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Attractions of Ukraine
Attractions of Chernihiv region
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Chernihiv region
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Bohdan Khmelnytsky Street, 21 Bakhmach
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The Baturyn Archaeological Museum was opened in the reconstructed premises of the Resurrection Church and Parish School (1904). It is a part of the reserve "Hetman's capital". The exposition is developed in three halls according to the chronological-thematic principle. The Neolithic, Bronze and Iron Ages are represented by fragments of pottery and silicon products. Ancient Russian material: utensils, glass bracelets, ornaments made of non-ferrous metals, iron and bone products. The date of construction of the Polish fortifications is indicated by a silver thaler minted in Basel in 1622. Insurgent weapons tell about the liberation movement of the Ukrainian people: battle axes, pitchforks, etc. The hetman's period of Baturyn is characterized by Cossack derivatives and household items, copies of documents and maps, handicrafts, in particular original tiles with images of the coats of arms of Ukrainian hetmans Ivan Bryukhovetsky, Ivan Mazepa, Pylyp Orlyk. The relics of the heroic defense of the city of 1708 found during the excavations deserve special attention - body icons and crosses of the victims of the massacre, fragments of a cannon and a bell. The symbol of the tragedy was a burnt icon of the Mother of God with the Infant on a copper plate with traces of gilding by masters of the Kiev-Pechersk Lavra of the late XVII century, found by archaeologists in the grave of an elderly woman with a broken skull.
Partizanska Street, 10 Baturyn
Chernihiv Regional Art Museum named after Hryhoriy Galahan is located in the building of the former women's gymnasium (XIX century) on Val. The collection includes about 8,000 works of fine and decorative arts, from the XVI century to the present. It was based on a unique collection of Ukrainian noble family Galagans, represented by works of Western European and domestic art of XVII-XIX centuries, folk paintings, including the famous Cossacks Mamaia, portraits of eight generations of this famous Cossack family and their relatives - Rozumovsky Lamz. Works of decorative and applied art of Ukraine, a folk toy are also presented.
Museum Street, 6 Chernihiv
The openwork building of the Chernihiv Collegium with a high bell tower is located on the territory of the Chernihiv Dytynets (Val). It was once part of the cathedral Borisoglebsk monastery - the residence of the Chernihiv archbishops. The construction of the monastery refectory was probably started at the end of the 17th century by Archbishop Lazar Baranovich. In its current form, the building was erected in 1700-1702 by Archbishop Ioann Maksymovych with the support and funding of Hetman Ivan Mazepa, as evidenced by the board of the bell tower with the coat of arms of Mazepa, which is now exhibited in exhibition halls. Later, the refectory began to be used as one of the premises of the Chernihiv Collegium - the first higher educational institution of the Left Bank of Ukraine, which operated from 1700 to 1786. Latin and other languages were taught here, as well as poetics, rhetoric, philosophy, mathematics, geography, and so on. The college trained church figures, civil servants, translators, writers, and physicians. Now the Chernihiv Collegium houses a museum that covers the history of the school. The class of the college has been reconstructed, an exposition of icon painting has been exhibited, and the exhibition "Chernihiv and Chernihiv People 100 Years Ago" is open. The administration of the National Architectural and Historical Reserve "Ancient Chernihiv" is also located here.
Preobrazhenska Street, 1 Chernihiv
Castle / fortress , Museum / gallery
The wooden Cossack fortress in Baturyn on the Seym River was reconstructed in 2009 on the same site where from 1669 to 1708 the fortified residence of three Ukrainian hetmans was located: Demyan Mnohohrishny, Ivan Samoilovich, Ivan Mazepa. The life and activity of Pylyp Orlyk and Kyrylo Rozumovsky are also connected with the hetman's capital in Baturyn (a monument "Hetmans. Prayer for Ukraine" has been erected).
Baturyn Fortress was founded in 1625 on the ancient Russian settlement by Polish magnate Alexander Pyasochynsky. In 1664, when Baturyn was already a hundredth Cossack town, the fortress could not be captured by the troops of Polish King Jan Casimir. Baturyn fortress consisted of external urban earthen fortifications with a fence and a citadel (castle), where the residence of the hetmans was located. There was a stone hetman's house and a wooden Church of the Resurrection, an entrance gate and three towers.
In 1708, all the buildings of the Baturyn Fortress were completely destroyed during a punitive operation by Russian troops under the command of Alexander Menshikov on the orders of Tsar Peter I of Moscow in revenge for Hetman Ivan Mazepa for siding with Swedish King Charles II during the Moscow-Swedish War. In memory of the Baturyn tragedy, during which almost the entire population of the city was destroyed (5-6.5 thousand soldiers, 6-7.5 thousand civilians), in 2004 a memorial was erected on the site of the north-eastern tower of the citadel. cross.
