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176:, and its cellars having the most exotic liquors. The reception halls were decorated with hunting trophies. Also, the palace room housed a large art collection, consisting of paintings, porcelain (e.g. Sèvres, Saxon and Korets) and books. Józef gathered in his library around 20,000 volumes. The garden and park around the palace were around six thousand hectares in size. Józef arranged here one of the largest menagerie parks of Europe, where he arranged many hunts but also bred animals that were not used to the European climate.
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121:(1718–1791), grants for long-term use the village and estate of Holodky to Ignatius Malchevsky, who was married to her sister Antonina, and was regent of the royal chancellery. The couple settled in Holodky, and decided to construct a palace and a garden. Ignatius named the palace after his beloved wife Antonina. The name also became associated with the village, so Holodky became Antoniny.
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set the palace on fire. It lasted several days in August 1919, and destroyed the entire mansion. During the fire, employees and some residents of the estate moved part of the collections (artworks, furniture, library and archive) to nearby stables and campers. In 1920, they were transported to
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In the 1960s, a sport stadium was constructed on the site of the palace. What now today remains, are only the landscape park and some ancillary buildings, such as the stables. The entrance gates still bear the coat of arms of the
Sanguszko and Potocki families.
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Józef
Potocki was one of the richest magnates in the Russian empire, a lover of nature and an avid hunter. He travelled the world around for it, not only Poland, but also India, Ceylon and Africa. This was also reflected in Antoniny, which was rebuilt into a
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did the first work in the 1870s. The French architect François Arveuf was involved between 1897 and 1903 adding a guest wing and redesigning the interior. And
Ferdinand Fellner again between 1905 and 1908, adding a new entrance.
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During the first World War, the palace was guarded by clerks and administrators. But it did not help, in the
Russian Civil war which followed, the
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641:"Антонінський палац на Волині: розкіш та екзотика (Antoniny Palace in Volyn: luxury and exoticism)(Ukrainian podcast on Antoniny palace)"
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478:"Клаптик Англії на Волині: Антоніни графа Потоцького (A Patch of England in Volhynia: Antonines of Count Potocki)"
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The new renovated palace was full of elegance and luxury. It became famous for its stud of
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in August 1919. Today the park and various service buildings remain, such as the stables.
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family, who further renovated the palace and turned into a splendid estate. When
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Former hunting lodge of the
Sanguszko and Potocki families in Antoniny, Ukraine
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The Great
Country Houses of Central Europe: Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Poland
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The palace gates with the coat of arms of the
Sanguszko and Potocki families
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Antoniny Palace before the reconstruction into a neo-baroque stately home
140:. When her husband died, she transferred the palace to her younger son,
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565:"Ostatni portret Józefa Potockiego (Last Portrait of Józef Potocki)"
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residence. The reconstruction happened in various phases: the
504:"Антоніни. Фахверкове містечко (Antoniny Half timbered town)"
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At the start of the 19th century, the castle returned to the
188:. The transferred collections were destroyed during the
136:(1822–1889), Antoniny palace transferred to the
670:Buildings and structures in Khmelnytskyi Oblast
400:Remains of the interior in a service building
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225:The palace before the neo-baroque rebuilding
249:A view of the stables and the gates in 1912
536:. New York: Abbeville Press. p. 380.
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285:A hunting party at the steps of the palace
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532:Pratt, Michael; Trumler, Gerhard (1991).
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200:Image gallery: The palace in its heyday
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303:Image gallery: What has remained
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273:Entrance to the palace in 1916
213:The palace in the 19th century
105:. It was destroyed during the
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297:A hunt at the Antoniny estate
144:(1862–1922). The elder son,
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130:Maria Klementyna Sanguszko
690:Potocki family residences
388:A former service building
376:A former service building
364:A former service building
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352:A dilapidated guardhouse
71:Antoniny Palace in 1910
63:Antoniny Palace in 1914
86:) was a palace of the
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621:"Антоніни (Antoniny)"
427:"Антоніни (Antoniny)"
142:Józef Mikołaj Potocki
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37:49.80861°N 26.87111°E
569:www. zamek-lancut.pl
508:ukrainaincognita.com
261:Camels at the palace
166:Fellner & Helmer
134:Alfred Józef Potocki
132:(1830–1903) married
593:, pp. 107–108
591:Bred for Perfection
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685:Palaces in Ukraine
675:Castles in Ukraine
84:Антонінський палац
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42:49.80861; 26.87111
119:Barbara Sanguszko
107:Russian Civil War
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174:Arabian horses
138:Potocki family
117:In the 1760s,
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97:families in
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606:, pp. 56–57
571:(in Polish)
164:architects
158:neo-baroque
40: /
664:Categories
651:1 November
631:1 November
575:1 November
514:1 November
488:1 November
437:1 November
406:References
181:Bolsheviks
28:26°52′16″E
25:49°48′31″N
192:in 1944.
126:Sanguszko
91:Sanguszko
80:Ukrainian
602:Archer,
482:bbc.com/
162:Austrian
99:Antoniny
589:Derry,
113:History
103:Ukraine
95:Potocki
645:vsn.ua
540:
186:Warsaw
88:noble
653:2023
633:2023
577:2023
538:ISBN
516:2023
490:2023
439:2023
93:and
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.