Rogalin pronounced [rɔˈɡalin] is a village in western Poland, situated on the river Warta.
[2] It is best known for the Rogalin Landscape Park (with the oldest oak trees in Poland[3]), the Baroque palace, art gallery, and neoclassical church with the mausoleum of the Raczyński family.
Rogalin is primarily famous for its 18th-century Polish Baroque palace of the Raczyński family, and the adjacent Raczyński Art Gallery, housing a permanent exhibition of paintings by the Polish and foreign artists of international renown including Paul Delaroche and Claude Monet as well as the famous Jan Matejko's large-size painting Joanna d'Arc (see a fragment below).
Rogalin is also known for its putatively 800-year-old oak trees (Polish: Dęby Rogalińskie) on the flood plains of the Warta and the historical St. Marcellinus Church, whose design was inspired by the Roman temple Maison Carrée in Nîmes, France.
The last owner of the estate was Count Edward Bernard Raczyński, who was from 1979 to 1986 was President of the Polish Republic in exile.