Dziedzictwo Kulturowe Północnych Kaszub
This website was partially financed with the aid of European Regional Development Fund as part of the Lithuania, Poland and the Kaliningrad Region of the Russian Federation Neighbourhood Programme, Inrerreg IIIA

The remains of medieval defensive walls with a well-preserved Ivy Tower. Erected in mid-14th century by the Teutonic Knights.
St Jacob Apostle Church. Its building began before 1345 and was completed at the beginning of the 15th century. It was burnt by Swedes in 1657. Due to the town’s impoverishment, it wasn’t until the end of the18th century that it was rebuilt. A three- nave building. It has an altar and pulpit in Baroque style and a precious ivory tabernacle as well as epitaphs dating back to the 16th century. In the vestry one may find a unique “crystal” vault.
The castle of the Teutonic Knights from the first half of the 14th century. Converted several times. It differed markedly from typical Teutonic strongholds. It had no settlement outside its walls, so living quarters bordered on outbuildings. Through the courtyard flowed the Łeba River propelling the Teutonic watermill. It was the seat of Teutonic aldermen, representatives of the Dukes of Pomerania, Polish starosts and Prussian officers. At present it is the seat of District Court of Justice.
The castle mill, converted thoroughly throughout centuries. In principal, the mass of the mill dates from the 18th and 19th centuries.
Miller’s House built in 1806 on the foundations of an older house dating back to the 14th-15th centuries.
A storehouse for salt located in the ancient area in front of the castle of the 16th-17th centuries. Nowadays it is the church of Pentecostals.
The Town Hall in neo-Gothic style erected in 1900 following the great fire in 1899, which destroyed, among others, the old town hall. It has a magnificent tower crowned with an openwork lantern with a spire. The Town Councillors’ Room is decorated with beautiful stained-glass windows presenting the coats of arms of the local gentry who supported financially the building of the town hall.
The neo-Gothic Church of Blessed Virgin Mary built in 1870. Originally it was an evangelical church, funded mainly by Katarzyna Elżbieta Karlstäd. Its massive main body, despite its size, is not divided into naves. To the west it has an adjacent soaring tower with a rosette and a cupola and Christ’s bust incorporated into it. To the east the main body is extended by the tall chancel. The interior, slightly narrowed with side galleries, seems spacious and empty as the neo-Gothic ornamental elements are almost invisible. The polychromes from 1958 are definitely worthy noticing.
The Post Office building in neo-Gothic style erected in 1905.
Bourgeois tenements dating from the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. One of them, located in ul. Młynarska 14-15, houses the Lębork Museum.
The Bismarck’s Tower built in 1912 on the southern slope of Liberty Hill, formerly known as Hang Men’s Hill (a place where criminals were executed). It simultaneously functioned as a water tower, a view tower and the memorial to the Iron Chancellor. Its attractive form resembles a four-side small castle with a little tower on the corner. At present it is owned by the Municipal Company operating both water supply and sewage systems.

Deptak
Poczta
Biblioteka
Zamek
Zamek
Kościół św. Jakuba
Ratusz
Muzeum
Baszta Bluszczowa i mury obronne
Baszta narożna
Kościół NMP
Wieża ciśnień