Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai, former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
License: CC BY-SA 4.0, Source: Archiwum prywatne Bartłomieja Gutowskiego, License terms and conditions
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai, former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
License: CC BY-SA 4.0, Source: Archiwum prywatne Bartłomieja Gutowskiego, License terms and conditions
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (fragment of facade), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
License: CC BY-SA 4.0, Source: Archiwum prywatne Bartłomieja Gutowskiego, License terms and conditions
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (fragment of facade), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
License: CC BY-SA 4.0, Source: Archiwum prywatne Bartłomieja Gutowskiego, License terms and conditions
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (fragment of facade), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
License: CC BY-SA 4.0, Source: Archiwum prywatne Bartłomieja Gutowskiego, License terms and conditions
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (side elevation), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
License: CC BY-SA 4.0, Source: Archiwum prywatne Bartłomieja Gutowskiego, License terms and conditions
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (fragment of facade), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
License: CC BY-SA 4.0, Source: Archiwum prywatne Bartłomieja Gutowskiego, License terms and conditions
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai, former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
License: CC BY-SA 4.0, Source: Archiwum prywatne Bartłomieja Gutowskiego, License terms and conditions
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (fragment), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
License: CC BY-SA 4.0, Source: Archiwum prywatne Bartłomieja Gutowskiego, License terms and conditions
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (detail), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
License: CC BY-SA 4.0, Source: Archiwum prywatne Bartłomieja Gutowskiego, License terms and conditions
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (detail), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
License: CC BY-SA 4.0, Source: Archiwum prywatne Bartłomieja Gutowskiego, License terms and conditions
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (detail), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
License: CC BY-SA 4.0, Source: Archiwum prywatne Bartłomieja Gutowskiego, License terms and conditions
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Plaque dedicated to Gucevich on the façade of the Verkiai Palace, photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
License: CC BY-SA 4.0, Source: Archiwum prywatne Bartłomieja Gutowskiego, License terms and conditions
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai, former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Anna Sylwia Czyż, 2018, all rights reserved
Source: Instytut Polonika
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Western annex of the Massalski residence, photo Anna Sylwia Czyż, 2018, all rights reserved
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Gardener's cottage in the park of the Massalski residence, photo Anna Sylwia Czyż, 2018, all rights reserved
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Cordegard at the Massalski residence, photo Anna Sylwia Czyż, 2018, all rights reserved
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
Stables in the Massalski residence, photo Anna Sylwia Czyż, 2018, all rights reserved
Photo showing Verkiai Palace
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ID: POL-002134-P/162691

Verkiai Palace

ID: POL-002134-P/162691

Verkiai Palace

Verkiai is a former estate of the bishops of Vilnius, with a villa rustica (country villa) type residence next to the farm buildings. Today it is a picturesque, distant suburb of Vilnius.

The Verkiai estate was granted in 1387 by Wladyslaw Jagiello to the bishops of Vilnius as their endowment. From the very beginning, they were seen as an economic base, at which a wooden manor house was erected to serve as a resting place. It served this function especially under Bishop Eustachy Vollovich, who transformed it into an exclusive country villa perched on the lofty banks of the Neris River, and under Konstantin Casimir Brzostowski, who before 1700 erected a small brick palace in Verkiai in the shape of a castellum.

In 1779, with the consent of the Sejm, Bishop Ignacy Massalski took over Verkiai, giving the family estate of Czerwony Dwór near Nemunas to the Bishop of Vilnius in return. In Verkiai, the bishop planned to set up an estate for Duke Charles Joseph de Linge (1759-1792), husband of his niece Helena Apolonia (1763-1815). As a well-educated and wealthy man, he wanted not only to match the best members of the political and social elite of the time, but also to endow the family with a permanent place of prominence in the Republic.

When embarking on the project, Ignacy Massalski decided to erect the residence on a lofty hill with a distant view of the river and the town in a wooded area. Construction was started by Marcin Knackfus (1740-1821), but in 1780 Wawrzyniec Gucewicz (1753-1798) took over, strongly criticising the work of his predecessor and teacher. This was the time when the less than 27-year-old architect returned from his studies in Paris, enamoured of the solutions there.

By 1794, Wawrzyniec Gucewicz had completed the entire grandiose ensemble, which consisted of the palace and two detached outbuildings, as well as numerous outbuildings (stables and coach houses, a lower mill, a waterworks building, an administration house and servants' houses). The buildings with their subdued, austere classicist forms, together with the free park composition, formed an ensemble of high artistic rank. The park surrounding the buildings was also connected with the paths of the Calvary of Vilnius, founded in 1662 by Bishop Jerzy Bialozor.

The most representative building was of course the two-storey palace itself, with a projecting central risalit and a six-column Ionic portico with a tympanum and two side porticoes. The central part of the palace on the garden side was topped with a dome. This is where the grand ballroom, also used for theatre performances, was located. The palace was decorated with sculptures depicting, among other things, country work. The main tympanum depicted a paragon of civic virtue, the Roman senator Cincinnatus ploughing the fields with oxen. This is so characteristic because Bishop Ignacy Massalski was a controversial and ambiguous figure. Associated with the Commission of National Education, a haggard, accused of treason, he was hanged in the Old Town Square in Warsaw during the Kościuszko Uprising. His family and supporters were then relegated to political oblivion, which was also linked to the collapse of the Verkiai seat. Already in 1788, her husband was abandoned by Helena Apolonia de Linge, who married Wincenty Potocki (1749-1825).

