Market Square (Lviv)

Coordinates: 49°50′29″N 24°01′53″E / 49.841466°N 24.031265°E / 49.841466; 24.031265
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

49°50′29″N 24°01′53″E / 49.841466°N 24.031265°E / 49.841466; 24.031265

View of the northwestern corner of Market Square
Plan of the square

Rynok Square (Ukrainian: Площа Ринок, romanizedPloshcha Rynok, Polish: Rynek we Lwowie, German: Ring) is a central square of the city of Lviv, Ukraine. According to archaeological data, the square was planned in the second half of the 13th century, during the reign of Prince Leo I of Galicia.[1][need quotation to verify][2] However, there is a long tradition of later dating the emergence of the square, associated with the activities of the Polish king Casimir III the Great.[3]

The square is rectangular in shape, with measurements of 142 metres by 129 metres and with two streets radiating out of every corner. In the middle there was a row of houses, with its southern wall made by the Town Hall. However, when in 1825 the tower of the Town Hall burned, all adjacent houses were demolished and a new hall, with a 65-metre tower, was built in 1835 by architects J. Markl and F. Trescher.[4]

Around the square, there are 44 tenement houses, which represent several architectural styles, from

mythological figures: Neptune, Diana, Amphitrite and Adonis. In front of the Town Hall, there was a pillory. In 1998 the Market Place, together with the historic city center of Lviv, was recognised as a UNESCO world heritage site.[5]

History

The square was designed soon after Lviv’s location as a city. Originally, the buildings were

Ioan Potcoavă (Ivan Pidkova) (1578) and Iancu Sasul
(1582).

In 1848, during the

proclaimed Ukraine's independence
in a house located on the square. In 2006, a major restoration of the square’s pavement was carried out.

Houses

Eastern side

View from the Town Hall on the eastern side of the square
Eastern side
Black House, Lviv

Southern side

Southern side of the square
  • Number 11. A 19th-century house, build on the site of an earlier one.
  • Number 12. Justglac House, with mascarons presenting faces of the Sarmatians in the attic (see: Sarmatism).
  • Number 13
  • Number 14. Venetian House. A Renaissance-style, remodelled by Paweł Rzymianin for a consul of Venice, Antonio Massari.[4] On the front wall, there is a stone lion of Mark the Evangelist, a coat of arms of Republic of Venice and the date 1600.
  • Number 15
  • Number 16. Mieszkowski House. Rococo style, with a Gothic portal.
  • Number 17. Wening House. Rococo style, with main office of the Association of Polish Culture of the Lviv Land located here.
  • Number 18. Gutteter House, also called Pharmacy under the Golden Deer. Rococo style, built in 1533 and remodelled in 1785.[4] It used to be called the prettiest tenement house in the city.
  • Number 19
  • Number 20. House Under the Lion
  • Number 21. House of the Ubaldinis. Built in the 16th century, it belonged to a rich émigré from Florence, Ripo Ubaldini. Among persons who lived here, there is Jerzy Michotek, who wrote a popular song, Only in Lwów.[4]
  • Number 22. A 19th-century house, built on the site of an earlier one.

Western side

Scholz-Wolf House at Nr. 23
Zipper Family House at Nr. 32
  • Number 23. Scholz-Wolf House. Renaissance style, built in 1570 for the Scholz-Wolf family, which came to Lviv from Silesia. It is richly decorated; on the second floor there is a sculpture Baptism of Christ, probably by Herman von Hutte or Sebastian Czeszko.[4] In this house, among others, lived a renowned 17th century Polish poet, Szymon Szymonowic.
  • Number 24. House of Giebl. Renaissance style, remodelled in 1920 in a modernistic style. Here, in 1707, stayed Russian tsar Peter the Great.[4]
  • Number 25. In the interbellum period, a Milikowski bookstore was located in this Rococo house.
  • Number 26
  • Number 27
  • Number 28. Heppner House. Renaissance, built in 1510. It belonged to a doctor and member of the city council, Pawel Heppner. The house is known for its numerous lions, with as many as 20 of them.
  • Number 29. The Palace of Felicjan Korytkowski, together with Andreolli’s covered way. Empire style, built on the site of the House of Zimorowicz, demolished in 1790.
  • Number 30. House of Jakub Reguła. Rococo-style.
  • Number 31. Mazanczow House. Built in 1714 in a late Renaissance style, it belonged to the
    Baczewski family before the First and Second World War. The store that sold J. A. Baczewski spirits was located on the ground floor. Its art-deco façade was designed in the 1920s by architect Bronislaw Wiktor
    , the sculptural work is by Sigmund Kurczynski.
  • Number 32. Zipper Family House . A fusion of Modernism and Polish Renaissance, built in 1923 on the site of an earlier house.

Northern side

Northern side of the square, seen from the tower of the Town Hall
Northern side of the square
  • Number 33
  • Number 34
  • Number 35
  • Number 36. House of the Gielazyns. Built in 1778. Among its residents, there is Prince
    Jozef Poniatowski, who lived here in 1784–1785.[4]
  • Number 37. House of Marcin Gronswajer. Gronswajer was mayor of the city during the Khmelnytsky Uprising.
  • Number 38
  • Number 39. Formerly a mint.
  • Number 40. Boim Family House. Remodelled in late Baroque style in 1771.
  • Number 41 Rococo style.
  • Number 42
  • Number 43
  • Number 44
  • Number 45. Under the Deer. Built in 1790. In the interbellum period, a popular Atlas Coffehouse was located here. It was a meeting place of local artists, such as
    Jozef Wittlin. Here, in 1924, Adam Hanuszkiewicz was born.[4]

Statues and fountains

  • Diana
    Diana
  • Neptune
    Neptune
  • Adonis
    Adonis
  • Amphitrite
    Amphitrite

See also

References

  1. ^ Могитич Р. Найстаріша міська книга про будівництво Львова у XIV столітті // Галицька брама. — 1999. — No. 11–12 (59–60). — С. 6.
  2. ^ Ткач Є. (2017) «Археологічні відкриття 2017 року у Львові» Відвідано: 30 December 2017
  3. ^ "Lviv History". Lviv Best Portal. Retrieved 3 November 2008.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Lwów: Rynek" (in Polish). Onet.pl guide to Lviv. Retrieved 3 November 2008.
  5. ^ "L'viv – the Ensemble of the Historic Centre". World Heritage List. UNESCO. Retrieved 3 November 2008.
  6. ^ The Bandinelli Palace[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ Tenement houses on Lviv marketplace
  8. ^ Lviv History Museum

External links

Media related to Market Square, Lviv at Wikimedia Commons