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2013 | 16 | 18-32

Article title

Michal Jan Borch and his residence in Varklani: genesis and ideological programme

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Close to the old Riga - Rezekne road on the outskirts of the tiny town of Varaklani in Latvia’s eastern province of Latgale, is the former residence of the Belz Voivode Michal Jan Borch (1753-1811). Photographs and drawings record the state of the garden before the destruction of the war, showing its varied surface with such architectural features as arcaded bridges and the entrance gate decorated with vases. Borch was an individual of many-sided interests, known in cosmopolitan courts and among the academic circles of Europe of the Ancient Regime. He travelled to Italy via Saxony, France, Switzerland and stayed on for a longer period in Sicily and Malta. In 1791 he settled down for good in the Varaklani estate granted to his ancestors. Borch’s major achievement was to create a palace and garden complex. He employed the Italian architect Vincenzo de Mazotti who drained the marsh to prepare the land for the residence, erected the palace and collaborated on landscaping the garden. In 1790 Borch travelled to England and the English residences he became acquainted with must have had some impact on the arrangement of the Varaklani estate. This is indirectly testified to by the very title of the first version of Borch’s literary work on the Varaklani garden, ‘Jardin moral et emblematique’ which the author read to Stanislaus Augustus in the winter of 1791. The surviving and documented elements show that the described landscaped garden was partially implemented. Of all the planned pavilions, only the rotunda was built, not identified actually with either of the described temples, as well as a small pavilion with a square layout (later Jadwiga’s Chapel). Similarities can be detected with the English garden in Stowe (Buckinghamshire) and the Warsaw landscape gardens Lazienki – the Royal Baths and Arkadia near Lowicz. The landscaping in Varaklani was described as a planned route for a young nobleman with didactic and moral guidelines as well as patriotic and historiosophical messages.

Contributors

  • Institute of Art of the Polish Academy of Sciences, ul. Dluga 26/28, 00-950, Warsaw, Poland

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-ee508147-b5a1-41a8-a669-55dd87d790b0
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