Shevchenko National Reserve

Shevchenko National Reserve (Ukrainian: Шевченківський національний заповідник, romanizedShevchenkivskyi natsionalnyi zapovidnyk) is a historic-cultural reserve near Kaniv (Ukraine), known for the grave of Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko and a museum dedicated to his memory.[citation needed] The total area of the reserve is 45 hectares, the reserve includes eight cultural heritage sites, and borders the Kaniv Nature Reserve.[1]

Background[edit]

On May 22, 1861, famous Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko was buried on a Chernecha Hill, which afterwards became known as Taras Hill (Ukrainian: Тарасова гора, romanized: Tarasova Hora). In 1884, the first folk museum of Taras Shevchenko was built on Taras Hill and a monumental cast-iron cross-monument designed to Viktor Sychuhov was erected. On June 10, 1918, the Council of Ministers of the Ukrainian State recognized the tomb of Taras Shevchenko as national property. In August 1925 Tarasova Hill was recognized as a reserve.[1]

During 1935–1937, the Taras Shevchenko Museum was built.[citation needed] In 1939, a new, bronze monument to the poet designed by Matvei Manizer was erected. Destroyed during the Second World War by the German army, the museum and the monument were rebuilt. In 1989, the reserve was inscribed in the tentative World Heritage list of Ukraine.[2] In the same year, the reserve was granted national status and assumed its present name. This was confirmed by the Decree of the President of Ukraine in 1994.[3][1]

Nowadays[edit]

The reserve is included in the sphere of management of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of Ukraine. The department is managed by the State Service for National Cultural Heritage.[citation needed]

The reserve is a cultural-educational, research and tourist center that studies and promotes the heritage of the Ukrainian national and world historical and cultural heritage, the work by Taras Shevchenko, the history of Chernecha Hill, as well as protects cultural monuments from prehistoric times to the present, as well as the natural landscape.[citation needed] Its collection includes works by textile artist Hanna Veres.[4]

Every year the museums of the Shevchenko National Reserve are visited by more than 100 thousand tourists from Ukraine and abroad.[citation needed]

General directors of Shevchenko National Reserve:

Gallery[edit]

Further reading[edit]

  • Kugno II Kaniv. Guide to the city and its surroundings. Kyiv: Pandemia, 2006, pp. 22–24. ISBN 966-8947-00-2
  • Shevchenko in 21 century // Ukraina moloda, 5.08.2010 р., c. 14.
  • «Серед степу широкого на Вкраїні милій…»: to the 90th anniversary of the founding of the Shevchenko National Reserve in Kaniv (1925). Dates and events. Kyiv, 2014. pp. 36–40.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c SA Bryzhytska. Shevchenkivsky National Reserve in Kaniv. Encyclopedia of the History of Ukraine: in 10 vol. Кyiv: Naukova dumka, 2013. Vol. 10. p. 617. 784 pp. ISBN 978-966-00-1359-9
  2. ^ "Tarass Shevtchenko Tomb and State Historical and Natural Museum – Reserve". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Archived from the original on 23 August 2021. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
  3. ^ "Decree of the President of Ukraine "On National Cultural Institutions"". Ukrainian Parliament. October 11, 1994.
  4. ^ "РУШНИКИ ГАННИ ВАСИЛАЩУК ТА ГАННИ ВЕРЕС". lib.if.ua. Retrieved 2022-03-01.
  5. ^ "Ліховий Ігор Дмитрович" (in Ukrainian). Institute of history of Ukraine.
  6. ^ a b "The director of the Shevchenkivsky National Reserve in Kaniv, Maryan Pinyak, passed away" (in Ukrainian).
  7. ^ "Ihor Renkas has been appointed as a director of the Shevchenko reserve". kaniv.net (in Ukrainian).
  8. ^ "Vasyl Kolomiets has been appointed as a director of the Shevchenko reserve". kaniv.net (in Ukrainian).
  9. ^ "New director of Shevchenko Museum in Kaniv is appointed". istpravda.com.ua (in Ukrainian).
  10. ^ "Shevchenko National Reserve in Kaniv was headed by Valentyna Kovalenko". procherk.info (in Ukrainian).

External links[edit]

49°43′53″N 31°30′56″E / 49.73139°N 31.51556°E / 49.73139; 31.51556