Kabaki. The Sventitsky Estate.
Manor
Belarus, Brest region, Berezovsky district, kabaki.
0
103
26.01.2025
Description
In the village of Kabaki, Bereza district, outbuildings and the park of the Sventitsky estate remained. The place was first mentioned in the 16th century and at different times belonged to different owners. Since the 19th century, the place passed to the Vladek family and in 1856 Anton Vladek was in charge of Kabaki. In 1886, the estate had a brick factory, a brewery, and a windmill.
Since the beginning of the 20th century, the farm passed to Witold Sventitsky through his marriage to Sofia Vladek. To date, the outbuildings and the park of the Sventitsky estate have been preserved, and the palace was dismantled after the war in the 1950s.
Categories

On restoration

Historical

Park area

Architectural monument
Location
Latitude: 52.49696594
Longitude: 24.76295372
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Reviews to the Place
1Алег Дзьячкоу
26.01.2025
Kabaki. The Sventitsky Estate.
Between Bereza and Pruzhany there is an ancient place Kabaki in the Bereza district with the remains of a manor house.
The place was first mentioned in historical sources during the time of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1563. At first it was a part of the Kobrin economy. The Kabaki voitovstvo was created. Administratively, it was part of the Brest district of the Brest Voivodeship.
After the third partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, it became part of the Russian Empire in 1795. The Kabaki enter the Pruzhany district of the Grodno province.
By order of Empress Catherine II, the place was granted, along with the nearest villages, to the descendants of Field Marshal Pyotr Rumyantsev–Zadunaisky. And the descendants of the field marshal sold the place to Pavel Yagmin (1794-1865), a civil servant and landowner.
In the 19th century, the place passed to the Vladek family. In 1856, Anton Vladek, who owns 1,118 people, was in charge of Kabaki. In 1886, the estate had a brick factory, a brewery, a windmill and other outbuildings.
At the beginning of the 20th century, it passed to Witold Sventsky through his marriage to Sofia Vladek. During the First World War, since 1915, under German occupation. In the period 1921-1939 under the rule of the Polish state.
The farm buildings and the park of the Sventitsky estate have been preserved to our time. People still live in the apartment building in 1912, and the distillery building is in good condition. The Palace building was dismantled after the war in the 1950s.
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