The village of Rozdil on the Kolodnytsia River is located between Mykolaiv and Zhydachiv, 50 kilometers south of Lviv.
It was founded in 1569 by the nobleman Mykola Cherneyevsky "on raw soil" - an uninhabited place called the Pole Rozdil (the border field between two villages).
At the beginning of the 18th century, the Lviv zemstria judge Zhevusky established a manor in Rozdil, which later became the property of representatives of the Liantskoronsky count family. In 1874, Count Karol Liantskoronskyi built a new palace in the French Renaissance style on the site of the old manor house, which has survived to this day.
The monastery building of the 18th century has also been preserved.
Селище Розділ на річці Колодниця розташоване між Миколаєвом і Жидачевом в 50 кілометрах на південь від Львова.
Засноване в 1569 році шляхтичем Миколою Чернеєвським "на сирому ґрунті" - незаселеному місці, яке називалося Поле Розділ (межове поле між двома селами).
На початку XVIII сторіччя львівський земський суддя Жевуський заклав в Роздолі садибу, яка потім перейшла у власність представників графського роду Лянцкоронських. В 1874 році граф Кароль Лянцкоронський побудував на місці старого садибного будинку новий палац в стилі французького ренесансу, який зберігся понині.
Також збереглася будівля монастиря XVIII століття.
Lyantskoronsky Palace
Palace / manor , Park / garden
Before the arrival of the Bolsheviks, the romantic palace in Rozdil belonged to the Lyantskoronsky count family.
The palace was built in 1874 by Count Karol Lyantskoronsky on the site of the old manor house founded in 1704 by the Lviv Zemstvo judge Mikhal Zhevusky.
The building in the style of the French Renaissance, designed by the architect Ivan Levinsky (according to other sources – Yulian Zakharevych), has been well preserved to this day. The galleries of the palace are decorated with medallions depicting the Olympian gods.
Count Lyantskoronsky, fascinated by ancient culture, traveled a lot in Asia Minor and collected a rich collection of sculpture and painting. A large part of the collection later ended up in the Drohobych Museum of Local Lore, and recently discovered ancient sculptures in the park, which were considered to be plaster copies, are currently kept in the Lviv Art Gallery.
In Soviet times, a sanatorium functioned on the territory of the manor.
Currently, the Zhevusky-Lyantskoronsky Palace in Rozdil is in private ownership, restoration is planned.
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