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Attractions of Ukraine
Attractions of Rivne region
Attractions of Dubno district
Found 17 attractions
Dubno district
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Museum / gallery , Ethnographic complex
Ladomyriia Ethnopark has been under construction since 2019 on the revitalized industrial territory in the town of Radyvyliv, Rivne region.
This is an ethnographic complex, which presents three restored by authentic technologies wooden peasant houses aged about two hundred years, ancient looms and their new copies, elements of national costumes and costumes of different regions of Volyn region.
During the excursions, guests can visit the open-air location, the exhibition hall, which presents reproduced authentic costumes of historic Volyn, a weaving workshop, photo areas. Visitors are offered workshops on weaving and knitting traditional hats.
In 2024, the Museum of Schooling in Historical Volyn was opened in Ladomyria. In an authentic house of the 19th century, the interior of a classroom of a rural school of that time is recreated. Old desks, a blackboard, an abacus, school textbooks, historical documents and photographs are presented.
There is also an Austeria cafe on the territory of Ladomyriia, where you can taste branded catfish dumplings.
Shkilna Street, 1 Radyvyliv
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Museum / gallery
The Radyvyliv Historical Museum presents expositions dedicated to the history and ethnography of the Radyvyliv Region.
Also on display are works by local folk artists: artists, sculptors, carvers.
Kremenetska Street, 24 Radyvyliv
Temple , Architecture
The former church of the Bernardine monastery is the oldest church in the city of Dubno. The monastery was founded by Yanush Ostrozky in 1614. The temple complex in the early Baroque style was completed in 1630, already under the Zaslavsky princes.
Surrounded by defensive walls, the Bernardine monastery was part of the system of city fortifications of Dubno together with the Lutsk Gate. After the third partition of Poland in 1784, the Church of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary of the Bernardine monastery was transformed into an Orthodox church and rebuilt in a pseudo-Rus style.
In Soviet times, the building was used as a production facility. Currently, it is the Saint Nicholas Church of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, which has been partially restored.
Danyla Halytskoho Street, 74 Dubno
Architecture
The complex of buildings of the Carmelite monastery was built in Dubno in the early Baroque style during the time of the Zaslavsky princes.
The church and cell building are connected by side facades, an arched gallery runs along the main facade.
In 1890, the monastery was closed by royal decree. Subsequently, it temporarily resumed activity in 1921-1936. During the Soviet rule, the monastery finally ceased to exist.
In 1946, a cancer dispensary was placed in the former monastery buildings. Currently, it is an oncology hospice under the care of the Dubno Medical College. In 2004, with the consent of the head of the oncology dispensary, rooms were allocated here for the house church and for cells for the residents of the Holy Barbary Monastery of the UOC of the Moscow Patriarchate.
Tarasa Shevchenko Street, 51 Dubno
The parish church of Saint John of Nepomuk is the only active Catholic church in the city of Dubno. It was built in 1817-1830 by the local parish priest Aloyiz Osynsky on the site of an older church. There is a stone bell tower nearby.
During the Soviet rule, the gymnasium of the local sports school was closed and transformed.
In 1991, after Ukraine gained independence, services were resumed in the church. In 1994, the church of Saint John Nepomuk in Dubno was officially handed over to the faithful of the Roman Catholic parish
It is part of the State Historical and Cultural Reserve of the city of Dubno.
Kostyantyna Ostrozkoho Street, 18 Dubno
The Contract House on the market square of Dubno was built in the 19th century. The building is made in the style of classicism.
The place of the famous "Dubno contracts" was the city of Dubno in the 18th century, until they were moved to Zviahel, and then to Kyiv. Grand fairs were held annually during the month immediately after Christmas. Later, fairs were revived on a smaller scale.
Nowadays, the Contract House is a house of children's creativity.
