SH Archive Mud Flood in Belarus. Yurovichi village. Jesuit temple: year of foundation 1741.

SH.org OP Username
Aply1985
SH.org OP Date
2018-09-10 20:29:50
SH.org Reaction Score
6
SH.org Reply Count
6

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This summer I was lucky to get into the abandoned Jesuit monastery in Belarus, the village of Yurovichi.
Google Maps

The first thing that caught my eye was that the landscape shot in the 19th century does not agree with what is now. This is the main entrance from past.
Juravičy._Юравічы_(4.03.1865) (1).jpg Juravičy._Юравічы_(XIX).jpg

If you look on present day photo you will not find river and a hill oposite the main entrance. The entrence is on the west side

797dff8c83d0b576ba55232063360e47.jpg
It looks as if all this gap was covered with sand. I was lucky to get inside this complex and get all the details.


I was struck by the landscape around very similar to the fact that this place is covered with sand


Then other surprises waited for me. The caretaker of this complex allowed me to go into the cellars. Pay attention to the number of blocked moves and arches we can see. We descended according to the caretaker's words for 3-5 meters down.


The caretaker told us that scientists have been coming here 2 years in a row and digging out new tunnels. After they have finished all the excavations are bricked up and all the finds are taken away. According to the caretaker's stories, about 1 km of tunnels have already been excavated.


I was lucky that scientists forgot one broken plate on which you can see the date 1762 or I762.

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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2018-09-11 06:03:58
Reaction Score: 3
The amount of buried brickwork throughout the world is staggering.

Jesuits - they were able to visit all the places in this world, didn't they?
 
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Username: Aply1985
Date: 2018-09-11 07:25:44
Reaction Score: 0
I Agree with you!
 
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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2018-09-11 14:06:44
Reaction Score: 5
The quality of those old bricks, but more than that their various shapes especially seen in the construction of those tunnels is something to think about.

Googling brick making techniques of the 19th and 18th centuries makes the amount of produced brick a suspect. Yet this brick is all over the place.
 
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Username: Aply1985
Date: 2018-09-11 16:01:47
Reaction Score: 8
the most sad, old bricks from 18 century will be ok for centuries but a new ones which we can see on top after 10-15 years will begin to collapse

 
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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2018-12-05 22:33:53
Reaction Score: 1
I still can't get over the amount of this high quality brick present in such humongous quantities. Those brick making factories had to be numerous and big. Where are those factories?

The quality is a separate topic altogether.
 
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Username: wizz33
Date: 2018-12-06 04:13:27
Reaction Score: 1
i think that it was made on near spot in something like big river barge
 
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