The village of Nizhnia Apsha is located 5 kilometers northwest of Solotvyno, a compact settlement of Transcarpathian Romanians.
Known since 1380 as Apsha, then Nizhnya Apsha (in Soviet times it was renamed Dibrova, but in 2004 the historical name was returned).
The exceptionally slender Gothic wooden church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker (1604) has been preserved. From the original temple, the log walls and the ceiling above the nave remained. It acquired its modern appearance in the first half of the 18th century.
Near the village, in the Molochniy Kamin cave, a parking lot of ancient people of the Stone Age was discovered.
Село Нижня Апша розташоване в 5 кілометрах на північний захід від Солотвино, місце компактного проживання закарпатських румунів.
Відоме з 1380 року як Апша, потім Нижня Апша (в радянські часи було перейменовано в Діброву, але в 2004 році було повернуто історичну назву).
Збереглася надзвичайно струнка готична дерев'яна церква Святого Миколая Чудотворця (1604 рік.). Від первісного храму залишилися зруби стін і перекриття над бабинцем. Сучасного вигляду набула в першій половині XVIII столітті.
Поруч з селом, в печері Молочний камінь, виявлена стоянка древніх людей кам'яного віку.
History and Ethnography of Transcarpathian Romanians Museum
Museum / gallery
The private museum of the history and ethnography of Transcarpathian Romanians opened in 2014 in the village of Nyzhnia Apsha, which is called the richest village in Ukraine. A significant part of the population here is made up of ethnic Romanians.
The museum was created in his own yard by the Apsha dentist and writer, ethnic Romanian Ion Botosh, who has been collecting Romanian antiquities since 1984. The real adornment of the complex is a 200-year-old wooden house in the Maramorosh style.
The exposition presents Romanian embroidery, authentic clothes, towels, household items, icons, books, manuscripts, documents. You can also familiarize yourself with the tools of peasant labor and the working tools of craftsmen.
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Region |
Transcarpathian |