Renavas manor is a former residential manor in Renavas village, Lithuania on the bank of Varduva river.[1] Currently it is a museum. In the manor's park grows the thickest fir in Lithuania. The manor is valued for its original interior. Renavas Manor is one of the main tourist attractions in Mažeikiai District Municipality.[2]
History
The estate was first mentioned on 26 December 1589 as Gaurai manor in the inventory of Luoba's and Gaureliai's manors. It was stated in the inventory that the estate was leased to Burba brothers. The mansion building at the time was wooden with a thatched roof.[3]
The von Rönne Family
At the end of the 17th century the estate was purchased by French-born German family Rönne (Renė) from Bremen.
The family was known in Lithuania since the beginning of the 15th century, having been granted permission to reside in Lithuania from the Archbishop of Riga.[4] They owned numerous manor houses including: Gargsdai, Hlinowka, Obakie, Zawierz, Wensau, Puhren, Oxeln, Bershof, Hasenpoth, Wilkajen, New Sahten and Old Appusen.[5]
Stefan Karl von Rönne (c1678-1753)
Stefan Karl von Rönne (c1678-1753) was the first owner of Renavas from the von Rönne family. He bought Renavas and, together with his son, Mikolaj (b.c1720), built a wooden chapel on the estate.[5]
In 1758, Stefan von Rönne's daughter, Johanna von Rönne, married Franciszek Piłsudski (1707-1791), Podczaszy (Deputy Cup Bearer) and member of Parliament.
In 1753 the manor became the main residence of the family[3] and in 1780 the estate was renamed Renavas.
Felix I von Rönne (1770-1827)
Renavas was then inherited by Mikolaj's son, Felix I von Rönne (1770-1827), who was Chamberlain of the Polish Court in 1792 and in 1799 received the medal of St. Stanislaus. He was awarded with the title Baron.[5]
Antoni von Rönne (c1795-1869)
Felix's son, now Baron Antoni von Rönne (c1795-1869) inherited the estate from his father.[5]
Between 1812 and 1819 Renavas was administered by the agronomist Mykolas Očepovskis - one of the pioneers in agricultural sciences in Lithuania and Poland.[3]
On the initiative of Antoni Rönne in 1830-1833 the present-day Renavas Manor ensemble was built[3][4] on a high slope at a picturesque site near the bend in the Varduva River. Ponds were excavated in the park, and stone steps and benches were made.
Renavas Manor is associated with the January Uprising of 1863. Here a rebel party was gathered and led by Liudžinskis, the steward of the manor.
The estate was famous for its garden and about 18 hectares of English-style park.[4]
Felix von Rönne (1800-1844)
After the death of Antoni von Rönne (who had no male heirs), the estate was inherited by Antoni's brother, Felix von Rönne (1800-1844).
Felix renovated the interior of the mansion. Surviving from this period are impressive library furnishings (ceiling-high wooden cupboards and a curved cast-iron stairs leading to a gallery encircling the upper part of the room), white-tile ovens in the hall of mirrors, and a fireplace in the vestibule.[6]
Eugene Rönne (1830-1895) loved to travel, and wrote poems in Polish. In 1878, he published a book "Poezye i prace dramatyczne" in Vilnius.[4]
By this time, the library at Renavas was one of the most largest and most valuable in Lithuania.[8] Topics included philosophy, natural sciences and history along with many books of fiction - this may have been influenced by the Baron's own love of writing poems.[8]
The manor also held an active cultural life. Gabriela Maria Ogińska's cousin's (Michał Mikołaj Ogiński) orchestras performed more than once, and the manor hosted prominent people including painters, writers and politicians.[4]
In 1877, Eugene renovated the palace. The metal porch (inscribed with the initials of his father) was probably presented by Eugene in 1880, on the occasion of the centenary of the naming of the estate Renavas (1780). In 1890 the masonry buildings mentioned in the Renavas Estate inventory included: the palace, barn, stables, orangery and water mill. Wooden buildings included: an administrative building, servants’ house, laundry building and others.
The Mielżński Family
After the death of Eugene von Rönne, Renavas was inherited by Eugene's sister's (Aniela Helena von Rönne,[5] married to Count Stanislaw Mielżński) son, Count Felix Mielżński (1871-1910) in 1895.
He also constructed decorative terraces leading to the river and a pergola by the east façade. The farm sector was expanded on the north and west side of the estate, new buildings were constructed, and the lower park beyond the Verduva River was restored.[6]
The Mielżńskis were particularly proud of their collection of porcelain ware and artworks made in European cities, as well as their library. It contained over 1,000 volumes of books (most of them nicely bound, in German and in Latin).
In the late 19th century, Renavas won fame by its garden and hothouses, in which silk worms were bred.[4]
Stanisława Mielżńska (c1869-1958), and Maria Janušova Zdiechovska
Felix Mielżński's widow, Stanisława (c1869-1958), and her daughter Maria Janušova Zdiechovska were the last owners of Renavas Manor.[4][6]
In the 1940s, the estate was nationalized by the Soviet government, and its archive was taken to Telšiai, where in the first days of World War II it burned.
Renavas had been in the von Rönne/Mielżński family for 250 years.
The Soviet Period
After the Second World War the manor housed the administration of a kolkhoz, library and cultural house.
Renovations
Since the 1970s, the Institute for the Restoration of Monuments has carried out historic, architectural and other research at the renovated palace buildings and the park.
For the first time in 1985 the manor was renovated.[4]