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Tuskulėnai Manor

Buildings and structures in VilniusCommons category link is locally definedHistory of VilniusHouses completed in 1825Houses in Lithuania
KGBManor houses in LithuaniaMass gravesMuseums in VilniusNeoclassical architecture in LithuaniaObjects listed in Lithuanian Registry of Cultural PropertyParks in Lithuania
Tuskulenai 2008
Tuskulenai 2008

Tuskulėnai Manor (Lithuanian: Tuskulėnų dvaras) is a neoclassical manor in Žirmūnai elderate of Vilnius, Lithuania. It is best known as burial grounds of people executed by the KGB in 1944–1947. After Lithuania regained independence in 1990, the manor was reconstructed and the park was transformed into a memorial to the victims of Soviet repressions. It is administered by the Lithuanian Genocide and Resistance Research Center.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Tuskulėnai Manor (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Tuskulėnai Manor
Žirmūnų g., Vilnius Žirmūnai

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 54.698055555556 ° E 25.302222222222 °
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Address

Tuskulėnų rimties parko memorialinis kompleksas

Žirmūnų g. 1F
09101 Vilnius, Žirmūnai
Vilnius County, Lithuania
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Phone number

call+37052750704;+37052751223

Website
genocid.lt

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Tuskulenai 2008
Tuskulenai 2008
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Slushko Palace
Slushko Palace

Slushko Palace (Lithuanian: Sluškų rūmai, Polish: Pałac Słuszków) in Vilnius, Lithuania is a Baroque palace situated on the left bank of Neris River in the Old Town elderate, former Antakalnis suburb of the city. The palace was erected in 1690–1700 by voivode of Polock Dominik Słuszko of the Clan of Ostoja, who ordered creating an artificial peninsula on Neris for the purpose of building the palace there. The peninsula was formed from the soil of the leveled down hill separating Antakalnis from the Vilnius Castles. Initially the façades of the palace were unified by a giant order of Ionic pilasters framing huge windows. It is believed that the decoration works of the palace were performed by Michelangelo Palloni and Giovanni Pietro Perti who was the architect of the palace.The Polish–Lithuanian rulers used to stay in the palace during their visits in the city after the Royal Palace was damaged. The tsar Peter I of Russia stayed and had his headquarters established here in 1705 and 1709.After Słuszko's death the palace was owned by the Puzyna princely family (of Rurikid stock) since 1727 and by the Potocki family since 1745. The Piarist monks bought the palace in 1756 and established a collegiate and a printing house. Later it was bought by Michał Kazimierz Ogiński in 1766 and reconstructed by Pietro Rossi. The palace was confiscated by the tsarist government in 1794 and transformed into an apartment house. It housed a brewery of Dominik Zajkowski from 1803 until 1831 when the palace was taken by tsarist military. The building was rearranged, the floors were redivided into four, and the palace served as a military prison since 1872. The rich original interior and exterior of the palace have not survived. Nowadays the palace houses the Lithuanian Academy of Music and Theatre. In the meantime the outhouses are undergoing the restoration and the main palace is planned to come next. The palace is planned to regain its original two main floors layout and original Baroque style windows.