In 1840, the residence was bought by Ludwig Sayn-Wittgenstein (1799-1866). On his instructions, the Swiss architect Bernard Simon demolished the palace in 1845, and from the material thus obtained extended the eastern outbuilding by adding one hall and a tower, and a cast-iron orangery. This building became the Wittgenstein palace proper.

Time of construction:

1779-1794, 1845

Creator:

Wawrzyniec Gucewicz (Laurynas Stuoka Gucevičius; architekt; Polska, Litwa)(preview), Bernard Simon (architekt; Szwajcaria, Petersburg)

Bibliography:

  • E. Małachowicz, „Wilno. Dzieje, architektura, cmentarze”, Wrocław 1996, 130-136
  • R. Janonienė, „Verkių dvaras XVIII a. pirmoje pusėje, w: Acta Academiae Artium Vilnensis”, Vilnius 2020, 229-253
  • B. R. Vitkauskienė, „Werki - rezydencja biskupia i magnacka (koniec XIV - początek XX wieku), w: Środowiska kulturotwórcze i kontakty kulturalne Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego od XV do XIX wieku. Materiały z XVII spotkania Komisji Lituanistycznej zorganizowanej przez Instytut Historii PAN, Instytut Historyczny UW i Instytut Historii Prawa UW w Warszawie 23-24 września 2008”, red. U. Augustyniak, Warszawa 2009, 23-37

Publication:

02.08.2024

Last updated:

23.08.2025

Author:

dr hab. Anna Sylwia Czyż, prof. ucz.
see more Text translated automatically
Facade of the Neoclassical palace in Verkiai, Vilnius, with a central portico supported by six Ionic columns. The building is surrounded by a green lawn and trees under a partly cloudy sky. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai, former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
Facade of the Neoclassical palace in Verkiai, Vilnius, with a central portico supported by six Ionic columns. The building is surrounded by lush greenery and a well-maintained lawn under a partly cloudy sky. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai, former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
Facade of the Verkiai Palace in Vilnius with a prominent portico supported by six Ionic columns and a tower on the left. Several cars are parked in front, and trees are visible in the background. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (fragment of facade), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
Facade of the Verkiai Palace in Vilnius with a central portico supported by six Ionic columns. The building is light yellow with white decorative elements. Two flags are visible near the entrance. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (fragment of facade), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
Facade of the Werki Palace in Vilnius with six Ionic columns and a pediment. A child stands on the path in front of the building. The architecture is classical with detailed cornices. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (fragment of facade), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
Facade of a two-story classical building with a central entrance, flanked by four columns. The structure is surrounded by greenery and trees under a blue sky. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (side elevation), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
Facade of the palace in Verkiai, Vilnius, featuring a central section with six Ionic columns and a pediment. The building has a classical style with multiple windows and a light yellow exterior. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (fragment of facade), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
Facade of the Neoclassical palace in Verkiai, Vilnius, featuring a central portico with Ionic columns and a tympanum. The building is surrounded by trees and a paved driveway. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai, former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
Detail of the facade of the palace in Verkiai, featuring two large arched windows with decorative sculptures and floral motifs. The architecture reflects classical influences. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (fragment), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
Detail of a classical pediment above a window at the Palace in Verkiai, featuring decorative elements such as garlands and a central emblem. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (detail), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
Close-up of an Ionic column capital with intricate scrollwork and decorative elements, part of the architectural details of the Palace in Verkiai, Vilnius. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (detail), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
Detail of decorative stucco with floral motifs on the facade of the Verkiai Palace in Vilnius. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai (detail), former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
Marble plaque dedicated to Laurynas Stuoka Gucevičius, the first professional Lithuanian architect, with text in Lithuanian describing his contributions. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Plaque dedicated to Gucevich on the façade of the Verkiai Palace, photo Bartłomiej Gutowski, 2025
The facade of the Verkiai Palace in Vilnius, featuring a light-colored building with classical columns and a tower. Trees and greenery surround the palace. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Wittgenstein Palace in Verkiai, former eastern annex of the Massalski residence, until 1794, 1845., photo Anna Sylwia Czyż, 2018, all rights reserved
Facade of the Neoclassical palace in Verkiai, Vilnius, featuring a two-story structure with a prominent central portico supported by six Ionic columns. The building is surrounded by trees and a paved area. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Western annex of the Massalski residence, photo Anna Sylwia Czyż, 2018, all rights reserved
Small yellow building with a gabled roof and two chimneys, surrounded by greenery in Verkiai, Vilnius. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Gardener's cottage in the park of the Massalski residence, photo Anna Sylwia Czyż, 2018, all rights reserved
Yellow two-story building with a central portico supported by columns and a dome on the roof. Flags are displayed on the facade. Trees and a parked car are visible nearby. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Cordegard at the Massalski residence, photo Anna Sylwia Czyż, 2018, all rights reserved
Old farm building with a sloped roof and wooden doors, part of the historical Werki estate near Vilnius. Photo showing Verkiai Palace Gallery of the object +17
Stables in the Massalski residence, photo Anna Sylwia Czyż, 2018, all rights reserved

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