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Attractions of Cherkasy region
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Temple
Saint Michael's Orthodox Church was founded in Lysianka in 1723 and rebuilt in the second half of the 19th century.
In Soviet times, the large stone temple was closed, and in the late 1970s it was completely destroyed. In 2000, a new five-domed Saint Michael's Church was built in its place. Next to the church stands the priest's house, decorated with a huge painting.
Sanatorna Street, 8 Lysianka
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Temple , Architecture
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 wooden church of Saint Nicholas in the village of Orlovets was built in 1876-1886 on the site of an even older church, founded in 1779 by the Zaporizhzhian Cossack Kyrylo Polov. Consecrated in 1888.
An icon of Saint Nicholas hangs above the entrance to the church. One of the doors to the temple as a whole is also an icon.
Saint Nicholas Church belongs to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine.
2nd Smilyanskyi lane, 4 Orlovets
The ancient Lebedyn Monastery of Saint Nicholas is located east of the village of Lebedyn in a picturesque and secluded location surrounded by forests and lakes.
It was founded by the nuns Mahdalyna and Tryfiliyeya in 1779 on the lands of Prince Frantsysk Ksaveriy Lubomyrskyi. The healing spring discovered by Saint Opanas has been preserved. The people call the Spring Mahdalynskyi" in memory of the first abbess of the monastery.
Initially, all the monastery buildings were wooden, but in the 19th century most of them were replaced by stone ones. Among them are the Saint Nicolas Church (1800) and the Barbarian Church (1839), which was destroyed during the Soviet era, but was rebuilt again in the 1990s. In 1837, a new 34-meter-high brick bell tower was built in place of the wooden one, through which the main entrance to the monastery was arranged (only a third of it has survived).
In 1929, the monastery was closed, the "Red October" commune was established on its territory, then a boarding school for homeless children, and later for children of the repressed. During the Second World War, the German authorities revived the monastery, but in 1961 it was closed again. Valuables were taken away, the bells were handed over to the museum of the city of Cherkasy. A tuberculosis hospital was placed on the territory, and then a boarding school.
The revival of the Lebedyn Monastery began in 1992. Today, two churches, a chapel, cell buildings are located within the walls of the monastery, and a little further away - a complex of farm buildings. All buildings, except the northern wall, are in excellent condition. The monastery belongs to the Moscow Patriarchate.
Lebedyn
The wooden church of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker in Tubiltsy was founded in 1843 by Prince Mykhaylo Vorontsov.
Initially, the church was planned to be consecrated as Intercession, because that was the name of the previous church in Tubiltsy, but due to the fact that the new one was built from the materials of the dismantled church of Saint Nicholas in Moshny, the built church was also dedicated to this saint.
At the beginning of the 20th century, on the initiative of Countess Kateryna Balashova, the Saint Nicolas Church was reconstructed.
During the Soviet period, the baths were removed from it and turned into a warehouse.
Now it is a working temple again. The dome and bell tower have not yet been restored, but even without them the church looks very colorful. The high stone foundation and huge windows are especially impressive.
Tarasa Shevchenko Street Tubiltsi
The Saint Nicolas Church in Skorykivka was built at the expense of the parishioners by craftsmen from the village of Veremiyivka , Cherkasy region.
The creative approach to architecture is visible in the wood carvings that decorate the roof, eaves and other details.
During 1934-1941, the church of Saint Nicholas was closed by the Soviet authorities. Services were resumed from 1941 to 1962. Until 1990, the building was used as a warehouse.
Saint Nicholas Church has been open to parishioners since 1991. Restored in 1994.
Soborna Street Skorykivka
The Church of Saint Oleksandra in Yablunivka in the Lysyanka region was built in 1838 on the site of the old church of Joseph the Betrothed, founded in 1814.
The church-like stone Orthodox church in the name of Tsarina Oleksandra was built by Countess Sofiya Potoska with her mother's Oleksandra Branitska money. The architecture of the temple is very interesting and unusual for the Dnipro region. A characteristic feature is the two bell towers above the entrance.
At the beginning of the 20th century, a church and parish school operated at the church. In the 1930s, the church was closed, the premises were used as a warehouse.
In the 1990s, the church of Saint Oleksandra was restored and returned to believers.
