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Attractions of Ukraine
Attractions of Poltava region
Attractions of Lubny district
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Lubny district
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Architecture
The Zemska school building in the style of Ukrainian Art Nouveau was built in Pisky-Udaiski in the 1910s according to the project of the architect Opanas Slastion (Slaston).
The Ukrainian painter, ethnographer and architect Slastion developed a number of original school projects for the Lokhvytskyi zemstvo, to which the village of Pisky-Udaiski belonged at the time. These projects are characterized by pointed towers and trapezoidal window openings.
After a new, wider building was built for the village school (now the village library), the Zemska school building is not used.
Kosiy Khutir Street Pisky-Udaiski
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The ancestral tomb of the Zakrevsky family in the unusual shape of an Egyptian pyramid was built in Berezova Rudka at the end of the 19th century by the famous lawyer Hnat Zakrevsky, who was in the service of Emperor Oleksandr III, was a member of the Masonic lodge and admired Egyptian culture. According to one version, he was also Russia's ambassador to Egypt.
The chapel-mausoleum built by him over the grave of his ancestors most likely has a secret symbolic meaning. The funeral building combined the classical forms of the Egyptian pyramid and pagan paraphernalia with Orthodox symbols. Thus, the entrance to the chapel was "guarded" by a statue of the goddess Isis brought by Zakrevsky from Egypt, and an Orthodox cross was placed on the portico above the entrance. In the center of the hall was an Orthodox altar with a large stone cross.
Hnat Zakrevsky himself died in 1906 in Egypt, his embalmed body was brought to Berezova Rudka and buried in the mausoleum.
Pyramid in Berezova Rudka is one of the three pyramidal temples in Ukraine. During the Soviet rule, the chapel was desecrated and looted, now the building is in a bad condition.
Tsentralna Street Berezova Rudka
The luxurious building of the women's diocesan school adorns the center of the city of Lubny.
The building was built in 1907 according to the project of the famous architect, academician of architecture Oleksiy Beketov at the expense of the candle factory of the diocese. The school opened the following year.
Now it is Gymnasium named after Vasyl Barka of the Lubny City Council.
Viktora Novikova Street, 2 Lubny
Museum / gallery
The Pyriatyn Museum of Local Lore was founded in 1967.
The museum is located in one of the first stone residential buildings of Pyriatyn - the house of one of the local landowners.
The exposition of the museum is placed in six rooms and highlights the history of the region from the most ancient times to the present day. In particular, an ethnographic collection is presented, as well as exhibits that reproduce the life and daily life of the Pyriatyn Cossacks.
Muzeyna Street, 47 Pyriatyn
Temple , Architecture
The modest church of All Saints of the Ukrainian Land in Lubny is located on the territory of the Children's Park named after Oles Donchenko, opposite the market.
Founded in 1836. Now it belongs to the community of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine.
Mystetska Street, 3 Lubny
The private art salon of the Vasylenko creative family "Museum of Ukrainian Life" in Velyka Krucha is located next to the Kyiv-Poltava highway, near the Brewery complex with a restaurant.
Collector Mykola Vasylenko collected a rich collection of works by folk artists not only of Poltava Region, but also of the whole of Ukraine. In particular, Velyka Krucha ceramics made by local amateur artists Oleksandr Suvorov and Serhiy Syomin are presented: vases, pots, figurines of fairy-tale heroes, park sculpture.
Here you can buy various household items and art products. In particular, dishes with paintings by the local master Ivan Vovchanskyi.
Heroyiv Maydanu Street, 77A Velyka Krucha
Museum / gallery , Ethnographic complex
Ethnographic collection "Drevo" is a museum of antiquities in the village of Kozubivka in the Poltava region, founded in the old parent's house of Poltava ethnographer Eduard Kutko. Five generations of his family grew up here.
The authentic village house has been restored, its original interiors have been restored, old furniture and household items reflecting the life of a traditional Poltava village are presented.
The museum collection includes more than 2,000 exhibits and items of intangible cultural heritage: embroidery, towels, carpets, paintings, icons, as well as recordings of ancient songs. Most of the exhibits date back to the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century.
In addition to excursions, the museum offers a master class on making necklaces from Oleksandra Gerasymova, tastings of craft wines from local winemaker Vladyslav Oliinyk, and dinners with traditional Poltava dishes. On the territory there is a garden, a gazebo, a swing.
Stepova Street, 6 Kozubivka
The Holy Assumption Cathedral in Khorol was founded in 1802 at the expense of the merchant Chebotaryov.
Destroyed by the Bolsheviks in 1934. The revival began in 2002. Now the temple has been rebuilt. It belongs to the UOC of the Moscow Patriarchate.
Voskresenska Street, 2 Khorol
The Holy Trinity Church in Lubny is located in the building of the former dormitory of the medical school in Nyzhniy Val, although until 1961 it was the central and largest church of the city.
The wooden Trinity Church was first mentioned in 1622. It stood until 1869, when a white stone five-domed temple was erected in place of the old temple, which beautified and ennobled the central square of the city.
In 1960, under the pretext of clearing the site for the construction of a hotel, the Trinity Church was moved to an unsuitable building on the outskirts of the city, and the church in the city center was blown up.
Today, the church has been rebuilt in classical Orthodox forms.
Nyzhniy Val Street, 2 Lubny
The Family Museum of the Hrebinka Brothers in the village of Maryanivka was opened in 2018 during the cultural festival "Hrebinka Evenings". The exhibition is located in the premises of the Maryanivka village culture center.
