Pažaislis Monastery
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Pažaislis monastery and church (Lithuanian: Pažaislio vienuolynas) form the largest monastery complex in Lithuania, and the most magnificent example of Italian baroque architecture in the country. It is situated in the Petrašiūnai elderate of Kaunas, Lithuania, on a peninsula in Kaunas Reservoir (Lithuanian: Kauno marios) near Kaunas Yacht Club.
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[edit] History
Founded in 1662 by the Great Chancellor Krzysztof Zygmunt Pac for Order of the Camaldolese Hermits, the main construction has been built until 1674 and further finished until 1712. The church was designed by Pietro Puttini, were directed by Carlo and Pietro Puttini, Giovanni Battista Frediani. The building of the towers and the dome after 1755 was funded by king's chambelain Michał Jan Pac.
In 1832 the church was closed by Russians and later converted into an Orthodox church where the author of the Imperial Russian national anthem God Save the Tsar Alexei Lvov was interred in 1870. After 1920 the ruined church returned to Roman Catholics and was restored by sisters of the Lithuanian convent of St. Casimir. After World War II, the Soviet authorities converted the church and monastery into an archive, a psychiatric hospital and finally an art gallery (in 1966). In 1990s the complex was returned to the nuns of the convent and reconstruction work began.
[edit] Music festival
Today the monastery is home to the annual international Pažaislis Music Festival. It was started in 1996 and now lasts for three summer months and offers about 30 different concerts. The festival was visited by Lord Yehudi Menuhin twice. It features classical music of diverse genres and styles, ranging from Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart to ABBA classics. To some concerts admission is free, to most it is very affordable (6-10 litas or 2-3 United States dollars). Actual concerts take place in many different venues across Lithuania, such as the Kaunas Castle, the Klaipėda University, or even the Pociūnai Airport.
[edit] See also
[edit] Image gallery
Litas commemorative coin dedicated to Pažaislis monastery |
[edit] External links
- Laima Sinkunaite, The Pazaislis Monastery — A Baroque Pearl in Bridges journal, March 1999.