Legend has it that in 1184
oxen carrying the remains of
St. Florian – the future patron saint of Poland – the relics miraculously grew too heavy to be taken any further into the city and remained in Kleparz until it was decided for the Church to be built at that exact spot. The martyr had nothing do with Poland before his relics were brought from
Rome to Kraków. Kraków needed a saint for political reasons, in order to reaffirm its role as Poland's capital, which was contested by the city of
Gniezno. The district of Kleparz was founded by
Casimir the Great in 1366 as a separate town, around St. Florian's Church. It was named by King Casimir as Florencja () after its centrally located church, or in Latin, Clepardia. Kleparz remained an unofficial suburb of Kraków till 1792, when the
Polish Parliament incorporated it within the city. File:Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Grunwald Monument and church of St. Florian, Matejko Square, Kraków, Poland.jpg|Matejko Square. From left to right, Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Grunwald Monument, and (in background) St. Florian's Church File:Church of St Florian (interior), 1 Warszawska street, Krakow, Poland.jpg|Church interior. File:Kościół św. Floriana w Krakowie 03.jpg|Figure of St. Florian on the church facade. File:Church of St. Florian, Golgotha-1905 by Aleksander Józef Veith, 2 Kurniki Street, Kraków, Poland.jpg|
Golgotha, outer wall of the presbytery, designed by Aleksander Józef Veith (1905). ==See also==