Kyryla i Mefodiya Street, 11 Dubno
Castle / fortress , Architecture , Museum / gallery
The family castle of the princes Ostrozky was built in Dubno in the 15th century, then it belonged to several more aristocratic families: Zaslavsky, Sanhushsko, Lyubomyrsky, Baryatynsky.
For centuries, the Dubno Castle remained impregnable - the fortress walls withstood repeated sieges by the Crimean Tatars in the 16th century, the Cossack units of Maksym Kryvonos, and the Russian army in the 17th century. During various wars of the 18th and 19th centuries, hetman Ivan Mazepa, the Swedish king Karl XII, tsar Peter I, generals Suvorov and Kutuzov visited here.
The Dubno castle is surrounded by a defensive moat, over which a bridge leading to the gate and the gatehouse is overturned. On the right is the Ostrozky Palace (XVI century), and on the left - the Lyubomyrsky Palace (XVIII century), in which the stucco work of the Italian master Domeniko Merlini has been preserved. In the 17th century, the castle was fortified with two bastions with towers designed by the engineer Voban. The "Maiden's Tower" is associated with the legend of Princess Beata and her successful shot from a cannon at the tent of the Tatar Khan, who was besieging the castle.
There is a whole system of basements and underground passages. They are, in particular, described by Mykola Hohol in the novel "Taras Bulba", the main action of which unfolds around the Dubno Castle. In one of the basements, there is an exposition of the museum of torture. Theatrical tours are held.
In 2024, the museum room "Reviver of Ukrainian Castles" was opened, dedicated to the outstanding Ukrainian art critic, long-time director of the Lviv National Art Gallery Borys Voznytsky, who at one time contributed to the restoration of the Dubo Castle.
There is a souvenir shop and a cafeteria.
Zamkova Street, 7A Dubno
The Dubno Great Synagogue was built in the 16th century.
It underwent reconstruction in the 18th century after destruction during the Liberation War of Bohdan Khmelnytskyi.
Until the middle of the 19th century, Dubno had the largest Jewish community in Lutsk County, which flourished thanks to the "Dubno Contracts" fairs that were regularly held in the city. There were 15 synagogues and prayer houses, as well as a Jewish printing house.
The Dubno Great Synagogue was badly damaged during the First World War, but has survived to this day.
Kyryla ta Mefodiya Street, 23 Dubno
Palace / manor , Architecture , Museum / gallery
The palace and park complex in Mlyniv was founded in 1775 by tycoon Yan-Mykola Khodkevych, inviting the Polish court architect Efrayim Shreher.
The 25-hectare park was planned by the famous park builder Dionysius Mikler.
Valuable collections of French and Chinese porcelain, paintings, and silverware were stored in the palace.
Heavily damaged during the Second World War, the palace was dismantled, and the premises of the zoo-veterinary technical school were built in its place.
One of the outbuildings of the palace, in which the Khodkevychy lived until 1939, has been preserved, as well as the dilapidated pavilion of the Philosopher's House and the summer gazebo.
The Mlyniv Museum of Local Lore is located in the wing, the interior of Khodkevych's room is reproduced.
Next to the estate is the Intercession Church with a bell tower (1830-1840).
Ivana Franka Street, 1B Mlyniv
Castle / fortress
The Lutsk Gate is a three-tiered stone building that played the role of the western entrance gate and the forward defense tower - the Barbican, in the medieval system of Dubno city fortification. It was built in 1623 by the architect Yakub Madlayn.
This type of defense structure is typical for Poland and is not found anywhere else in Ukraine. Researchers assume that the Lutsk Gate was connected to the Dubno Castle by a wide underground passage. Later, the building lost its defensive significance, the gate was bricked up, and the street was built next to it. The commemorative plaque indicates that the restoration was carried out in 1785.
According to legend, at the end of the 18th century, a masonic lodge met in the Lutsk Gate under the leadership of Grand Master Mykhaylo Lyubomyrskyi.
Now the Lutsk Gate is used as an administrative building. The monument needs restoration.
