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Attractions of Ukraine
Attractions of Rivne region
Attractions of Rivne district
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Rivne district
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Architecture
The Derman Gymnasium building was built in 1912-1913 for the Saint Fedir Teacher's Seminary, which was transferred to Derman in 1906 from Zhytomyr under the care of the Derman Monastery.
The gymnasium was opened here during the Polish period, and during the Soviet times it was a secondary school. In 1917-1920, the famous Ukrainian writer Ulas Samchuk studied in a four-grade school at the Derman Seminary. The gymnasium now houses a museum of Samchuk, in which, in particular, some of his personal belongings are presented: glasses, a cane, and a pen.
In addition, there is a room-museum of the poet Borys Ten, who was also born in Derman.
Shkilna Street, 1 Derman Druha
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Zoo , Recreation area
The Eco Farm AlpacaHome (Fluffy Farm) in Horodyshche near Rivne opened for visitors in 2024. It is located on the banks of a large pond 10 kilometers from the city center.
About three dozen South American alpacas now live on the farm. They are accompanied by pygmy goats, sheep, rabbits, guinea pigs and peacocks.
During a visit to the farm, visitors are in the same territory with alpacas, which are completely non-aggressive. You can directly contact the animals, feed them with special food, take pictures with them.
On the territory there are places for relaxation with gazebos, tables, hammocks, canopies, deckchairs.
The price of the visit includes an excursion and a portion of feed for the animals. Pre-registration is required to visit.
Shchaslyva Street, 56A Horodyshche
Museum / gallery , Architecture
The firefighting museum opened in 2020 in the restored premises of the old fire station in the village of Dibrivka in the Rivne region.
The fire station in Dibrivka was built by Czech colonists, who in 1923 founded the first volunteer fire brigade here, which was part of the Association of Voluntary Fire Protection. The number of team members was 22 people. The team went to the fire in a radius of 5 kilometers.
During Soviet times, the building was adapted for economic purposes, and for a long time it stood empty. It was restored by the joint efforts of the Emergency Department of the Rivne region and local patron Roman Stasyuk.
Now the fire station in Dibrivka has an authentic appearance. It houses a museum exposition, which presents firefighting equipment from the beginning of the 20s of the 20th century. There is an information stand nearby.
Kozatska Street Dibrivka
Museum / gallery , Park / garden
The Forest Museum near Kostopil was opened in 2011 on the basis of the Kostopil Forestry.
The exposition covers the work of each of the 16 forestries of the region. In particular, one of the stands tells about the 250-year-old Kostopil oak.
Among the exhibits of the forest museum are a stuffed animal of 50 species of birds, wild boars, martens, badgers and bison. Another exposition tells about the peculiarities of wooden architecture and life of Polishchuks.
Around the museum is the creation of a forest park with a cascade of ponds and labyrinths of forests. Lawn and flower beds were laid out, paths were equipped, gazebos for recreation and a playground with wooden figures of fairy-tale heroes were installed, a chapel was built.
There is a souvenir shop.
Sarnenska Street 21 Kostopil
Built in Ostroh in the 16th century, the defensive Great Synagogue was at one time one of the largest centers of Jewish culture in Europe, with a higher school of rabbis.
It was destroyed during the War of Liberation.
After the Second World War, the Jewish community of the city was never restored, the synagogue building was used as a warehouse.
Until 2016, it was in a state of disrepair, gradually collapsing. In 2016, the restoration of the synagogue began at the expense of patrons.
Lavrentiya Tustanovskoho Street Ostroh
Temple , Architecture
The building of the main Great Synagogue in Rivne was built at the end of the 19th century.
Before the Bolshevik coup of 1917, a Jewish school operated there.
Since Soviet times, the building of the Great Synagogue has housed the children's and youth sports school "Avangard".
Shkilna Street, 33 Rivne
Architecture , Museum / gallery
Ostroh Slavic-Greek-Latin Academy is the first higher educational institution in Ukraine and Eastern Europe.
It was founded in 1576 by Prince Vasyl-Kostyantyn Ostrozky and Princess Halshka Ostrozka (a memorial sign has been erected in Shevchenko Park next to the castle where the academy was originally located). The first printer Ivan Fedorov opened a printing house there in 1580, where the first "Bukvar" and the famous "Ostroh Bible" were published.
The first rector of the academy was Herasym Smotrytsky. Among the graduates are Hetman Petro Sahaydachny, the Nalyvayko brothers and others.
