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Attractions of Ukraine
Attractions of Cherkasy region
Attractions of Uman district
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Uman district
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Architecture , Museum / gallery
The State Historical and Architectural Reserve "Old Uman" unites 68 objects of historical and cultural heritage in the central part of the city of Uman.
The administration and exhibition hall are located in the premises of the Basilian Monastery - the oldest building in the city. The monastery was built by the governor of Kyiv Frantsishek Saleziy Potocki in 1764-1784 for a Greek Catholic monastery with a Basilian school, which became the cradle of the poets of the "Ukrainian school" in Polish literature.
After the liquidation of the Polish state in 1832 and the confiscation of the estates of the owner of Uman, Count Potocki, the Basilian school was closed, and the monastery buildings were used for administrative purposes. In Soviet times, there was a military unit.
Since 2006, the former monastery complex has housed the administration of the State Historical and Architectural Reserve "Old Uman" with exhibition halls, which host temporary exhibitions.
The tourist route "Mysterious dungeons of the Basilian monastery" is organized in the underground premises.
Also in the reserve you can book city tours "Streets of old Uman", "Uman during the Second World War", "Uman and Hasids".
Nebesnoyi Sotni Street, 31 Uman
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Natural object , Rest on the water , Recreation area
The extremely picturesque Buky Canyon in Cherkasy region is formed by the high rocky banks of the Hirsky Tykich river.
The river cut its channel in granite deposits, the age of which is about 2 billion years. The canyon is narrow (20-40 meters in places), deep (up to 20 meters), winding and long (about 1 kilometer). It starts from the artificial two-meter overturning of the former hydroelectric dam, which is called the Vyr waterfall.
You can admire the rocky outcrops of the banks, between which the river runs along the rapids, in the center of the village of Buky, from the bridge over Hirsky Tykich.
The ruins of a 19th-century water mill and a hydroelectric power station from 1929 have been preserved.
Downstream is the Vyr itself - a deep place in the river bed, drilled by eddies. Next, you can find the most interesting place, where high sharp rocks very picturesquely hang directly over the water, creating a landscape that is completely uncharacteristic for central Ukraine, similar to a fjord.
There are convenient picnic areas along the entire length of Buky Canyon (there are many people on warm weekends).
Lisova Street Buky
Park / garden
The famous park "Sofiyivka" in Uman is a masterpiece of world-class garden and park art, an example of a landscape composition of water, land, architectural structures and sculptures.
Founded in 1796 by Count Stanislav-Feliks Potocki and presented to his wife, the beautiful Greek Sofiya, on her birthday in 1802.
The park was built by the Belgian military engineer Lyudvih Mettsel in a romantic style using plots from Roman and Greek mythology. At that time, "Sofiyivka" included the Great waterfall with an iron bridge, the Amsterdam lock cut into the rock, the Grotto of the Lion (or Thunder), the Grotto of Venus with a waterfall, the Rybka basin, the Upper and Lower ponds, an underground river. Styx and others. Then appeared: the entrance gate (1850-1852 years); flora pavilion (1842-1844 years); the pink pavilion on Love Island (1850-1852) in the Renaissance style; Chinese gazebo (1841).
The originals of the park sculpture from the Sofiyivka Park are exhibited in the hotel-museum near the central (old) entrance. Opposite the bus station is a new entrance and a shop selling seedlings.
There is a large influx of people on weekends.
Kyivska Street, 12A (old entrance - Sadova Street, 55) Uman
Historic area
The grave of the tzaddik Rabbi Nachman (Bratslavskyi) in Uman is one of the most revered Hasidic shrines, a place of annual mass pilgrimages.
Rabbi Nachman, the founder of the Breslov current of Hasidism (the orthodox branch of Judaism), tzaddik (righteous man), according to his will, was buried in the territory of the Jewish cemetery in Uman in 1810.
During the Second World War, the grave of Tzadik Nachman was destroyed, during Soviet times a residential neighborhood was built on the site of the cemetery. After 1991, Hasidim from all over the world started coming to this place regularly, the surrounding houses were partially or completely bought, and a temporary synagogue was built on the site of Nachman's grave in Uman. Later, the largest synagogue in Ukraine was built here for 7,000 people.
Every September, during the celebration of Rosh Hashanah (Jewish New Year), this area, filled with pilgrims, acquires a bright Middle Eastern flavor.
Hryhoriya Kosynky Street, 3 Uman
Museum / gallery
The art exhibition "Footstones of Bartosyk Generations" in Ivanky was opened in 2013 by the metal artist Sashko Bartosyk, the son of the famous Ukrainian monumental artist Mykola Bartosyk.
The art gallery is dedicated to the work of the Bartosyk family, where the central place is occupied by plastic compositions made of metal by the artist-blacksmith. The subject of his works: lyrics, love, philosophy of life.
According to the creator's plan, in the future the space of the gallery will be filled with his new sculptures and his daughter's creative works, various entertainment and educational activities will be held here.
The gallery is currently free to visit.
There is a shop on the first floor of the gallery, and a coffee shop in the basement.
Ihorya Shcherbyny Street, 58А/1 Ivanky
Architecture
The former Catholic church in Monastyryshche is now used as a city cultural center.
The church in the style of classicism was built in the 19th century.
In Soviet times, it was significantly rebuilt: the bell towers were demolished, side extensions were built, and an assembly hall was equipped inside.
Soborna Street, 119 Monastyryshche
Temple , Architecture , Museum / gallery
The Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Uman was built on the initiative of Count Andriy Potocki on the site of the old wooden church of Saint Anthony.
During Soviet times, two towers with baths and crosses were removed. The premises were used for various purposes, and in 1977 an art gallery was opened in it.
