Lahoysk

In different periods it came into the possession of Jagiello, Skirgaila, Vytautas and Czartoryski princes as well as of the Tyszkiewicz counts.

In 1505, in the war against the Crimean Khanate, the town was captured by the Tatars, plundered and burned.

According to some data, in 1842 brothers Konstanty and Eustachy Tyszkiewicz established an archaeological museum in Lahoysk.

In the 1980s, St. Nicholai Church walls were painted by master painters from Sergiev Posad.

St. Nicholas painted the story Apocalypse, its altar – on the theme of the Lord's supper.

It is located in the central part of Logoisk, on the left side of the river Gaina.

The building is a light beige color with a modern silhouette, which features Gothic Revival traced.

[clarification needed] St. Kazimir Catholic Church during the four centuries of its history was erected four times.

The church was founded in 1604 by Count Alexander Tyshkevich as a sign of his conversion to the Catholic faith.

In the late 1980s, believers established a cross on the former site of the shrine and began to seek permission to build the church.

Place attracts many pilgrims and travelers to try the spring water, and if possible to find cure of diseases.

Most of the palace, as well as farm buildings almost completely destroyed and the chapel at the end of World War II by the retreating Germans.

In the courtyard of the estate were "the hut" ledovnya (refrigirator-building), congestive, stable box and other outbuildings.

Its a story, that Tyshkevich's castle and St. Kazimir Catholic Church was connected with underground road.

Tyshkevich castle, picture by Napaleon Orda