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Attractions of Ukraine
Attractions of Sumy region
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Sumy region
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Temple , Architecture
Hamaliivka (Kharalampiivskyi) monastery is a monastery-prison, one of the most negative examples of the use of historical and architectural heritage in Ukraine.
Founded in 1702 as a hermitage at the wooden church of Saint Harlampius. In 1713, Hetman of Ukraine Ivan Skoropadskyi issued a charter and allocated funds for the construction of a women's monastery. He was buried right there in the ancestral crypt of the Harlampius church (white stone tombstones have been preserved), and the monastery actually became an ancestral tomb.
In 1735, the construction of the Cathedral of the Nativity of the Virgin was finished, the territory was surrounded by walls with towers and a belfry over the gate, stone cells and farm buildings appeared.
In the 18th century, the monastery burned twice and was rebuilt. It existed until 1924, when a nursing home and a children's shelter were opened here, and the cathedral was transformed into a cultural center.
In 1961, correctional and labor colony No. 66 of strict regime was established on the territory, the crypts of the Skoropadskyi were walled up, and the graves of the monks were dug up. It was only in 1994 that the restoration of the Harlampi church was carried out, and religious services for prisoners began to be held in it. The cathedral is still used as a workshop. The issue of returning the monastery to the Orthodox Church has not been resolved.
Hamaliivka
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Palace / manor , Architecture
The Kharytonenko estate in Sumy is located on the bank of the Psel River at the confluence of the Sumka River on the opposite bank from the city center.
The famous sugar factory and philanthropist Ivan Kharytonenko bought this plot in the 1860s. The estate built by him consisted of three buildings: a residential building (a little in the depth of the estate; Kharytonenko's house in Moscow, where the British embassy is now located, was built on the model of this mansion), and two service buildings. In addition, the estate included a fountain in front of the residential building and a park above the Psel. In 1912-1913, the office building of the trading house "Kharytonenko and Son" was built, which housed a polyclinic in Soviet times.
Currently, the Kharytonenka estate belongs to the Ukrainian Academy of Banking of the National Bank of Ukraine, which is going to build a Palace of creativity and leisure for students here.
Troyitska Street, 4 Sumy
The estate house in Lyfyne was founded in the first half of the 19th century by the Khrushchov family of landowners. It is located in a park on a hill above a pond on the Vorozhba River. It is famous for the stay here of the outstanding Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko.
Initially, the complex consisted of a wooden manor house and one outbuilding in the form of a typical Slobozhanshchyna hut in two halves. Nearby was a farmyard with wooden services, barns, stables, etc. An alley led through the garden to a wooden bridge over the pond.
In the summer of 1859, the then owner of the estate, Dmytro Khrushchov, hosted Taras Shevchenko for four days, whom he had met the day before in St. Petersburg. The poet lived in an outbuilding that has not survived to this day. Here he wrote the poem "Oh, the rose blooms on the mountain". The centuries-old Shevchenko pine tree also reminds of the poet's stay.
In 1880-1893, the estate was rebuilt and significantly expanded. The main house was bricked and decorated in the French Neo-Renaissance style. The wooden manor house was also bricked, and another outbuilding was built to the south of it. In the northwestern corner of the front yard on the edge of the hill, a wine warehouse was built, resembling a medieval castle.
Despite the fact that the Khrushchov estate is included in the State Register of Immovable Monuments of Ukraine in the category of local importance, the buildings are in poor condition and remain abandoned. In addition, in 2025, the main building was severely damaged by a Russian drone strike - a fire completely destroyed the roof and all wooden architectural elements.
Lyfinska Street Lyfyne
Architecture
The two-story building "Teremok" is the only surviving structure of the estate of the Kondratyev landowners in Stare Selo near Sumy. It is considered the oldest surviving civil building in Sumy Region.