Shkilna Street Yablunivka
The rotunda church of Saint Oleksandra in Lebedivka was built in 1843 by retired captain Porfyriy Krasovsky, who owned the village in the middle of the 19th century. Before that, there was an old wooden temple here.
The current stone church in the style of classicism has an unconventional for Orthodoxy round shape of a rotunda, which is accented on three sides by porticoes of the Tuscan order with paired columns.
The interior is decorated with stucco and monumental painting. Choirs are arranged in the western part of the rotunda, to which the balcony on the facade corresponds.
There is an assumption that the temple was Masonic, which explains its unconventional architecture.
Soborna Street Lebedivka
The wooden church of Saint Paraskeva in Antypivka was built in 1890 on the initiative of the abbot Ioann Drozdovskyi on the site of the old burned down church.
The current church is distinguished by unusual carved cornices and uncharacteristic side octagonal exits, which look like verandas, covered by small domes with crosses.
An ancient stone Cossack cross stands out among several grave crosses on the church perimeter.
Blahovisna Street Antypivka
The wooden church of Saint Paraskeva was built in the village of Sobkivka in 1870 and has a rare feature - three entrances on one side, and all entrances have separate porches.
The church is almost rectangular in plan, although there was once a baptismal font. It is not known when the side additions were made, but most likely during Soviet times.
Myru Street Sobkivka
The wooden church of Saints Peter and Paul was built in the village of Chorniavka by order of the Chamber of State Property in 1860, and completed in 1863.
The church was closed for a long time. It was revived in the 1990s, at the same time three small baths, removed during the Soviet era, were restored on the church. The improvised belfry is a piece of pipe hanging on a crane beam.
On July 26, 2015, the Peter and Paul Church in Chorniavka burned down.
Chorniavka
The Church of Saint Righteous Petro the Long-suffering (Kalnyshevsky) was built on the Buda farm in 2012 at the initiative of the public organization "Free Cossacks of Kholodny Yar" at the expense of entrepreneurs Olesya and Oleh Ostrovsky, who own the nearby ethnographic complex "Dykiy khutir".
The brick temple is made in the form of traditional Cossack churches and is decorated with wood. This is the first church in Ukraine, dedicated to the last basket chieftain of Zaporizhzhian Sich, Petro Kalnyshevsky, who was canonized in 2008.
Nearby, in 2014, the first monument to the heroes of the "Heavenly Hundred" was erected in Ukraine.
Partyzanska Street Buda
The architecturally unusual Church of the Transfiguration was built in Moshny in 1830-1840 by the city architect of Odesa, Dzhordzho Torrichelli, on the order of Count Mykhaylo Vorontsov.
Those who have seen the Vorontsov Palace in Alupka will immediately understand the architectural affinity of the Crimean palace and the village Orthodox church. Experts define this style as a romantic mixture of Tudor Gothic and oriental motifs.
The Transfiguration Church is a unique temple. Despite the oriental decor, the construction followed the principles of the Orthodox "cross dome". The side branches of the cross are greatly shortened, and the central one, on the contrary, is elongated. According to the fashion of the 19th century, it connects the temple with the 39-meter bell tower into a single entity. Above the central cross is the largest dome facing east. The special charm of the building is given by numerous elegant towers, which, together with the pointed windows, make the tall quadrangular belfry Gothic.
Blahovisna Street, 2 Moshny
Museum / gallery
The museum of the singer and composer Semen Hulak-Artemovsky in Horodyshche is located in an old one-story house in the center of the city.
Hulak-Artemovskyi was born in Horodyshche in 1813. He is known as one of the founders of Ukrainian classical music, the author of the first Ukrainian opera "Zaporozhets za Dunayem".
Mykhayla Hrushevskoho Street, 4 Horodyshche
Architecture
Shcherbyna House is the most luxurious mansion of pre-revolutionary Cherkasy, nicknamed the "Palace of Happiness" in Soviet times, because the city's civil registry office was located here.
Built in 1892 by entrepreneur Opanas Shcherbyna. It is distinguished by extraordinary lightness and elegance of architecture, rich decor.
For some time, the Zemska administration was housed here, in 1919 the premises were occupied by the district revokkom, then by the Council of Workers', Peasants' and Soldiers' Deputies. After the Second World War, the Cherkasy City Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine and the Komsomol City Committee were located here.
Since 1970, the building has been used as a Palace of Marriages.
Heroyiv Nebesnoyi Sotni Street, 3 Cherkasy