Wacława, German: St. Dorotheenkirche) is a Gothic Roman Catholic church in the southern part of Wrocław's Old Town.
[1] The church was founded to commemorate the signing of a treaty between Casimir III the Great of Poland and Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor.
The church was built under the supervision of the Augustinian hermits on a plot of land purchased by the burghers Job Stille and Jakob Reymfried.
The church was built in 1351 as a three-nave, high hall with a pentagonal chancel and apse covered with a cross vault.
During the Siege of Breslau at the end of World War II, the church sustained only minor damage, and as a result it was one of the best preserved medieval buildings in Wrocław.