The estate on the high bank of the Psel River was founded in the first half of the 18th century. The first one-story manor house was built in the Baroque style. In 1753, Colonel Stepan Kondratyev, a descendant of Herasym Kondratyev, the founder of Sumy, reconstructed the building. An extension was made to it and a second floor was added.
Later, "Teremok" was used as a granary. In Soviet times, it was residential. Now abandoned. Restoration is planned.
Nearby are the ruins of the Saint Nicolas Church (1741-1754).
Sumska Street Stare Selo
Museum / gallery
The Museum of the History of the Konotop Battle of 1659 opened in 2007 in the village of Shapovalivka in the premises of the village's cultural center.
It was in Shapovalivka that the Battle of Konotop took place in 1659, during which the Ukrainian-Tatar army led by Hetman Ivan Vyhovsky won an undisputed victory over the army of the Moscow kingdom.
The Museum of the History of the Konotop Battle is an integral part of the Memorial Complex "Battle of Konotop".
Kozatskoyi Slavy Square, 31 Shapovalivka
The Kozatske Village Local Lore Museum in Sumy region was founded in 2000 as a school museum. Since 2017, it has been operating on the basis of the local club "Krayeznavets" at the Kozatske Village House of Culture.
The museum's exposition, spread over several halls of the house of culture, tells about the origin of the village and its name, the history of the local school, church, and agricultural enterprises of the village.
Visitors can learn more about the traditions and customs of local residents, as well as see an exhibition of naive art paintings created by masters of the village of Kozatske.
An exhibition of retro equipment has been created in the park next to the museum, featuring old cars, tractors, and other equipment used by local agricultural enterprises.
Hetmana Samoylovycha Street, 20 Kozatske
The Krasnopillia History Museum was established in 1985 as a museum of the history of the district on a non-profit basis. In 1994, it received the status of a "People's Museum".
The museum's collections include about 4 thousand exhibits, some of which are available for viewing in four halls of the museum. A special place in the exposition is occupied by stands dedicated to famous natives of the region - Pavlo Hrabovsky, Petro Sokolenko, Leonid Zhabotynsky, etc. Separate expositions are dedicated to the events of the Ukrainian Revolution of 1917-1922 and the Holodomor in Ukraine of 1932-1933.
In addition, the museum presents a large ethnographic collection of the region.
Mezenivska Street, 6 Krasnopillia
Krolevets Museum of Local Lore was established in 2000 on the basis of the city history museum opened in 1971.
The museum occupies an old wooden house in the city center.
The exposition tells about the history of the region from ancient times to the end of the Second World War, about the culture and art of Krolevets.
A separate hall presents the history of weaving, the art of which Krolevets was famous in the XVIII century.
Soborna Street, 33 Krolevets
The building of the city administration (town hall) with a tall clock tower was built in Lebedyn at the beginning of the 20th century.
Made in the forms of rationalist modernism as an architectural dominant of the city center.
In Soviet times, a fire brigade was placed in the building, and the tower was converted into a fire hydrant.
Soborna Square, 14 Lebedyn
The museum-workshop was founded in Sumy in 2006 by the famous Ukrainian artist Leontii Kostur. The artist works in a style that he called his own surname - "kosturism". His mainly clay works, kosturs, tell about the everyday life and traditions of Ukraine.
The workshop is located in a house that Leontii Kostur inherited and converted into a museum-workshop. The museum exhibits more than 300 sculptures ("kosturs") and a significant number of paintings.
Stadionnyi Lane, 2 Sumy
The Lesya Ukrayinka People's Museum was opened in Kosivshchyna in 1971 for the 100th anniversary of the poet's birth.
Lesya Ukrayinka's stay in Sumy region is connected with her treatment for tuberculosis. In 1889, the mother brought Lesya to the Kosivshchyna to the folk healer Paraska Boрush. Here the poetess wrote her "Spring Songs".
