Vowchyn

Voŭčyn or Volchin (Belarusian: Воўчын, Ukrainian: Вовчин, romanized: Vovchyn, Polish: Wołczyn, Lithuanian: Vaučinė, Russian: Волчин) is a village in Kamenets District, Brest Region, Belarus. It is the birthplace of the last king of Poland, Stanisław August Poniatowski.

Vowchyn
Village
Holy Trinity Church during renovation in 2014
Vowchyn
Coordinates: 52°17′09″N 23°18′37″E
Country Belarus
RegionBrest
DistrictKamenets
Population
 (2010)
508
Area code(s)+375 1631

History

Holy Trinity Church in the 1930s

The village was mentioned in chronicles as early as the 16th century. It was a privately owned village of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. The village changed owners many times, in the 17th and 18th centuries it belonged to the Gosiewski, Sapieha, Flemming, Czartoryski and Poniatowski families. In 1720 Wołczyn came into the possession of Stanisław Poniatowski, father of the last King of Poland Stanisław August Poniatowski, born here in 1732.

In the early 18th century, a palace complex was built in Wołczyn by Prince Fryderyk Michał Czartoryski. The only standing remains is the 1729 Chapel of the Holy Trinity, which in Soviet times was used as a fertilizer warehouse. In 1761, Prince Adam Kazimierz Czartoryski and Izabela Czartoryska got married in Wołczyn.

In interwar Poland Wołczyn was the seat of Gmina Wołczyn, located in the Brześć County, Polesie Voivodeship.

In 1938 the remains of Stanisław August Poniatowski were moved to the Holy Trinity Chapel from St. Catherine's Church in Saint Petersburg. When the town was annexed by the Soviet Union during the invasion of Poland in September 1939, the tomb was despoiled and destroyed. The church was recently renovated.

In 1995 the king's remains were moved to St. John's Cathedral in Warsaw.

Building of the pre-war Polish gmina office

Notable people

  • (in Polish) Wołczyn in the Geographical Dictionary of the Kingdom of Poland (1893)
  • (in English) Andrea Simon "Bashert: A Granddaughter’s Holocaust Quest", University Press of Mississippi, Jackson, 2002 ISBN 1-57806-481-3

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