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Attractions of Ukraine
Attractions of Rivne region
Found 140 attractions
Rivne region
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Temple , Architecture
The Hoshchansky Orthodox Monastery was founded in 1639 at the Saint Michael's Church, which, according to the protective plaque, was built in Hoshcha in 1632.
The founder of the monastery was Rehina Solomyretska-Hoyska, who inherited Hoshcha from her brother Roman Hoysky. Soon, a relative of Metropolitan Petro Mohyla of Solomyretska transferred here from Vinnytsia a branch of the Kyiv-Mohylyanska Orthodox School, whose rector was Innokenty Hisel. The monastery and the school were helped in every possible way by the champion of Orthodoxy, the Ukrainian nobleman Adam Kysil, who owned the Hoshcha house since 1642. Soon, the Michael Church and the monastery passed to the Greek Catholics, but in 1833 they were finally returned to the Orthodox.
Each time the temple was rebuilt, but did not lose its distinctive features. In particular, the window openings have preserved their original slightly arrowed contours - echoes of Gothic architecture. The building acquired its modern appearance as a result of reconstruction in 1888. The warm Saint Nicholas Church was built next to it with a cell building attached to it.
During the Soviet rule, the premises were used for economic purposes. At present, the restored churches are part of the complex of the Saint-Intercession Hoshchansky women's monastery.
Tarasa Shevchenko Street, 3 Hoshcha
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Castle / fortress
The romantic ruins of the Hubkiv Castle adorn the picturesque rocky shore of the Sluch River.
The castle was built in the 15th century. It was first mentioned in 1505, when it was destroyed by the Tatars. In the 16th century, the Semashko princes restored the castle, turning it into one of the most powerful fortifications in Volyn. The fortification system consisted of four corner towers, united by walls with loopholes, an entrance gate and a drawbridge. Residential and commercial buildings were located in the castle yard.
In 1596, during Severyn Nalyvayko's rebellion, the Hubkiv Castle was captured by the Cossacks under the command of Hryhoriy Loboda (a memorial sign was erected), but was soon restored by the Poles.
Two episodes of the Northern War, when the fortifications were destroyed first by Russian (1704) and then by Swedish troops (1708), were fatal for the stronghold. Since that time, Hubkiv Castle has not been restored.
Small sections of dilapidated walls of one tower and the former palace, the castle well, have been preserved. Access is free.
Zamkova hora tract Hubkiv
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
Natural object
Khotyn Caves near Rivne are a natural monument of local importance (since 1979).
They are located on the slope of the second floodplain terrace of the Horyn River near the village of Khotyn.
The caves interested researchers as early as the 19th century, when drawings were discovered on the walls, possibly dating back to pre-Christian times. Probably, the Khotyn Caves were a refuge for local residents during enemy attacks.
According to legend, an underground passage leads to Rivne.
Khotyn
Park / garden
The Klesiv Arboretum was created on the territory of the Klesiv Forestry by a self-taught landscape designer, former forester Oleksiy Voron.
With his own hands, he created a lot of green sculptures from trees and shrubs, which he brought from various forests of Ukraine. The alleys of the Klesiv Arboretum are decorated with balls, pyramids, cylinders and glasses. There are about 30 sculptures, many arches and other architectural forms. There are also complex sculptural compositions: "Virgin Mary's Candle", "Olympic Cup", "Bohdan Khmelnytskyi's Chalice".
At the entrance to the Klesiv Arboretum, visitors are greeted by a huge coat of arms of Ukraine made of spherical thuja trees.
Yevropeyska Street Klesiv
The well-preserved, well-fortified Klevan Castle was founded in 1475 by Prince Mykhaylo Chartoriysky on the site of an ancient Rus settlement above the Stubla River.
The castle is surrounded by powerful walls (thickness of 3.8 meters) and a defensive moat, over which a four-arch bridge is thrown. The construction was supervised by the Lviv fortification engineer Ivan Lys, the architect of the Lviv City Arsenal. Two corner towers were also preserved from the original building. In the 17th and 18th centuries, a college of Jesuits was located here. After the reconstruction carried out in 1817 by Kostyantyn Chartoryysky, a Polish gymnasium was opened in the new buildings, then a theological school.
During the Soviet rule, the Klevan Castle housed a boarding school, a mechanization school, and a NKVD post at various times, then it was converted into a treatment and labor ward for alcoholics.
Currently, the buildings are derelict, and projects for reconstruction and development of tourist infrastructure are being discussed. Klevan Castle is cared for by volunteers from the sports and patriotic organization "Shyt".
Zamkova Street Klevan
The ruins of Korets Castle with a distinctive tower over the gate of red brick are the hallmark of the city.
The first wooden fortification was built in the 15th century above the Korchyk river by Prince Ostrozky. Later, the castle passed into the possession of Volyn Voivode Bohdan Koretskyi, who strengthened it with stone walls with towers and bastions, surrounded by an earthen rampart and a moat filled with water from the river.
In the 18th century, the fortress buildings became the basis for the construction of the palace complex of the Chartoryskyi princes. In 1832, the palace burned down and has not been rebuilt since then.
The three-level gate tower, the adjacent ruins of the outer walls of the palace buildings, and the three-pylon four-arch bridge (reconstructed in recent years) have been preserved.
Bohdana Khmelnytskoho Street Korets
Museum / gallery
The Korets Historical Museum was opened in the former Horchynski Palace (18th century) to mark the 850th anniversary of the first chronicle of the city.
