âodzieà Â. In the 1980s, the church and monastery roofs were covered with copper sheeting. Issues with the escarpment's instability persisted at the base of the complex. Between 1998 and 1999, archaeological and conservation work uncovered a medieval cemetery and 14th-century walls. From 2000 to 2003, conservation and renovation continued, restoring the altars and paintings of St. Anthony of Padua (by October 2001) and Our Lady of Consolation.
The complex (church, monastery, and fence) is listed in the provincial (1967) and municipal registers of Sanok monuments. In 1978, the Sanok branch of the Polish Tourist and Sightseeing Society's Monument Preservation Committee placed a plaque on the facade noting the building's historic status.
In 2019, construction began to stabilize the escarpment due to numerous cracks in the church buildings.
The church is oriented, with the chancel, housing the main altar, facing east. The current appearance of the church and monastery differs from its original form. The 1872 reconstruction removed its Baroque style. The church interior comprises a rectangular chancel, a main nave, and two side chapels, forming a layout resembling a Latin cross. The windows are semi-circular. Crypts lie beneath the church and chapels. The tower's lower level is made of quarried stone, while the upper two are brick. In 1998, the main altar was redesigned to reveal a section of the stone wall.
The original altars were restored between 1777 and 1778 by painter Serafià Âski from Rzeszów. The current main altar, rebuilt after the fire in 1887, was designed by from Przemyà Âl. It features a late-Baroque crucifix (noted for its cult and votive offerings in 1694), a dove symbolizing the Holy Spirit, and a gloria of God the Father at the top. Above, the ceiling depicts the Holy Trinity and the Four Evangelists. Statues of Bonaventure and Thomas Aquinas, crafted by Majerski in 1887, flank the altar. Four angel statues (two standing, two seated) adorn the pillar capitals. In the late 19th century, the main altar was painted in red marble.
A wooden baptismal font from 1996, designed by Jan Penar with polychromes by Artur Olechniewicz, is located in the chancel, depicting Franciscan and Sanok-related saints: Francis of Assisi, Clare of Assisi, Maximilian Kolbe, Blessed Jakub StrzemiÃÂ, St. Zygmunt Gorazdowski, and Servants of God martyrs Father Michaà  Tomaszek and Father .
The original pulpit was in the chancel's right side, moved to the left in 1887. The current pulpit, crafted by Majerski in 1889, features two angel figures on its canopy. In 1897, funded the pulpit stairs and a nearby wooden choir stall. A similar choir stall was placed on the right side near the sacristy entrance, both moved to the St. Francis chapel in 1977. Initially, eight pews (by Dutkiewicz, 1897) were under the pulpit, with 16 in the main nave (by Michaà  Car, 1939). In 1976, the tower's plaster was removed, and in 1977, the upper part was replastered, while the lower part retained its stone appearance, as did the church facade facing the Market Square.
The monastery, adjoining the church to the south, originally had three wings around a monastic garden, now with two gardens. Since the 19th-century reconstruction, it is a single-story building. The ground floor features cross-vaulted cloisters leading from the monastic garden to the church porch, sacristy, and chancel. The sacristy was renovated between 1900 and 1901, with paintings by Father Cyryl Sadowski, restored in 1970 by Sanok painters and . In the eastern cloister wing, the St. Zygmunt Gorazdowski chapel, funded by the Rylski family in the 19th century (also called the "Garden Chapel"), was renovated in 1901 and reconstructed in 1977.
Since late 2005, the church tower has featured a carillon of eight bells (total weight 250 kg), playing melodies every three hours between 6:00 AM and 9:00 PM.
Previously, the church housed paintings of Our Lady of the Scapular (transferred to the Church of the Virgin Mary Queen of Poland in Zahutyà Â) and Our Lady of the Rosary (moved to Jasà Âo).
During the operation of the Sanok parish at the parish church (until 1886), the then-vicar, later Bishop , began his priestly service (from September 1879 to the end of 1880). At the end of the 19th century, Father , a January Uprising participant, resided in the monastery. From 1899 to 1901, and again from 1938 to 1942, Father was a monk in the monastery; he died in the Auschwitz concentration camp. Father resided in the monastery from 1914 to 1935. In 1934, Father Wà Âadysà Âaw Bachuta was temporarily interned in the monastery.
Others in the monastery included, among others: Father Hilary Pracz-Przyczyà Âski (1929âÂÂ1935), Father Wacà Âaw Niewodowski (âÂÂ1953), Father Radosà Âaw Bulsiewicz (âÂÂ1985), Father Salezy Kucharski (1928âÂÂ2001), Father Franciszek Patryjak (1944âÂÂ2005), Father (1919âÂÂ2015). At the end of the 20th century, the monastery was served by Father Tadeusz Pobiedzià Âski (until 1989), Father Marek Daukszewicz, Father Marek Andrzejewski, Father Anicet Sajek (the latter two were catechists at the Economic Schools Complex). From 26 July 1972 to 1 November 2015, Father Andrzej Deptuch was part of the monastery community, at the time of his death the oldest Franciscan monk in the province and the oldest priest in the Archdiocese of Przemyà Âl. Until 2017, the parish was served by Father Piotr Marszaà Âkiewicz (catechist at the Karol Adamiecki School Complex No. 1 in Sanok, also a chaplain for the STS Sanok ice hockey club).
Before 1913, the Sanok Franciscan convent was part of the Sanok branch of the Galician Economic Society. In 2009, the Sanok Franciscan fathers received the Sanok Mayor's Award. The tomb of the Sanok Franciscans is located at the Central Cemetery in Sanok.
Since 4 October 1998, Jacek Szuba has been the organist at the church.