By 2009, the reconstruction of three defensive towers, wooden fortress walls, a stone hetman's house, a treasury and the castle Resurrection Church, which were included in the exposition "Citadel of Baturyn Fortress" of the Hetmanate History Department of the National Historical and Cultural Reserve, was completed Hetman's capital ". An exhibition of three-dimensional figures "Light Hetmans. Life for Ukraine" has been opened in the Hetman's house. The best panorama of the Sejm valley opens from the observation deck of the gate tower.
Partyzanska Street, 2 Baturyn
2nd lane of Olexander Dovzhenko, 2 Sosnytsia
The house-museum of the General Judge of the Zaporizhia Army Vasyl Kochubey in Baturyn is a rare example of civil architecture of the Ukrainian Baroque era. This is the only building that has survived since the Baturyn Fortress after the destruction of the Hetman's capital by Moscow troops in November 1708.
The one-storey brick building of the General Court was built in the second half of the 17th century during the time of Hetman Demyan Mnohohrishny. He performed both administrative and housing functions. From 1700 it was inhabited by Judge General Vasyl Kochubey and her family. His 16-year-old daughter Motrona (Motrya) was in love with her godfather, 58-year-old Hetman Ivan Mazepa, but the father was adamantly against their marriage. Kochubey and his associate Ivan Iskra tried to settle accounts with Mazepa by informing Tsar Peter I of Moscow about the hetman's secret negotiations with King Charles XII of Sweden. The tsarist government extradited the informers to Mazepa, and they were sentenced to death. After the execution of her father, Motrya went to the monastery. The monument, the Alley of Love and 500-year-old oaks in the manor park (there are the remains of the ramparts of the Baturyn fortress) remind of this dramatic story.
The house of Judge Kochubey has housed the Museum of History and Local Lore since 1975, which in 2006 became part of the National Historical and Cultural Reserve "Hetman's Capital". The exposition acquaints with the history of the house and the Kochubey family, and also deeply reveals the theme of Motria’s and Mazepa's love. The interiors of the investigation and pre-trial detention rooms with an exposition of instruments of torture are recreated in the basements. Part of the exhibition is dedicated to the beekeeper, inventor of the hive Peter Prokopovich, who lived in Baturyn.
Hetmanska Street, 74 Baturyn
The Korop Regional Historical and Archaeological Museum is located in the building of the former Theodosius Church, which was built in the 1880s in the pseudo-Russian style. Under Soviet rule, the baths were removed from the temple and housed first a cinema and then a museum. Archaeological, geological and ethnographic collections are of considerable value. In the exposition you can see finds from the Mezyn Paleolithic site, a diorama of the Radychiv settlement from the times of Kievan Rus, samples of traditional clothes and towels. The museum also widely presents samples of ceramic pottery and tiles of Korop region, which was known as one of the leading centers of pottery. The architecture of the region is represented by models of all 9 churches that existed in Korop in the early XX century.
Voznesenskaya Street, 2 Korop
Mykhailo Kotsyubynskoho Street, 3 Chernihiv
The Maclay Sails Historical and Cultural Center was opened in Baturyn in 2014 to mark the 168th anniversary of the birth of the outstanding traveling scientist Nicholas Miklouho-Maclay. This is the third museum created by the descendants of the scientist Alexander and Nadezhda Miklouho-Maclay. Nicholas Miklouho-Maclay himself was not directly related to Baturyn, but was a descendant of the Zaporozhian Cossacks, and his patron was Count Alexei Tolstoy, great-grandson of Hetman Kirill Razumovsky, who spent his best years in Baturyn. In the second half of the 19th century, Miklouho-Maclay studied the indigenous peoples of Southeast Asia, Australia and Oceania, and wrote many works on zoology, zoogeography, and physical geography. The museum presents a gallery of portraits of Maclay and members of his family, family coat of arms, materials of ethnographic expeditions, models of ships, statuettes of island natives, maps and more. In one of the rooms there is a corner where you can try on costumes of the XIX century and take pictures at the helm. The Maclay Sail Museum is part of the eponymous hotel and restaurant complex.
Cooperative Street, 5 Baturyn
The cathedral was built in the XII century on the foundation of an older stone building of the XI century, has been rebuilt several times. During the restoration in the middle of the XX century the buildings returned to the old Rus forms. The interior has preserved ancient frescoes, inlaid floor. A museum of architecture has been opened in the church, which is part of the National Architectural and Historical Reserve "Ancient Chernihiv". The administration of the reserve is located in the adjacent building of the Collegium (1672), which in the XVII century was part of the Borisoglebsk Monastery - the residence of the Chernihiv metropolitans.
