Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Wooden Churches of the Carpathian Mountains # 6 - Ulucz, Poland

This formerly Greek Orthodox church located in Poland's far south-eastern corner sits on a steep wooded hillside above the small village of Ulucz. Thought to be one of the oldest Eastern Rite churches in the country, the tserkva was constructed in 1659 as part of a monastery complex with surrounding fortifications. The monks closed the monastery and left the region in 1744, but the church continued to serve the local Orthodox population until the 20th century.
At the end of the Second World War, the Boyko ethnic group who lived in the village were forcibly resettled to other parts of Poland, and Catholic Poles were encouraged to settle in the region. As a result, the Greek Orthodox church was converted for use as a Roman Catholic church for the second half of the 20th century. It has recently been taken over by the Museum of Folk Architecture in the nearby town of Sanok and is now used only as a museum. A mass is held in the church just once each year, on Ascension Day (40 days after Easter).
The church interior is nearly empty, as the Greek Orthodox iconostasis and icons are now on permanent display in the Sanok museum. A few badly faded painted frescoes can be seen on the wooden walls, including one depicting the crucifixion of Christ. The key to the church is kept by the family who live in house number 16 at the opposite end of the village. They are happy to come and open the church for visitors who come by car, as the distance to the church is about two kilometres along the road.
The village of Ulucz is best reached with your own transport, though there are infrequent buses which run to the village from the town of Sanok. Another excellent option is renting a bicycle in Sanok in order to travel to Ulucz and to have the opportunity to visit other villages in the region as well.

3 comments:

  1. hey fantastic blog!! I got truely inspired and hopefully will visit some of the destinations listed. YOur travel suggestions are really unusual and the kind of thing I was looking for!
    I am writing a travel blog myself and if you are interested I would love to have you as a guest blogger??I havn't found a post about Bulgaria here? If you want I would love to write a guest post for you in exchange? if this sounds good visit me on:
    www.unusualtraveltip.com or just drop me a line at info@unusualtraveltip.com . I'm looking forward to hering from you!!! and keep posting great travel tips!
    Cheers:)

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  2. Hi Steffy,
    Thanks for your comments! There are few references (so far) to Bulgaria because my photographs of Bulgaria are film photos, I travelled in Bulgaria in 2003 and 2005, and I didn't get a digital camera until 2006. I hope to get the photos digitized eventually, but it will take some time. I only publish posts on this blog with my own photographs of the places mentioned, so that's why some countries are not represented here, such as Serbia, BiH, Moldova, Belarus and the Baltic states, as I only have film photographs of these countries from trips I made before 2006. I'd be pleased if you'd write an article as a guestblogger on a Bulgarian topic, could you write about Tryavna or Koprivshtitsa and include some personal photos?
    cheers,
    Wildroo

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  3. Hi there and Happy New Year!!

    Thnx a lot for the proposal:) I would love to write a post about Bulgaria! could you give me your email, so we could discuss it further?

    Best wishes,
    Steffy

    ReplyDelete