Vyaloe. The ruins of Count Tyshkevich's estate.
Manor
Belarus, Minsk region, Volozhinsky district, Vyaloe tract
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240
13.12.2024
Description
In the town of Vyaloe in Nalibokskaya Pushcha there are ruins of the hunting estate of Count Tyshkevich.
First, 2 wooden palaces were built here in the 19th century, which burned down at the end of the century. In the 1890s, Benedict Heinrich Tyshkevich built a three-storey stone palace, the ruins of which have survived to our time. Tyshkevich organized a darkroom in this building, as he was a great lover of photography. I came here in my own car.
The manor was severely damaged during the war.
Categories

Ruins

Literary

Historical

Zoological

Hydrological

Botanical
Location
Latitude: 53.9762695
Longitude: 26.6924888
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1Алег Дзьячкоу
13.12.2024
Vyaloye. The estate of Count Tyshkevich.
At the beginning of the 19th century, when the Tyshkevichi built a large palace and manor in Volozhin, they founded their hunting residence in Vyaloye in Nalibokskaya Pushcha.
In the Volozhinsky district, near the village of Rudnya, the ruins of the former Tyshkevich hunting estate remain. But even these ruins are impressive. The Vyaloe estate is located on the banks of the Isloch River, 20 kilometers from Volozhin.
In 1840, Benedikt Tyshkevich (1801-1866) built a wooden palace here, and a little later another wooden palace. These buildings burned down in the 1890s and Benedict Heinrich Tyszkiewicz (1852-1935) built a large stone building with several floors, the remains of which have survived to our time.
Tyshkevich first lived in France, and after the death of his wife decided to live closer to the wild in Nalibokskaya Pushcha and moved to the estate in Vyaloe. He set up a darkroom in the building and was very fond of photographing local peasants. Then his son Benedikt Jan Tyshkevich, who was a great lover of hunting, takes care of the estate. At this time, a huge menagerie of 400 hectares is being created in the estate. The Tyszkiewicz family had their own private car, one of the first in Belarus, and they came here in their own car.
During the First World War, the estate was severely damaged and looted. During the Polish period, the authorities restored the menagerie. During the Great Patriotic War, a stone multi-storey building burned down, which is still in ruins.
A few years ago, a photo exhibition of Benedikt Tyshkevich was organized in Minsk.
Next to the Tyshkevich estate there is a former sanatorium, which was closed after the Chernobyl disaster.
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