Korolishchevichi. The stable of the Prushinsky estate.
Landmark
Belarus, Minsk region, Minsk district, Korolishchevichi.
Description
In the Minsk region, in the village of Korolishchevichi, the stone stable of the Prushinsky estate has been preserved. In the 18th century, the Korolishchevichi passed to the Prushinskys. Stanislav Prushinsky built a manor house on the banks of the Svisloch River at the end of the 18th century. A master's house, a farmyard, a church and a park were built. The house was small, wooden and one-storied. The building was destroyed by fire in 1989 and the foundations with a basement have remained from it to our time.
There is a brick stable building in the village, which has the status of historical and cultural value.
Categories

Ruins

Historical

Architectural monument
Comments
Reviews to the Place
1Алег Дзьячкоу
13.03.2025
Korolishchevichi. The stable of the Prushinsky estate.
There are several historical sites and architectural monuments in the Minsk region in the town of Korolishchevichi. Among other things, the stone stable that was attached to the Prushinsky estate has been preserved.
In 1703, the Korolishchevichi, and Loshitsa and Trostenets passed to the Prushinsky family. The first owner was Georgy Hieronymovich Prushinsky. Then Joseph Prushinsky, who served as the head of the Grand Duchy Tribunal, owned the town.
With the money of Stanislav Prushinsky, a wooden Catholic church of the guardianship of the Mother of God was built in 1785, which has been preserved to this day in a rebuilt form. Stanislav Xavier Prushinsky (1768-1813) was a military officer of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. A representative of the ancient noble family of Prushinsky, who had his own coat of arms called "Lyubich".
During the Russian Empire in 1791, Korolishchevichi was the center of the Prushinsky estate. In 1800, he became a member of the Hegumen district of the Minsk province.
And. In 1779, Prushinsky transferred the place to his son Stanislav Prushinsky, who was an aide-de-camp to King Stanislav Poniatowski of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. He founded the St. Stanislaus Church in Karolishchevichi in 1785. Stanislav Prushinsky built a manor house in the village at the end of the 18th century. There is a family legend that in this manor Prushinsky hosted Emperor Paul I.
Then Michal Prushinsky, who fed Minsk, was in charge of the estate. Then Mieczyslaw Pruszynski, who was a Minsk judge. The next owner was Mikhail Prushinsky, who was a member of the Minsk agricultural society.
The manor was built on the high left terrace of the small Svisloch River. A farmhouse, a farmyard, a Catholic church, and a park were built.
The house was small, wooden, and one-story, built in the Baroque and classical styles. It is rectangular in plan, covered with a four-pitched shingled roof. There is a porch with columns on the front facade. There were 5 windows in each wing of the house. The interior had a collection of paintings of family portraits and furniture from the 19th century. Down the case, a park was created in a regular style. The architectural accent of the long-range perspective was the Church of Stanislav, which was built across the river.
The manor house was destroyed by fire in 1989, and the foundations with the basement, where the vaulted ceiling is made of red brick, have remained from it to our time.
The stable building, which has the status of historical and cultural value, has been preserved from the farmyard. The building is made of red brick and measures 33 by 12 meters, rectangular in plan.