Lesya Ukrayinka's museum room is located in the local secondary school named after the poetess. Among the 600 exhibits are things that belonged to Paraska Boрush: a pot, a thick-walled pot for medicine, a trough, a towel. Lesya Ukrayinka's first collection "On the Wings of Songs" published in 1904, etc., is presented.
Excursions are conducted by young tour guides.
Shkilna Street, 16B Kosivshchyna
Architecture , Museum / gallery
The People's Museum of Marshal of Armored Troops Pavlo Rybalko has been operating in the village of Malyi Vystorop since 1954, which is associated with the life and activities of this Soviet commander. It is located on the territory of the Malyi Vystorop Vocational College, which bears the name of Marshal Rybalko.
The museum building is a historical monument. It is the former estate of the Romanivskyi Sugar Factory, which was built in 1870.
Rybalko's wife, sister, and nephews helped local teachers and students create the museum. For many years, the institution has been headed by Marshal's great-grandson, Volodymyr Rybalko.
The current exhibition was created in 1984. The museum has several thematic rooms dedicated to Rybalko's childhood and family, his participation in the First and Second World Wars, as well as scientific and teaching activities after 1945. One of the rooms recreates his study - with furniture and a library. In general, the exhibition consists of photographs, newspaper clippings, posters, documents, objects, and clothing that belonged to Rybalko or have survived from that era.
It is planned to update the exposition in accordance with a modern view of the history of the 20th century.
Marshala Rybalka Street, 1 Malyi Vystorop
Historic area
Maydan Nezalezhnosti (Independence Square) in Sumy is the historical and administrative center of the city.
The city began from this place in the middle of the 17th century, when its founders, Colonel Herasym Kondratyev of the Sumy Slobid Cossack Regiment and Voivode Kyrylo Arsenyev, began to implement their plans for the construction and arrangement of the Sumy Fortress and its post.
In 1694, a wooden Mykolaiv church was built, which has not survived to this day. Already after the death of Colonel Kondratyev in 1702, the construction of the Resurrection Cathedral was completed, which is now the main decoration of the square. Mykolayivska and Voskresenska squares, formed around the churches, later merged into one.
For a long time, the square was called Petrivska because Tsar Peter I visited it on the eve of the Battle of Poltava. After the Second World War, the square was reconstructed, at that time it was named after Lenin. In 1991, it was renamed Maydan Nezalezhnosti.
The buildings are dominated by high-rise buildings of the regional council and the Sumy hotel.
Nezalezhnosti Square Sumy
Monument
The village of Nova Sloboda in the Sumy region is called the Ukrainian Khatyn, because in 1942 the German occupiers shot 586 villagers to take revenge for the help of the villagers to the partisan unit of Sydor Kovpak.
In 2004, the "Bell of Sorrow" memorial was opened in the center of Nova Sloboda - a monument to the unconquered village and its brave inhabitants.
The monument is made in the shape of a bell, inside there is a small chapel, the names of all those who died in that tragedy are engraved on the marble slabs.
Nova Sloboda
Reserve
The Michael's Virgin Land Nature Reserve is a unique area of virgin meadow steppe with an area of 202 hectares, which has never been touched by a plow.
Since 1741, these lands belonged to the Kapnist Counts, who bred Oryol trotters at their stud farm in Mykhailivka. Large areas of the steppe were set aside for pastures and therefore were never plowed.
In 1928, "Michael's Virgin Land" was declared a reserve, until recently it was part of the Ukrainian Steppe Nature Reserve (in 2009, it was allocated to a separate protected area). The territory of the reserve, surrounded by a protective afforestation, is a low hill that gradually descends to the surrounding streams. The total area of the reserve is 882.9 hectares.
More than 500 types of herbs grow here, 38 of which are protected (11 are listed in the Red Book of Ukraine). Since they bloom at different times, the steppe changes color 10-12 times during the summer.
Brown hares, foxes and small rodents live in the reserve.
Excursions to the "Michael's Virgin Land" are organized by the Lebedyn city museum of local lore.
Velyki Luky