It was in Maryanivka, which in the 19th century was called Hlybokyi Yar, that the outstanding Ukrainian writer-biker Yevhen Hrebinka (1812) and his brother, architect Mykola Hrebinka (1819) were born. Only a crypt and an old chestnut tree remained from the Hrebinka family estate, a monument was erected at the burial place of Yevhen Hrebinka.
The museum presents materials about the life and creative path of prominent compatriots. In particular, you can see a reproduction of the portrait of Yevhen Hrebinka, painted by Taras Shevchenko, and other exhibits that tell about Shevchenko's stay in the Hrebinka family.
Tsentralna Street, 24A Maryanivka
Hrebinka City Local Lore Museum was opened in 1967. It is located in two rooms on the first floor of the Hrebinka Municipal Culture House in the center of the Hrebinka city.
The exposition consists of five sections: "People's life", "Hrebinka - the city of railway workers", "The combat glory of the Hrebinka region", "Outstanding compatriots", "Hrebinka's Room". Household items of Ukrainian peasants and ancient tools of rural work are widely represented, in particular, an ox harness dating from the 19th century, a horse collar from the beginning of the 20th century, horseshoes, etc. Among the rarities are the textbooks "Grammar of the Latin Language" (1826) and "Basic Fundamentals of Differential Calculus" (1822), special editions of the newspaper "Russkoye Slovo" devoted to the beginning of the First World War.
In 2023, the exhibition "Ukrainian house rich in goodness" was opened in the Hrebinka City Local Lore Museum, the main goal of which is to revive the customs and traditions of the Ukrainian people.
There is a separate museum "Hrebinka's Room", dedicated to the figure of the Ukrainian writer Yevhen Hrebinka, who was born in the village of Maryanivka not far from the city of Hrebinka, where the Family Museum of the Hrebinka Brothers is opened.
Yevhena Hrebinky Street, 13 Hrebinka
The memorial manor of the parents of Hryhoriy Skovoroda, a small-land Cossack Savva Skovoroda and his wife Pelaheya.
In 1722, their son Hryhoriy was born here - a future poet, philosopher and educator. In 1734, he went from here to study at the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, from where he went to St. Petersburg, and then on a long journey through European countries. He returned to his homeland in 1750, but did not find his parents alive.
In the center of the manor is a hut under a thatched roof, where items of rural life of the 18th-19th centuries are presented. A large exposition is devoted to the life and work of the philosopher.
Tsentralna Street, 45 Chornukhy
The Kaplyntsivskyi Bridge over the Udai River on the southern edge of the village of Kaplyntsi in the Poltava region is considered the longest wooden bridge in Ukraine. Its length, according to various estimates, reaches from 230 to 240 meters (some sources indicate a length of 356 meters, presumably taking into account the earth dam).
According to legend, the first wooden bridge was built across the river at the end of the 19th century. In 1933-1934, a new crossing was built in Kaplyntsi to lay a direct road to Pyriatyn.
The bridge stands on oak piles, has 46 spans. About 600 oak logs were used for construction. On top of the longitudinal beams, oak beams were laid crosswise, which were sheathed with oak boards. Initially, the bridge had a wooden railing.
Now the Kaplyntsivskyi Bridge is part of the "Zaplavnyi Udai" eco-tourist route, laid through the picturesque surroundings of the city of Pyriatyn and nearby villages on the territory of the Pyriatynskyi National Nature Park. It is a popular tourist location due to its beautiful scenery and the opportunity to take interesting photos.
Veselkova Street Kaplyntsi
Museum / gallery , Architecture
The first folk museum of local lore was organized in Khorol by ethnographer Volodymyr Biryukov back in 1917, but it was closed in the 1930s.
The current exposition has been operating since 1995 and is housed in a historical building of the beginning of the 20th century, which is an architectural monument of local importance.
The nature department presents a diorama, stuffed animals, and geological samples.
The archaeological collection includes ancient weapons, ceramics, and stone tools.
In the department of ethnography, the interior of a village house is recreated, folk costumes and household items are exhibited.
A diorama of the "Khorol Yama" death camp is on display.
Nebesnoyi Sotni Street, 98/4 Khorol
Palace / manor , Architecture
The manor in Vyshniaky was built in 1805 by Colonel Radion Palaments from Hadyach, probably according to the project of the famous architect Mykola Lviv.
The two-story house in the style of classicism is located on a slope going down to the Khorol River, and was once surrounded by a park and an orchard. The compositional center of the building is an oval hall topped by a dome with a low spire. Above the main entrance is a carved wooden balcony-terrace resting on massive stone pillars. On the park facade, four pillars support a semicircular balcony.
Radion Palamenets was married to Nadiya Obolonska, whose Cossack family owned Vyshniaky since 1744. After the founder's death, the manor was inherited by his wife, and then by her brother, Demyan Obolonskyi. The poet and artist Taras Shevchenko knew his son, the editor and publisher of the magazine "Narodne khednyi" Oleksandr Obolonsky well. In 1845, the Obolonsky hosted Shevchenko at the Vyshniaky estate, which he later mentioned in the story "The Twins" (a commemorative plaque was installed).
Later, the landlady Rodzyanko-Kotlyarevska became the owner of the Vyshniaky, whose name the estate now bears.
Now this is the closed territory of a boarding house for the disabled.
The Kotlyarevsky manor is connected by an underground passage with the Trinity Church located opposite.
Tarasa Shevchenko Street, 100 Vyshniaky