The author analyzes architectural forms of palace in Korsuń (now. Ukraine), the 18th century residence of prince Stanisław Poniatowski and comes to the conclusion that it was designed by the architect Stanisław Zawadzki.
The designs of the garden residence of Stanisław Kostka Potocki at Olesin, raised in 1782, but no longer extant, are analysed. The dating and provenance of the villa forms are ascertained, with detailed references made to the opinions of other scholars.
Palaces raised in the early 19th century in Niemija, Michałowice, and Maków, near Kamieniec Podolski, are described. The little palace-villa in Niemija, owned by Stanisław Szczęsny Potocki, has a square layout and is crowned with a little belvedere resembling the one of the Łazienki Palace. Destroyed during the Soviet revolution and known only from photos, the palace of Andrzej Eligiusz Dzierżek in Michałowice had a rectangular layout, was two-storeyed, and featured a four-column stone portico. During WW I the Maków residence of the Raciborski brothers: Jan and Adam, was destroyed. Photographs of several of the facilities there have been preserved: three Neo-Classicists – the outbuilding of the former palace, the park pavilion known as ‘At George’s’, and a stone table in the garden, as well as of two mock-Gothic ones - a granary and a smithy. When analyzing the form and architectural details of the buildings and comparing them with the preserved designs of Henryk Ittar, the Author decides that the above-described facilities were also designed by him.
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