There are two departments in the permanent exhibition: "Western European and Ukrainian art of the 19th - early 20th centuries (works of Western European artists Dzhuzeppe Betstsuoli, Zhan-Batist Hrez, Symon, Polish masters Stanislav Reykhan, Kazimir Mardzevych, Kryzhanovsky, the German artist Busch), as well as "Modern Ukrainian art".
Divine services are held every Sunday in the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Andriya Kyzyla Street, 2 Uman
Palace / manor , Architecture
A wonderful neo-Gothic palace in the style of English medieval castles is located near a landscape park laid out in the 18th and 19th centuries in Leskove by the Dakhovsky landowners.
In 1912, Tadeush Dakhovsky, who returned from Europe, decided to transform the family estate into a type of English estate. The palace was rebuilt in its current form by the Polish architect Tsekhanovsky. The building impresses with its strictness and at the same time elegance of architecture. The central element of the composition is a square donjon tower among round and polygonal toothed towers. The interiors of their time were richly decorated with picturesque canvases and sculptures.
Nearby is a lake that separates the park with the "island of love".
After the Ukrainian revolution at the beginning of the 20th century, a sanatorium was located in the manor, then it was transferred to the military. Currently, the complex is owned by the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, the territory is under protection, formally the access of tourists is prohibited, but exceptions are possible.
military unit A1382 Leskove
Temple , Architecture
The wooden church of the Holy Intercession is located in the village of Letychivka, a suburb of Monastryshche, on the shore of the Kuravskyi Pond.
It was built in 1880 on the site of the old church, known since 1776.
The church is functional and in good condition.
Shkilna Street, 5A Letychivka
Entertainment / leisure
The complex of Light and music fountain "Pearl of Love" was opened in 2017 in Taras Shevchenko Square in Uman.
Located both on land and on water, the Uman fountains are among the three largest in Ukraine. The complex includes the main bowl of the fountain on land with a light-music show and a show on the water screen, a light-dynamic floating fountain on the Ostashivsky Pond and three static fountains with light-dynamic illumination, the color of which does not repeat during the day.
The bowl of the main fountain has an area of 450 square meters, the water screen is almost 200 square meters. The height of the water jet of the floating fountain on the Ostashivsky pond is 19 meters, and the static one is 1.9 meters.
In light and music mode, the fountains work on weekdays from 6:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. and on weekends from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. From Friday to Sunday at 19:30 there is a light and music show on the water screen.
Nezalezhnosti Street, Taras Shevchenko Square Uman
The impressive building of the Male gymnasium in Uman was built according to the project of the architect Vladyslav Horodetskyi. At one time it was a famous educational institution.
Currently, the building is occupied by the Uman Agricultural College.
Nezalezhnosti Street, 21 Uman
Monastyryshche Museum of Local Lore tells about the history of the region from ancient times to the present day.
Presented materials about the life of the region in ancient Rus times, the Liberation War of the Ukrainian people of 1648-1654, the history of the creation of Monastryshche; the culture of the region in the XVIII-XIX centuries, collectivization and crimes of the communist regime, the events of the Second World War, the restoration of the region in 1945-1960.
Mykhayla Hrushevskoho Street, 6 Monastyryshche
Monument
Monument to Maksym Zaliznyak and Ivan Gonta, the leaders of the 1768 "Koliyivshchyna" Haydamaks uprising, was erected in 2015 on the site of the Uman fortress in the area of the "Megometer" plant.
In 1968, for the 200th anniversary of "Koliyivshchyna", a memorial stone was installed here, but the construction of the monument was delayed for almost half a century. The first sketch project of the equestrian monument, depicting the moment of the meeting of the two leaders of the Haydamaks near Uman, was developed by the Kyiv sculptor Ivan Honchar even then. In the final version, the bronze sculpture was made by the sculptor Ihor Zarichny.
The monument to Zaliznyak and Gonta was built on the initiative of the "Uman Cossacks" organization at the expense of the residents of Uman.
Heroyiv Nebesnoyi Sotni, 40 Uman
Saint Nicholas Cathedral in Uman is an architectural monument of the 19th century. It is located in the center of the city, on the territory of the former fortress.
It was built by the architect Tomash Etlinher with donations from the townspeople in honor of the victory over Napoleon on the site where a Catholic church once stood. In 1843, it acquired the status of a cathedral. In 1911, the interior of the cathedral was remodeled and decorated with ornaments and icons similar to the Kyiv Saint Volodymyr Cathedral (artist Vereshchak).
During the Soviet rule in the early 1930s, the Saint Nicholas Cathedral was closed, first it was transferred to the balance of the Megommeter plant for a club, then in 1977 it was transferred to the local history museum to create a museum of atheism. In the process of restoration work, all wall paintings were lost.
In 1989, the church was handed over to the UOC church community of the Moscow Patriarchate and consecrated in honor of Saint Nicholas.
Heroyiv Nebesnoyi Sotni Street, 37 Uman
The complex of shopping premises (shopping rows) was built in 1780 according to the project of the architect Tepinger at the expense of the Potocki family.
The building was square in plan, made of brick, had a spacious courtyard with four entrances. Inside the courtyard there were more than 40 storerooms for the storage of goods by visiting merchants. The east and west wings of the shopping rows had two floors each and towers at each corner of the building. There were underground passages from the basements under the building. The main trade was conducted in the courtyard, in the center of which stone benches were built. This layout of houses for trade refers to the period of construction of courtyards-fortresses of the late 17th and early 18th centuries and is very rare.
In 1838, Fessinger completely rebuilt the building, adapting it to accommodate the city hall, county court, audience seats, treasury, as well as a prison. Later, the four corner towers and the second floors above the northern and southern passages were dismantled.
The building of shopping rows is still used for its intended purpose - it is part of the Uman city market.
Heroyiv Nebesnoyi Sotni Street, 47 Uman