Popov Manor House | |
Native Name: | Садиба Попова |
Native Language: | uk |
Type: | Manor house |
Coordinates: | 47.4458°N 35.275°W |
Location: | Vasylivka, Zaporizhzhia Oblast |
Area: | 2.87ha |
Founder: | Vasiliy Popov |
Built: | 1864-1884 |
Original Use: | Family manor house |
Architect: | not established |
Architecture: | Moorish architecture, Gothic Revival architecture, others |
Governing Body: | Vasylivka Historical and Architectural Museum-Reserve |
Owner: | Government of Ukraine |
Current Use: | Historical museum |
Designation1 Offname: | Vasylivka Historical and Architectural Museum-Reserve Popov Manor House |
Designation1 Date: | 29 January 1993 |
The Vasylivka Historical and Architectural Museum-Reserve "Popov Manor House" (also known as Vasylivka Castle) is an established museum complex at a partly preserved manor house built between 1864 and 1884 near the town of Vasylivka, Ukraine by Vasili Popov Jr. (a grandson of General Vasili Stepanovich Popov).
The Historic and Cultural Reserve was created on 29 January 1993 in place of the existing Vasylivka museum of local history.[1]
Its Gothic Revival design is attributed to Nicholas Benois. The main house had a telescope, a picture gallery, and an ethnographic museum. The castle was looted by the Bolsheviks and ruined by the Germans in the Second World War. Restoration works did not start until the 1990s.
On March 7, 2022, during the military invasion of Ukraine, the Popov Manor was fired upon by Russian troops. The arena-stable building of the Popov manor was damaged.[2]
On March 13, 2022, the museum was looted by the Russian military. In addition to the robbery, they damaged the premises, broke the windows and broke all the doors.[3] [4]
On April 19, 2023, it became known that the occupiers began to remove property from the historical and architectural museum-reserve located in the building of the once famous European palace and park ensemble-estate of General Vasyl Popov, which was built in 1894. This estate was once supposed to be an alternative to the Vorontsov Palace in Alupka. According to many researchers, the author of the project of the palace complex and many of its elements was the world-famous architect Benoit. According to experts, this is a real miracle of urban planning and there are no analogues of such high-quality brickwork in Ukraine or Europe.[5]
The lands near the future city of Oleksandrivsk were donated by Empress Catherine II to General Vasyl Popov. He became the founder of the settlement that later became the town of Vasylivka. Previously, the area was used for Cossack winter quarters and had several farms.
The general's grandson, Vasyl Popov, started a large-scale construction project in the second half of the nineteenth century. The Popov family owned the estate until the October Revolution of 1917.
It was not possible to identify the author of the project. Most likely, there were several of them, which causes problems for researchers. One of the possible architects is a local architect, Oleksandr Ageienko. According to stylistic features, one of the authors could have been the architect from St. Petersburg, Benoit Nikolai Leontievich (1813-1898). The construction of the manor lasted 20 years (1864-1884), and it became the largest among the manors of Eastern Ukraine. Built in the historical styles of the XIX century, the castle has features of the Northern Italian Renaissance, Gothic and Moorish features. The buildings are constructed of red brick from Popov's own factories in Vasylivka.
V.S. Popov was the manager of the office for the construction of royal houses and gardens. At a certain period, in the midst of career ups and downs, the count left the service due to health problems and began to arrange his estates. Popov had many of them: in the Yekaterinoslav, Kherson, Tavriya, Minsk provinces, and in the Urals.
The main building of the palace and park complex is the castle. The technical design was created by architect Stunkle. The castle was built of brick, two-story, in its original form, and had five towers, three of which had tent roofs. The building measured 42 by 45 meters, with foundations that housed wine cellars. The castle had baths (Finnish, Roman, etc.), a ballroom, living rooms, an art gallery, a library, and a collection of ancient weapons. In 1907, an ethnographic museum was organized, where exhibits of 15 different national cultures were presented. At the beginning of the XX century, the estate was equipped with a meteorological and power station. The meteorological station of the Popov estate was included in the network of meteorological services of the Russian Empire. An astronomical observatory with a telescope was also arranged on the roof of the estate. The terrace with the telescope was decorated with sculptures by the Italian master Langobardi. In addition to the main house, the estate had stables, office premises, a landscape park, and fountains.
The October Revolution and the First World War prompted the owner of the estate, Yurii Popov, to save the property. According to legend, he managed to take out some of the most valuable items. The library's books, furniture, ethnographic collections, paintings, and sculptures were looted or destroyed. The castle, the park, and the surrounding oak tree, which was cut down for firewood, suffered the greatest losses. Until the beginning of the Second World War, the buildings of the estate housed a pigsty.
In 1934, part of the estate's buildings were dismantled for construction of a local cultural center. The wooden vaults and ceilings and partially the roofs were broken out. In 1954, by the decision of the Soviet authorities, the Cathedral of St. Peter and Paul, also built by the Popov family in Vasylivka, was destroyed. Later, a school for mentally ill children was located in the stables of the estate. The carriage barn was added to the second floor, and a dormitory for a local technical school was built on the vacated territory. The complex was partially destroyed and the building materials were stolen by local residents.