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1999 | 1 | 1-9

Article title

NATOLIN, JEGO PRZESZŁOŚĆ, REWALORYZACJA I ROZBUDOWA

Content

Title variants

EN
Natolin, its Past, Revalorisation and Expansion

Languages of publication

PL EN

Abstracts

EN
The Romantic palace–park complex in Natolin, situated in the southern part ofWarsaw, emerged in place of the royal zoological garden of Jan III Sobieski, which dated back to the last quarter of the seventeenth century. In 1730, King August II the Strong founded on this site a Pheasantry and created a radial configuration of roads, modelled on the Versailles premise. In 1780–1782, Prince Adam Czartoryski built, in accordance with projects by Szymon Bogumił Zug, a Classicistic palace with a semi–open vista salon to the side of the Vistula escarpment. The interior of the palace was embellished by the paintings of Vincenzo Brenna. During the first quarter of the nineteenth century, the palace was redesigned by Christian Piotr Aigner, who adapted it for the purposes of a summer residence of the Potocki family, decorated by Empire stucco ornaments. At the same time, the Pheasantry became known as Natolin, from the name of Natalia, daughter of Count Potocki. The reconstruction of the palace was accompanied by the erection of an outbuilding, a stable and carriage house, Empire–style cottages of the caretakers, and a Gothic–Classicistic Dutch dairy. The former zoo was transformed into an English landscape park. In 1834–1835, additions to the park included a Moorish bridge designed by Henryk Marconi, a statue of Natalia Potocka– –Sanguszkowa, a Doric temple, a Roman aqueduct and a Moorish gate. The end of the nineteenth century marked a partial degradation of the historical complex, intensified by damage incurred during the second world war. Following the nationalisation of Natolin in 1945, the complex became the residence of the President of the Republic of Poland and, subsequently, the seat of the Council of Ministers. Since 1993 it houses the College of Europe. The intention of currently conducted conservation is to restore the palace–park complex to its former splendour and adapt a number of buildings for the needs of the College.

Keywords

Year

Issue

1

Pages

1-9

Physical description

Dates

published
1999

Contributors

References

  • Stanisław Lorentz, Natolin, Warszawa 1948,
  • H. Skimborowicz, W. Gerson, Wilanów. Album widoków i pamią tek, Warszawa 1877, s. 182,
  • M. Kwiatkowski, Architektura mieszkaniowa Warszawy, Warszawa 1989, s. 221.
  • S. B. Zug, Ogrody w Warszawie i okolicach opisane..., Kalendarz Powszechny na rok przestępny 1848, Warszawa 1848, s. 11.
  • I. Czartoryska, Myśli różne o sposobie zakładania ogrodów, Wrocław 1807.
  • T. S. Jaroszewski, W. Baraniewski, Pałace i dwory w okolicach Warszawy, Warszawa 1992, s. 108.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

ISSN
0029-8247

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-2179f178-7910-4b3f-b62d-9b82f620d581
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