National Museum of Folk Architecture and Folkways of Ukraine

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File:Pirogiv windmills.jpg
This ensemble of authentic windmills is the centerpiece of a 150-Hectare open air Museum of Folk Architecture and Life of Ukraine

Pyrohiv (Template:Lang-uk), also known as Pirogovo (Russian: Пирогово), originally a village south of Kiev, is a neighborhood in the southern outskirts of the Ukrainian capital city. It is now home to an outdoor Museum of Folk Architecture and Life of Ukraine.

Although the origin of the toponym is uncertain, pyrohiv (gen. pl.) is a Ukrainian word meaning a kind of pastry.

Location

Archaeological evidence confirms that the territory of Pyrohiv has been settled at the times of the Bronze Age. Pyrohivka settlement was first mentioned in 1627, as a feudal ___domain of the Kievan Cave Monastery. The 1720 records mention the village of Pyrozhov. The territory was included within the Kiev administrative boundary in 1957.

Two modern streets now go along the historic road Pyrohiv way (Pyrohivs'kyi Shlyah): the Stolychne Shose (Capital Motorway) and Novopyrohivska (New Pyrohiv) Street.

Museum

 
Wooden church at the Pyrohiv Museum

The territory of historic Pyrohiv now serves as the ___location of a 150-Hectare (370 acre) outdoor Museum of Folk Architecture and Life of Ukraine. