Anna Kunegunda Radziwill

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About Anna Kunegunda Radziwill

Anopal is a village in Belarus , in the Minsk region of the Minsk Oblast , about 25 km south of Minsk , on the Pliki river. The village was called Kropica until the beginning of the 18th century.

The village has existed for at least the 13th century. Since the 15th century it was located in the Minsk province of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania ( Minsk district ). After the partition, it was the territory of the Minsk county gubernian province . On September 15, 1919, the village became a part of the commune of Włoswałowice , which, together with the Minsk District, became part of the Minsk District Administration administered by the Civilian Administration of the Eastern Territories . After 1920 she was in the USSR , and after 1991 - in Belarus.

The village since the middle of the 13th century belonged to the Chaleckie, Anna Kunegunda Chalecka (1723-1765), married Albrecht Radziwill (1717-1790), she fell in love with him. The name of the part of the village (from the wife's name) was changed to Annopol, according to the customary 18th century (the neighboring village is now called Krupica and it is the seat of the grassroots). The village belonged to Radziwiłł until 1883, when Annopol became the property of Adam Krasiński . The last Polish owner of these goods was Jan Tyszkiewicz (1896-1939), the husband of Anna Maria Joanna Radziwiłłówny.

In the period from around 1780 to the middle of the 19th century, there was a wooden palace or manor house built by Carl Spilman for Albrecht Radziwiłł, after a fire in the mid-nineteenth century, a smaller mansion was built here, where salvaged furniture and numerous works of art were built. They were destroyed or razed in 1917. A few monuments have returned to Poland (where part was also ransacked in 1945).

Probably in 1776, Albrecht Radziwiłł founded the larch church of the church. St. Anna (supposedly wooden church existed here since the 12th century. In the basement of this church were, among others. The tombs of members of the line of the Annapolis family Radziwill. The church was dismantled in 1908 to give way to a new, brick-but - because of the October Revolution - despite Fr. Josef Zelby, has not managed to be built.