The urban village of Baryshivka is located on the Trubizh River 25 kilometers east of Boryspil, 6 kilometers north of the Kyiv-Poltava highway. Administratively, it is part of Brovary district of Kyiv region.
Baryshivka was first mentioned in 1125-1126 as Baruch.
Since the 16th century, Baryshivka belonged to Polish magnates. In 1630, the inhabitants took part in the uprising against the Poles. In 1649, the Baryshivka hundred was formed. In the 17th and 18th centuries, the village belonged to Colonel Rorion Dmytrashko-Raich, and from 1775 - to Colonel Sulyma.
Taras Shevchenko visited Baryshivka twice (a literary museum was opened).
Селище Баришівка розташоване на річці Трубіж в 6 кілометрах на північ від автотраси Київ-Полтава.
Вперше згадується в 1125-1126 роках як Баруч.
З XVI сторіччі належало польським магнатам. В 1630 році жителі брали участь у повстанні проти поляків. В 1649 році була сформована Баришівська сотня. В XVII-XVIII століттях селище належало полковнику Роріону Дмитрашку-Райчу, з 1775 року - полковнику Сулимі.
Тут двічі бував Тарас Шевченко.
Baryshivka Local Lore Museum
Museum / gallery
Since 1977, the Baryshivka Local Lore Museum has been operating in the former residential building of the landowner Hladysh, built in the 19th century. Later, a school was located here, where from 1920 to 1923, one of the most prominent neoclassical poets, Mykola Zerov, worked as a teacher.
The collection of the Baryshivka Local Lore Museum includes more than 4,000 exhibits, including tools of the Stone and Bronze Ages, ceramic fragments of the Trypillia culture, and other archaeological finds. A collection of women's clothing and embroidered towels of the 18th-20th centuries is presented.
A separate exhibition highlights the participation of the residents of Baryshivka in the events of the Second World War, the war in Afghanistan and the Russian-Ukrainian war.
Products of local folk craftsmen are exhibited: painting, embroidery, wickerwork, etc.
Taras Shevchenko Literary Museum
Museum / gallery
The Taras Shevchenko Literary Museum in Baryshivka was created in 1987 on the initiative of Ukrainian historian, writer and statesman Vasyl Kostenko. It was his private collection of various editions of the works of the outstanding Ukrainian poet that formed the basis of the museum exposition.
The reason for founding the museum was the fact that Taras Shevchenko was in Baryshivka, which he mentions in the story "A walk with pleasure and not without morals". Here Shevchenko visited the family of Tymofiy Boryspolets, the father of Platon Boryspolets, his fellow student at the Academy of Arts. According to various sources, he could visit Baryshivka one or more times between 1843 and 1846. It was during this period that the poet visited the nearby Berezan, where he wrote the well-known poem "The Plundered Grave".
The main part of the collection consists of more than 500 editions of "Kobzar", including contemporary editions. Drawings and illustrations of the poet's works with gift inscriptions by artists, a collection of stamps, commemorative badges, ceramics with a portrait of Kobzar are presented. One of the four posthumous masks of Taras Shevchenko is kept in the museum.
{{itemKey}} | {{itemValue}} |
---|---|
Region |
Kyiv |