The village of Lukiv is located next to the Warsaw highway M-07 "Kyiv - Kovel" between Kovel and Luboml.
Known since 1537 as Lukove. In 1557, the village received the status of a town, Magdeburg law and the new name of Maceiv after the surname of the nobles of Maceivskyi. The Church of Saints Anna and Stanislav Bishop was founded in 1595. The Church of Saint Paraskeva was built in 1723 at the expense of Count Peter Michal Myonchynskyi.
The Myonchynski Palace, built in the 18th and 19th centuries on the ramparts of a defensive castle, is also preserved, as are the moats with water and the stone bridge.
Селище Луків розташоване поруч з Варшавською трасою М-07 "Київ - Ковель" між Ковелем та Любомлем.
Відоме з 1537 року як Лукове. В 1557 році село отримало статус містечка, Магдебурзьке право та нову назву Мацеїв по прізвищу шляхтичів Мацейовських. Костел Святих Анни та Станіслава Біскупа закладено в 1595 році. Церква Святої Параскеви побудована в 1723 році коштом графа Петра Міхала Мйончиньського.
Також зберігся палац Мйончинських, споруджений в XVIII-XIX століттях на валах оборонного замку, про який нагадують рови з водою та кам'яний міст.
Saint Paraskeva Church
Temple , Architecture
The Church of the Holy Great Martyr Paraskeva was built in Lukiv in 1723 at the expense of Count Petro-Mikhaylo Mönchynskyi.
It has a high gable roof with a small spire tower. The pediments are bordered by small obelisks. The side facades are decorated with pilasters and semicircular windows. There is a wooden bell tower nearby.
An example of naive painting of the 18th century has been preserved in the interior. This is an icon depicting Saint George on a disproportionately small horse.
In 1839, the Greek Catholic church was handed over to the Orthodox Church. Now it belongs to the Volodymyr Eparchy of the UOC of the Moscow Patriarchate.
Saints Anna and Stanislav Church
Temple , Architecture
The Church of Saints Anna and Stanislav the Bishop was built in Lukiv in the Renaissance style in 1595 at the expense of Stanislav Matseyovsky.
In 1708, during the attack of the Swedes, the temple was almost completely destroyed.
At the beginning of the 18th century, the church was restored with the assistance of the Volyn voivode, Atanaziy Monchynsky.
After the partition of Poland, the church was confiscated by the Russian tsarist government and handed over to the Orthodox Church as the Church of the Assumption.
After the Second World War, the Assumption Church was closed by the Soviet authorities and turned into a granary.
Currently, this is an active church in honor of Saint Anna of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine.
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