Hetmanship Museum
The Hetman Museum is a museum of historical profile which collects, preserves and presents the evidence of one of the most important pages of Ukrainian history: the creation and functioning of the Cossack State, the Hetmanate. The Museum of Hetmanate is located in an ancient stone building from the 18th century, which local legend calls "the Mazepa's House". The museum is located in the foremost district of Kyiv - Podil, near "Kontraktova ploshcha" underground station. The museum exposition and exhibition halls are located on three floors of the building. The first floor is fully accessible, but the upper two floors require using stairs. On the first floor they can explore the architecture of the building and the main exhibition, which reveals the activities of the Ukrainian hetmans. The museum offers Ukrainian and English language guided tours at a cost of 100 UAH for individuals and 150 UAH for groups. Admittance fee to the museum is 30 UAH, and the entrance fee (students, pupils, pensioners) is 15 UAH. Top 5 exhibits: Portraits of the hetmans B. Khmelnytsky, P. Doroshenko, I. Samoylovych, I. Skoropadsky, P. Polubotok, D. Apostol and two female portraits – of Anastasia Skoropadska and Natalia Rozumykha from the family collection of the last hetman of Ukraine Pavlo Skoropadsky. Engravings I. Mazepa, B. Khmelnytsky, S. Petliura by the artist with Cossack roots Vasyl Masiutyn. Hetman Pavlo Skoropadsky personal seal. The leather belt from the military uniform of the coronel-general Oleksandr Udovychenko, the commander of the 3rd "Iron" Infantry Division. The bulava (mace) top 13th century.
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Sholom-Aleichem Museum
The classic of Yiddish literature, Sholom-Aleichem, is a prominent writer of the past whose works stood the test of time and belong to the treasure house of the world culture. "Sholom Aleichem" stands for "Peace to you!" This was the greeting echoing in every heart that over a hundred years ago Solomon Rabinovich, who soon became the most popular and the most favorite writer Sholom-Aleichem, gave to the Jewish people. He was a prominent publicist, a writer, and a public figure. Main themes of the Museum's display are Sholom-Aleichem and Kyiv, Sholom-Aleichem and Ukraine. This is entirely logical, since Kyiv played an important role in the writer's life: this is where he was shaped and developed, both as an individual and as a writer. This is where he longed to be as a young man and as a well-known writer living outside of the borders of the Russian Empire, this is where he expressed the will to be buried, next to his father, as he lay sick in New York. "Kyiv is my city. Staying away from it makes me sad." Sholom-Aleichem's response to a greetings telegram from Kyiv on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of his literary work. Italy, 1908. Sholom-Aleichem used to say about himself that he is the chronicler of Jewish life. "Why writing novels when life itself is a novel?" - reads an epigraph to his autobiographic novel "From the Fair." Life of a Jewish shtettl became the spring-well that nourished the writer's talent and inspiration. Our museum not only provides an account of life and work of the prominent writer. It also gives our visitor a chance to learn about the spiritual and material culture of the Jewish people. Sholom-Aleichem was born on March 2, 1859, in an old town of Pereyaslav to the family of a not too rich, not too poor merchant Nachum Rabinovich. The writer spent his childhood in Pereyaslav and in a small town of Voronkiv in Poltava Gubernia. It is Voronkiv that is often mentioned in Sholom-Aleichem's works under the invented name of Kasrilovka.