Yazlovets Castle

It originated in the 14th century province of Podolia in Red Ruthenia, as a fortress of the Buczacki noble family.

In 1684 it was involved in the Battle of Yazlovets, when king John III Sobieski used it as a prison for his Turkish and Moldovan captives.

[2] In 1863 Krzysztof Błażowski donated the crumbling palace and gardens to the Sisters of the Immaculate Conception order, for the establishment of a girls catholic secondary boarding school, Jazłowiec College, which continued, with interruptions for wars, until the Invasion of Poland in September 1939.

[2] From November 1918 the estate was briefly under the administration of the Ukrainian People's Republic until the summer of 1919 when it came under the aegis of newly independent Poland.

In the 1990s the Immaculate Conception Sisters were allowed to return to one wing of their former property, to run a retreat centre and a sanctuary for their foundress, Blessed Marcelina Darowska, who is buried in the palace.