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The museum, the former
farmstead. Photo by
Renata Veličkienė |
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The museum, the former
farmstead. Photo by
Renata Veličkienė |
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Professor Adomas Hreb-
nickis, painted by his
daughter Marija |
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Thank you letter for the
participation in the exhi-
bition in Warsaw 1934 |
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| Photo by
Andrej Judin |
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Photo by Renata
Veličkienė |
museum
of the professor adomas hrebnickis
Contacts
Address:
Rojaus kaimas, Dūkšto seniūnija, LT-30265 Ignalinos rajonas.
Tel. (+370 ~ 386) 45472, mob. tel. (+370 ~ 675) 01 098.
E-mail: renata303[at]gmail.com
Director – Renata Veličkienė.
Information for Visitor
Opening hours
Visits by arrangement tel. (+370 ~ 386) 45472, mob. tel. (+370 ~ 675)
01 098, e-mail: renata303[at]gmail.com.
1 May – 1 October:
Tuesday to Friday 9–17, Saturday 9–16.
Collection
The
collection of the museum comprises research works, household articles of
Adomas Hrebnickis (1858-1941), a pomologist and professor of the Forestry
Institute of Petersburg, paintings painted by his daughter and other things
connected with the professor's life and work.
Exposition
The exposition staged in his memory shows the professor's personal
possessions, his working tools, documents, publications, photographs, and
pictures painted by his daughter Marija Hrebnicka. A monument to A.
Hrebnickis (designed by sculptor Leonas Žuklys) was erected in the
reconstructed orchard.
Professor
Adomas Hrebnickis
A. Hrebnicki (1857–1941), pomologist, born near Lepel', Belorussia.
Graduating from the St. Petersburg Institute of Forestry in 1883, he
remained there as an assistant; from 1892–1922 he taught horticulture, and
in 1920 he was made professor.
Hrebnicki planted a 14 ha orchard in Staniškiai, near Dūkstas, in 1890–1904,
where from 1922 he took up permanent residence. In the orchard he cultivated
1 200 fruit trees, comprising apples, pears, plums and two varieties of
cherries. Hrebnicki studied fruit trees found in Lithuania, their species,
fertility, and resistance to cold; he discovered and propagated varieties
until then unknown in pomology, but which grew in Lithuania.
From 1939–1941 he was consultant to the Chamber of Agriculture.
Hrebnicki published over 100 articles in scientific journals and
encyclopedias about Lithuanian orchards, their cultivation, fruit ripening;
he wrote the widely popular work The Care of a Fruit Orchard (1892, 7th ed.
1936) and edited the book Catalogue of Fruits (1903–1906).
Other
news
The museum was founded in 1961 in the former farmstead of Adomas Hrebnickis
(1858–1941), a pomologist and professor of the Petersburg Forestry
Institute. In 1898 he built himself a house there, and established a
pomological orchard containing 1 197 fruit trees. His best known work is
"The Fruit Atlas", which he illustrated himself.
Founder of the museum - Ministry of Agriculture.
Ignalina Region
People lived in Ignalina environs already in the Stone Age. Relics of
settlements of those ancient times are discovered all over the territory of
the region. Our ancestors courageously defended their native land against
aggressions of the Sword Bearers Order. Not only legends and stories witness
about those times, but burial mounds, sites of ancient settlements and other
defensive fortifications tell much about this epoch, as well. 1812 Napoleon
war with Russia didn't pass round this district. Not far from Dūkštas, at
the site of an ancient settlement on a shore of Samanis Lake, in 1831 rebels
led by Emilija Plioterytė.
With centuries flying the state frontier of Lithuania passed several times
through Ignalina Land. In 1861 since the railway St. Petersburg-Warsaw has
been built Ignalina city was enlarged. In 1951 Ignalina became an
administrative center Ignalina region area is equal to 150 516 hectares. 57
thousand people live here. There are three cities in the region: Visaginas,
Ignalina, and Dūkštas.
Ignalina
region is like little Lithuania. Only the Baltic Sea shore is absent here.
There are both continental dunes blown by wind and lowlands resembling the
delta of the Nemunas during a spring flood-time. This land is attractive by
its hills, thousands various hill-ridges, among them shady ravines and
hollows with hundred lakes. The biggest Lithuanian lake Drukšiai is
stretched here. Our two dense great forests: Labanoras and Azvinciai with
nearby rustling Minčia forests stretch in outlying districts of Ignalina.
The outline of this region is very interesting: from the North to the South
it is stretched about 50 km long, and from the West to the East it is
extended more than 60 km long.
In 1971 near the biggest in Lithuania Drukšiai Lake a construction of one of
the most powerful atomic power stations in the world started. A settlement
of construction workers and power-engineering workers, Visaginas, was
founded 15 km far from the power station.
Everybody feels fascinated by Lithuanian ancient architectural monuments -
Kukutėliai, Mečioniai, Didžiasalis street villages, Gaveikėnai, Ginučiai,
Stripeikiai water mills, Melagėnai architectural ensemble of religious
buildings, a church and a bell tower of Palūšė village (XVII century) and
other.
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