At the beginning of the eighteenth century it bacame the road, and since 1757 is had become street of Bielino jurisdiction area. It leaded from the market (today Dabrowski Square) to the Zielna Street. In the reason of running among the gardens, the original name of street was the Garden Street. The current name (eng. Vain St.), which stemmed from the lack of development, Próżna Street obtained in 1770.
After the so-called "great deportation action" in 1942, the church was turned off from the ghetto. He was very badly damaged during the fighting during the Warsaw Uprising. Nazi's Aerial bombs and artillery fire caused much of fire, roof collapse of the ceiling down to the levels bellow a ground. They also demolished the eastern tower of the temple and inner works of Art like epitaphs and valuable paintings.
During the war in 1939 was slightly damaged. During the occupation, was one of three Christian churches, which were in the ghetto (the second temple was the church of St. Augustine, a third of the Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary). All Saints Church has served the Jewish Christians who were imprisoned in the ghetto. At the time of the ghetto, the parish priest, Fr. Monsignor Marcel Godlewski, known for his antipathy to the Jews before the war, he became involved in helping them.
Roman Catholic church located at Grzybowski Square 3/5 in Warsaw, the parish of All Saints' Day in Warsaw is placed.<br />
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Work on the construction of the temple started in 1861 and designed by Henryk Marconi. During the design inspired on the existing Renaissance church of St. Justine in Padua. According to the draft the church was dedicated on Oct. 31, 1883, by Archbishop Vincent Popiel. He was not yet fully completed at the time - only in 1892 began construction of the towers.
The Church was built between 1907-1923 and designed by Luke Wolski. The founder of the church was Michael Peter Radziwill, from which the name of this part of Prague called Michałów. Initiated the construction of a person's development, and the temple was, however, his wife Maria of Kieżgajłłów-Zawisza Radziwill. The start of construction of the temple comes at a time of ecclesial renewal of life in Poland after the decree of Tsar issued in 1905 by allowing, inter alia, the creation of new parishes.
The columns separating the nave of the basilica of the side aisles were originally made for the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls in Rome. Proved to be too short and were sold in 1915 Radziwiłłowowej Zawisza Maria, who gave them to the needs of the church built in Warsaw.