In 1624, after the founding of the Jesuit College in Ostroh, funding for the academy ceased, and in 1636 it was disbanded. Revived in 1994 as a state university. Today it occupies the premises of the former Capuchin monastery with the Trinity Church (1778, architects Paolo Fontana).
There is a museum of history of the National University "Ostroh Academy", excursions to the dungeon of the monastery, where crypts with burials of monks were found.
Seminarska Street, 2 Ostroh
The Church of the Holy Ascension in the village of Verkhiv was built in 1875 on the site of an old wooden church known since 1785 that burned down.
Tsentralna Street Verkhiv
The wooden Church of the Assumption is the oldest building in Rivne. The temple in the Tyutkivskyi suburb of the city was built in 1756 at the expense of the parishioners. The church is single-domed, the iconostasis was completed in 1784.
According to legend, Ivan Honta, the leader of the Haidamac movement, prayed in the Assumption Church before the battle with the Polish nobility.
The belfry and the "chain of moral foundations" to which ungodly parishioners were chained in the 18th century for public atonement have been preserved.
Tarasa Shevchenka Street, 113 Rivne
The Assumption Church in Dorohobuzh is one of the oldest in Volyn. It was founded in the 11th century, when Dorohobuzh was the center of a separate principality of the Ryurykovychi princes.
For a long time, an Orthodox monastery operated near the church. In 1577 (according to other sources - in 1582), on the initiative of Prince Vasyl Ostrozky, the Assumption Church was completely rebuilt with the inclusion of fragments of the ancient Rus plinth masonry.
The building is rectangular in plan, single-nave, single-headed, with a rectangular apse strengthened by two corner buttresses.
From 1644 to 1834, the monastery was Basilian (Greek Catholic). During this period, two cell buildings were added to the temple, which have not survived. After the temple was returned to the Orthodox Church, a wooden bell tower was added to it.
The Church of the Assumption is a unique example of Ukrainian architecture of the XI-XVII centuries, in which the traditions of Old Rus architecture are combined with the Baroque style and some later architectural techniques.
Zelena Street, 19 Dorohobuzh
Temple
The Holy Intercession Cathedral in the city of Rivne is the main temple of the Rivne Diocese of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine.
The foundation stone of the building was laid in 1990 by Patriarch Mstyslav. The completion of construction and the consecration of the cathedral by Patriarch Filaret of Kyiv took place in 2001.
The Holy Intercession Cathedral is one of the highest churches in Ukraine - its height is 55 meters. The cathedral was built in the Ukrainian style. The central dome, symbolizing Jesus Christ, is surrounded by 12 smaller apostle domes.
Soborna Street, 6 Rivne
The wooden Holy Intercession Church in Obariv was built in 1781. A bell tower was built nearby at the same time.
The walls of the temple and the bell tower were originally lined with vertical boards. Currently, the temple is lined with clapboard, a brick extension was made to it, as a result of which the architectural monument has lost its authentic appearance.
It belongs to the UOC of the Moscow Patriarchate.
Druzhby Street, 3 Obariv
The Church of the Holy Intercession in Shubkiv was founded in 1770 by the owner of the village, Yevheniya Shenshyna, on the site of the old wooden Saint Nicolas Church, which was moved to the cemetery.
After Shenshyna's death, the construction of the church was completed by her brother, Admiral Dmytro Arsenyev. Icons for the church were painted by the artist Vasylyev. A four-tier bell tower was built separately from the temple. There was a clock with chimes.
The Church of the Intercession of the Holy Virgin in Shubkiv was considered one of the best in the Volyn province. Currently reconstructed.
Nezalezhnosti Street, 26A Shubkiv
The wooden Church of the Holy Intercession was built in the village of Svitanok in the 18th century.
The temple is one-story, wooden, three-log, with a three-tier bell tower on the western facade. In plan, it consists of a square nave, a nave and a faceted pentagonal apse. The log cabin of the nave is higher than the other volumes, covered with a truncated tent, finished with a gable. The nave has no window openings - its space is illuminated by four large rectangular octagonal windows. Babinets opens into the nave with a simple multifaceted arch-cut. The log cabins are made of pine logs, placed on a stone foundation, sheathed vertically with fasteners.
Shkilna Street, 55A Svitanok
The most notable architectural landmark of the city. The Holy Resurrection Cathedral was built in the 19th century on the donation of Emperor Oleksandr III on the site of the church that burned down in 1881.
During the Soviet rule, the museum of atheism was located here. With the beginning of democratic transformations, the religious building was returned to the Orthodox community of the city. Currently, the Holy Resurrection Cathedral belongs to the Moscow Patriarchate.
Soborna Street, 39 Rivne