The exposition is located in five halls: the history of the city of Korets, World War II, ethnography and two exhibitions. More than 6,000 exhibits reflect the history, culture and life of the region.
In front of the entrance to the Korets Historical Museum there is a monument to Taras Shevchenko, according to the legend, remade from the monument to Lenin.
Kyivska Street, 43A Korets
Kostopil Museum of Local Lore is located in a small one-story house in the center of Kostopil.
There are 10 exhibitions about the nature, history and ethnography of the region. In the exposition "Nature of the native land" the most interesting dioramas are "River and meadow" and "Forest".
In the ethnographic corner the interior of the Polissya house was reconstructed, the full process of fabric making was presented.
The archeological collection includes tools of prehistoric times, fragments of pottery, bronze products.
The history of the region is told by the exhibition "Kostopil region from the IX century to 1921".
Stands "Kostopilshchyna Today" is actually an advertising exhibition of products of local enterprises.
A large collection of military equipment from the Second World War, open to the 40th anniversary of the victory, is on display on the site in front of the museum. Among the 17 exhibits are an IS-3 tank, a BM-13 Katyusha jet mortar, ISU-122 and ISU-152 self-propelled artillery units, a 203-mm B-4 howitzer, an automatic anti-aircraft gun, and more.
Mykhayla Hrushevskoho Street, 16 Kostopil
Museum / gallery , Palace / manor
The estate of the Lenkevychi-Valevsky landowners in Hoshcha is an outstanding monument of palatial modernism in the residential architecture of Volyn in the 19th century, the embodiment of modernist aesthetics in Volyn garden and park construction. The palace is an architectural monument of local importance.
At the end of the 18th century, Stanislav Kostka Lenkevych of the Lenkevych-Ipochorskyi family, to whom Hoshcha had belonged since the beginning of the 18th century, founded the Hoshcha estate with an English-style park and a one-story wooden house. In 1852 the estate became the property of Oktaviya Lenkevych, who married Count Mikhal Valevsky. Around this time, the current palace was built in the style of a Swiss chalet - an alpine house with half-timbered facades, an attic floor, a decorative tower and a balcony over a porch in Art Nouveau style. The last owners were the Russian landowners Isakov.
In Soviet times, the palace was greatly modified by adding a second floor, completing the second wing instead of a decorative tower and partially covering the facades with ceramic tiles, but the main facade remained close to the original. For a long time the building was used as a district library.
In 2017, the Lenkevych-Valevsky estate was transferred to the balance of the Hoscha village council, and restoration work began. Now the exposition of the Hoshcha Historical and Ethnographic Museum "Pohoryna" is unfolding here.
Hoshcha Park with an area of 7 hectares is a monument of landscape art of national importance. Among its greenery you can find a relict ginkgo tree, which is also called the "dinosaur tree". Also growing are marsh oak with a pyramidal crown, Schwedler's red-leaved maple, Weymouth pine with small silky needles and long narrow cones, Japanese sophora, which resembles white acacia but has no thorns.
Sadova Street, 5 Hoshcha
The Church of the Resurrection of the Lord (former Saint Nicolas Church) was built in Kozlyn in 1793.
This is one of the few temples that survived during the Soviet occupation in the vicinity.
The Resurrection Church is an architectural monument of local importance.
Tykha Street Kozlyn
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 People`s Ethnographic and Local Lore Museum of the village of Lypky was founded in 1967. It bears the name of its founder and long-time director - the famous local historian, poet, writer and teacher Ivan Shyshko.
The museum's exposition chronicled the history of the village, presented tools of labor, household items, clothing from different times, and albums collected descriptions of rituals and village songs.
In the second half of the 1980s, enthusiasts restored a peasant hut of the 18th-19th centuries to house part of the exposition, demonstrating the traditional way of life. The hut has a peasant stove, a chest, a loom, a wicker hanging cradle, a sleeping mat, and on the walls are images in towels. In the pantry - straw mats, a stupa, and boxes. In the hallway - a grater and a millstone.
вулиця Молодіжна Lypky
Historic area , Architecture
The historic quarter "Maidan Bergshloss" opened in 2020 as part of the renewed architectural complex of the Rivne Brewery at the initiative of the director of the enterprise Maryan Hoda.
A small cobbled square is surrounded by three-story buildings reminiscent of the buildings of an old European city. Colorful and stylish false facades have Polish, German and Scandinavian features.
Most of the premises are currently occupied by the Hotel Optima Collection Bergshloss Rivne of the "Reikarts" chain. There is an Italian restaurant.
The European courtyard "Bergshloss" is periodically used as a festival site and a cultural and exhibition space.
The opening of the Beer and Hop Growing Museum is planned.
Petra Mohyly Street, 14 Rivne
Palace / manor , Architecture
The estate of the landowner Mykhaylo Malynskyi, the Dubene marshal (leader of the nobility) in the village of Zirne (a suburb of the city of Berezne) was founded at the end of the 19th century.
The landscape park with an area of 18 hectares was laid out on drained marshes in 1874-1897 (according to legend, the author of the project was the famous Irish landscape painter Dionisiy Mikler, which is unlikely). Among the 80 species of trees that grow here, there are Weymouth pine, Siberian spruce, European larch, silver maple, hornbeam, oak, ash and others. Several manor buildings in the Western European chalet style with elements of Art Nouveau have been preserved on the territory of the park.
Currently, an anti-tuberculosis sanatorium is located on the territory of the Malynsky manor. On the western edge of the park, you can see an unusual brick water tower about 25 meters high, which is stylized as the tower of a fairy-tale castle.
Myronenka Street, 27А Zirne