Harman Patil (Editor)

Sapieha Palace, Warsaw

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Town or city
  
Construction started
  
1731

Demolished
  
1944

Phone
  
+48 22 831 32 09

Architect
  
Jan Zygmunt Deybel

Country
  
Completed
  
1746

Opened
  
1746

Architectural style
  
Baroque architecture

Sapieha Palace, Warsaw

Address
  
Zakroczymska 6, 00-225 Warszawa, Poland

Similar
  
Branicki Palace - Warsaw, Copper‑Roof Palace, Czapski Palace, Uruski palace, St Kazimierz Church

Sapieha Palace (Polish: pałac Sapiehów w Warszawie) is one of the palaces in Warsaw New Town district of Warsaw, Poland. Started by the powerful Sapieha family who gave the name to the building, it currently houses the Environmental Protection School Complex.

History

The palace, commissioned by Jan Fryderyk Sapieha, Chancellor of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, was built in Rococo style in 1731-1746 by Johann Sigmund Deybel. It was constructed as a French-style city palace, so-called Hôtel particulier. At that time it consisted of five-axial main buildings (corps de logis) and two outbuildings between the palace and a street. Between 1741-1742 the existing one-story outbuilding was connected with the main outbuilding of the palace complex, and between 1771-1790 another wing was erected to connect the inhabited corps de logis with the second outbuilding.

In 1818–1820 the palace was converted into the Sapieha Barracks (Koszary sapieżyńskie) for the use of the army. The Neo-Classical remodelling in the early 19th century was the work of Wilhelm Henryk Minter. During the November Uprising of 1830–1831 it served as the barracks for the famous Polish 4th Infantry Regiment (Czwartacy).

Destroyed in 1944 by German occupying forces, it was rebuilt in the 1950s by Maria Zachwatowiczowa.

References

Sapieha Palace, Warsaw Wikipedia


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