Preobrazhenska Street, 1A Chernihiv
The only complex of post office buildings in Ukraine (XVIII century), which is almost completely preserved, in which the museum "Nizhyn Post Office" was opened. Post offices in Kyiv, Nizhyn and Baturyn were opened after the decree of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich on regular postal services between Moscow and Kiev in 1669. At the beginning of the XIX century Nizhyn post office was one of the largest in the Left Bank of Ukraine. M. Lomonosov, O. Pushkin, M. Gogol, T. Shevchenko and others stayed in the local hotel. The exposition is located in the former house of the station supervisor. The interior of the waiting room has been restored. The exhibition presents, in particular, a collection of postage stamps of Ukraine and Russia.
Poshtova Street, 5 Nizhyn
Palace / manor , Museum / gallery
The ceremonial residence of the last Hetman of Ukraine Kyrylo Rozumovsky effectively stands on a cliff above the river Seym in the town of Baturyn, which served as the hetman's capital in the XVII-XVIII centuries. It is an outstanding architectural monument of the Classicist era of national importance, the only surviving Hetman’s palace and the only architectural structure in Ukraine designed by the outstanding architect Charles Cameron. It is a part of the National Historical and Cultural Reserve "Hetman's Capital".
Construction lasted from 1799 to 1803, after the hetmanate, along with the remnants of Ukrainian independence, was abolished by the government of the Russian Empire. In fact, Rozumovsky did not have time to live in his new palace, as he died in the year of completion. His descendants did not use the palace for its intended purpose, it was badly damaged by fire, was in a dilapidated condition for a long time, and was partially restored several times. The revival began at the initiative of President Victor Yushchenko at the expense of patrons. On August 22, 2009, the restored palace with the exposition of the Museum of the Hetmanate was solemnly opened for visitors.
On the ground floor you can get acquainted with the historical past of Hetman Baturyn through the prism of state activity of Kyrylo Rozumovsky, as well as with the history of construction and restoration of the palace and park ensemble. The interiors of the second floor have been restored in analogy to the surviving works of Charles Cameron and are richly decorated with paintings of ancient Greek mythology, floral ornaments and hetman's jewels. The halls exhibit furniture and interior items, paintings, icons of the XVIII-XIX centuries. The Hetman's Hall is especially magnificent, where the "Stone" table with a marble board inlaid with semi-precious Ural stones is displayed. Among the items that belonged personally to Kyrylo Rozumovsky and his family, you can see the hetman's company lab, the seal of the Rozumovsky cloth factory, the hetman's station wagon and fragments of Rozumovsky's tombstone.
Around the palace is a regular French park, restored according to the scheme of the master plan of the palace and park ensemble. The original palace wings have not survived, their reconstruction is frozen.
Naberezhna Street, 1 Baturyn
Pryluky Museum of Local Lore named after V. Maslov occupies a restored two-storey mansion, built in the XIX century for the mayor M. Kislovsky in the heart of the city. Its history begins with the Museum of Natural History, opened in the late nineteenth century. It reached its peak in the 1930s under the leadership of the famous scientist V. Maslov (a monument was erected at the entrance to the museum). The basis of his collection was a collection of masterpieces of world art and Cossack relics of the famous public figure and philanthropist Hryhoriy Galahan. Since then, the museum has formed interesting art collections, a large collection of decorative and applied arts, opened a department of history of Pryluky. The most interesting exhibits: the saddle of Hetman Danylo Apostol, a model of the Pryluky fortress, a fragment of the fortress fence. The museum staff conducts tours of the city and its surroundings.
Kyivska Street, 277 Pryluky
Borzna Art and Memorial Museum "Estate of the People's Artist of Ukraine Oleksandr Saenko" opened in 1996 in the house of the Saenko family in the town of Borzna in Chernihiv region. The exposition covers the life and work of a prominent Ukrainian artist-decorator, whose name is included in the list of outstanding figures of world culture by UNESCO. Alexander Saenko was born here in 1899. Due to his illness, he lost his hearing and speech as a child, but thanks to the protection of his neighbor Saenko, the writer Ganna Barvinok (wife of Panteleimon Kulish), he got into the St. Petersburg Imperial School of the Deaf and Dumb. He became most famous for his works in the field of monumental and monumental-decorative art in the technique of straw inlay. The museum's exposition presents such well-known works as "Kozak Mamai", "Semen Paliy" and others. Also on display are carpets, tapestries, punches by Saenko, and his collection of Ichnia tiles.
Partyzanska Street, 58 Borzna