Manor and park complex of the Counts of Puslovsky

The heyday of the palace and park ensemble in Peski came at the end of the XVII - beginning of the XIX centuries, when the owner of the local estate was Wojciech Puslovsky, the owner of industrial manufactories and marshals of the nobility (the leader of the nobility) of the Slonim district.


The estate is located on a flat terrace of Lake Chernoe. The central position in it was occupied by the palace, located in the middle of the park. The palace had a rich collection of paintings by domestic and foreign artists, an archive, a library of mainly French and Polish publications, a collection of ancient manuscripts, a collection of weapons.


The magnificent palace was destroyed in a fire in 1843.


Then the old stable was rebuilt for the manor house, moving some salvaged valuables here: paintings, weapons, carpets. Another stable, a distillery, and a large park with exotic trees looking into the dark waters of a deep Black lake survived.


The entrances to the estate were fixed by brahms. The brama is formed by two high cylindrical towers with a crenellated completion, between which an arched passage with a crenellated attic is decorated. The brama has a rich Neo-Gothic decor: slit-loopholes, niches, relief crosses.


The western entrance to the estate also had a frame built in other forms. It was smaller and had no towers. Later it was converted into a store, in connection with which the arched passage was walled up. Inside, the building is divided into three chambers: the middle one, which served as a roadway in the past, had a sharp Neo-Gothic arched vault. Now the structure has the appearance of ruins. From brama to the manor house along the road stretched rabatki with flower plants.


The park occupied the central and southern part of the estate. It was a natural landscape, somewhat modified by man. Peacocks, guinea fowls walked here, an eagle was kept in the aviary. On the western side, the park was separated from the garden by a linear planting of larch, hornbeam, smooth elm and black alder.


During the First World War, the buildings of the former classicist courtyard burned down or were dismantled. The manor house, the distillery (brovar), the northern and southern brama have been preserved, as well as a well-preserved part of the park laid down by the former owners of the manor complex.


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