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Nacha. Chernotsky Manor.

Manor

Manor

Belarus, Brest region, Lyakhovichi district, Nacha

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131

13.01.2025

Description

In the village of Nacha, Lyakhovichi district, a manor with a park and a lake has been preserved. Nacha was first mentioned in historical sources during the period of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania from the 15th century. It belonged first to the Nemirovich gentry, then to Bartash Tabarovich, and then to his son Jan Tabarovich. Then the owners changed hands several more times. At the end of the 18th century, the Chernotskys acquired the place and founded their family estate here. A palace and utility buildings were built. A landscape park has been planted. The palace and the park have been preserved to our time.

Categories

Historical

Historical

Park area

Park area

Architectural monument

Architectural monument

Botanical

Botanical

Literary

Literary

Location

Latitude: 53.0344487
Longitude: 26.4239953

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Reviews to the Place

1

Алег Дзьячкоу

13.01.2025

Nacha. Chernotsky Manor.

Nacha was first mentioned in the 15th century and belonged to different owners. Then the place became the property of the king and the Grand Duke of Lithuania. King Sigismund Augustus handed over the Nacha to the Bryndzov family and since then the name of the place has become Nacha Bryndzovskaya. At the end of the 16th century, the local estate belonged to the Podarevsky family. Then the Catholic Jesuit Order became the owners here. After the partitions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, Nacha became part of the Slutsk district of the Minsk province.


After joining the Russian Empire, the estate was confiscated from the Jesuits and bought out in 1798 by Frantisek Xavier Chernotsky. This famous family in Belarus was the host in the night until 1939, before joining Soviet Belarus. In 1810, Mikhail Chernotsky, Kazimir's son, founded a noble family estate and built a palace. A landscape park was also established next to the palace. Mikhail's son Kazimir was the next owner of the estate. Then Kazimir's son Mikhail.


Kazimir's second son Napoleon Charnotsky (1866-1937) became a famous Belarusian translator and publicist. He studied at the gymnasium in Slutsk. He graduated from Moscow University and received a medical degree. He was a member of secret student circles and was expelled from the University in 1890 for his participation in student unrest. After these events, Napoleon Chernotsky was sent to his parents' estate at Nacha, where he lived under police supervision. Then he lived in Canada, Warsaw and Vilnius. Then he lived in Shchuchin district, where he founded a plantation of medicinal plants.

The last owner of the estate in Nacha was Sigismund Chernotsky, who died in Warsaw in 1953.


In 1910-1915, the palace on the estate was rebuilt and expanded according to the design of A. Kryzhanovsky. And in this form, the building has survived to our time. In Soviet times, there was a factory of a local collective farm in the palace.

A palace with outbuildings, a park with a pond, and the Chernotsky graves have been preserved to this day.

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