Ostrogski Palace
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Fryderyk Chopin Museum | |
Ostrogski Castle |
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Building information | |
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Town | Warsaw |
Country | Poland |
Architect | Tylman of Gameren |
Construction start date | after 1681 |
Date demolished | 1944 |
Style | Baroque |
Ostrogski Palace, otherwise known as Ostrogski Castle (Polish: Pałac Ostrogskich or Polish: Zamek Ostrogskich[1]) is a large manor in the city centre of Warsaw, at Tamka Street. Started by the mighty Ostrogski family who gave the name to the building, it currently houses the Frederic Chopin Society.
The spot for the palace, a large lot of land on the Vistula escarpment directly below the Nowy Świat, was bought by Prince Janusz Ostrogski in early 17th century. As the area had been still a suburb of Warsaw and exempted from the laws of the city which prevented the inhabitants from building private fortifications, Ostrogski decided to build a small castle there. For that he financed a bastion on which the manor was to be constructed. However, it was not until after his death that the manor itself was started. Designed by Tylman of Gameren, the palace built on top of the bastion was to become one of the wings of a huge future palace. However, it was never completed and was bought by deputy chancellor of the crown Jan Gniński, who turned it into his seat.
In 1725 the palace was bought by yet another magnate family, the Zamoyski, who made it a seat of their jurydyka. However, as the unfinished manor lacked many features of an 18th century magnate palace, it never served its original purpose and with time became neglected. Since 1778 it was divided onto small flats and started serving as a hostel for students, owned by Marcin Nikuta. Converted into a military hospital by the French in 1806, between 1812 and 1817 it was abandoned and gradually fell into disrepair. During the November Uprising it was bought by the Polish government and refurbished to become a military hospital once again. Turned over to civilian authorities in 1836, it continued to be a hospital until 1859, when it was bought by the Musical Institute. It was there that both Stanisław Moniuszko and Ignacy Jan Paderewski received their education. In late 19th century an additional story was added and in 1913 a new, much larger seat for the Institute was built adjacent to the palace.
Destroyed by the Germans in the effect of the Warsaw Uprising of 1944, the building had been rebuilt by Mieczysław Kuzma between 1949 and 1954, while the ruins of the 1913 construction were demolished. Since then it houses the Frederic Chopin Society.
[edit] Trivia
- The cellars below the bastion are supposedly home to a Golden Duck, a mythical creature from one of Warsaw's urban legends.
[edit] Notes and references
[edit] External links
- National Chopin Institute, the current owner of the palace
- Modern and pre-war pictures