Danyla Halytskoho Street, 68 Dubno
The National Historical and Memorial Reserve "Field of the Battle of Berestechko" was founded in 1912 on the site where the largest battle of the Liberation War took place in 1651 under the leadership of Hetman Bohdan Khmelnytskyi.
A 100,000-strong Cossack army supported by 30,000 Tatars of Khan Islam III Girey fought near Berestechko with a 300,000-strong Polish army of King Jan Casimir II. Due to the betrayal of the Tatars, the Zaporizzhhia were defeated, losing according to various estimates from 10 to 30 thousand killed. As a result of the defeat in the Battle of Berestechko, Khmelnytskyi was forced to conclude the unfavorable Bilotserkivsky Peace with Jan Casimir.
In 1912, in memory of the tragic battle, the wooden Saint Michael's Church (XVII century), in which Khmelnytsky prayed before the battle, was moved to Zhuravlykha Island. According to the project of architects Volodymyr Maksimov and Oleksiy Shchusev, a magnificent temple-monument to Saint George was built in the style of Cossack temples with nine baths and an iconostasis brought outside (artist Ivan Yizhakevych). The so-called "balcony" church of Borys and Hlib is located on the second floor.
An underground passage connects the Saint Michael's Church with the underground chapel-tomb of Paraskeva Pyatnytsya under Saint George's Church, where the remains of the dead Cossacks are buried (in particular, they fill the hollow central pillar).
In 1966, the museum-reserve "Cossack Graves" was created. Today it is the National Historical and Memorial Reserve "Field of Battle of Berestechko". The museum of the complex presents finds made by archaeologists on the battlefield.
In 1991, a monument to Cossacks and rebel peasants was opened (sculptor Anatoliy Kush).
The Saint George Men's Monastery of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine operates here.
Kozatskoyi Slavy Street, 26 Pliasheva
The Church of Oleksandr Nevsky in Radyvyliv was founded in 1824 with the assistance of Volyn Bishop Stefan Romanovsky.
Due to a lack of funds, the construction took 50 years. Only in 1874, thanks to the help of the then owner Radyvyliv, the active state adviser of Popov, the construction of the Oleksandr Nevsky Church was completed.
The church is subordinated to the UOC of the Moscow Patriarchate.
Oleksandra Nevsky Street, 31 Radyvyliv
The Cathedral of the Holy Prophet Ilya in Dubno was built in 1905 at the expense of the parishioners.
The ornate temple is made in a bright neo-Rus style, and the belfry is in the Rus-Byzantine style.
Previously, the miraculous icon of the Mother of God, donated to the city of Dubno by Prince Kostyantyn Ostrozky, was kept in the Saint Ilya Church, but it was stolen. Now there is a copy in the temple.
It is the central cathedral of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine in the city of Dubno.
Danyla Halytskoho Street, 13 Dubno
The first Orthodox church in Dubno was built in the 16th century on Kampa Island near the Transfiguration Monastery, founded by the first owners of the city from the Ostrozky family.
The Transfiguration Church was first mentioned in 1592 in a letter of Prince Kostyantyn Ostrozky as "a creation of our ancestors". In 1643, a stone church was built on the site of the wooden church, which has survived to this day. In 1839, the bell tower was completed.
One of the medieval bells of the church (1572) is presented in the exposition "Our spiritual treasures" of the Dubno historical and cultural reserve.
Ivana Franka Street, 30A Dubno
Historic area , Natural object
The Shevchenko spring (Tarasova krynytsya) is located next to the M-06 highway "Kyiv - Chop" not far from Dubno, behind the village of Pidluzhzhia near Tarakaniv.
In the fall of 1846, the Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko rested near this spring during his trip to Volyn as an artist in the Archaeological Commission. On his way back from Pochaiv, he visited the village of Verba and the city of Dubno. According to local legend, Shevchenko drank water from this roadside well.
During Soviet times, the Shevchenko spring was beautifully decorated, and a monument to the poet was erected near it.
Pidluzhzhia