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Indura. The Brzhostovsky-Kozlovsky Estate.

Manor

Manor

Belarus, Grodno region, Grodno region, Indura.

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26

19.02.2025

Description

In the village of Indura there are many architectural and ancient monuments: a Catholic church, an Orthodox church, a Jewish synagogue, a settlement and many others. Throughout its history, the owners of Indura were the famous gentry families: Radziwills, Pats, Oginsky, Masalsky...

The stone manor house of the last owners of the Brzhostovsky and Kozlovsky estates has been preserved to our time. The building is brick, plastered, with a basement on a high ground floor. The main entrance is highlighted by a two-story risalite with an attic and a triangular pediment. Now there are residential apartments in the building.

Categories

Historical

Historical

Park area

Park area

Location

Latitude: 53.4563667
Longitude: 23.8791423

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Reviews to the Place

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Алег Дзьячкоу

19.02.2025

Indura. The Brzhostovsky-Kozlovsky Estate.

In the village of Indura, Grodno region, there are many monuments of architecture and antiquity. The settlement is based on a small river Indurka.

The history of Indura is very ancient, as evidenced by the ancient settlement on the outskirts of the town. During archaeological excavations, it was discovered that in the 11th – 13th century there was a feudal castle on this site, which was fortified with an earthen rampart in front of which there was a defensive moat. During the excavations, ceramics, weapons, arrowheads and much more were found. The settlement has the status of an archaeological monument.


The Indura was first found in written sources in the 16th century during the era of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. At that time, the estate of Marshal John Davoinovich, who founded the wooden Trinity Church in 1522, was located here. Further in the 16th and 17th centuries, the place belonged to the Kishka, Radziwill, Pats, Volovich, Mlechki, and Isaikovsky families.

 And in the 18th century, Oginsky and Masalsky with Sologub were the owners here.

After the third partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the estate in the village was owned by the Brzhostovskys and the Kozlovskys.


To this day, a manor house on Solomovaya Street has been preserved on the outskirts of the town.

 It is a one-story symmetrical stone building. The main entrance is decorated with a two-storey part with an attic. The entrance is completed with a triangular pediment. Now the building is adapted for residential apartments. There are also several stone utility buildings nearby.

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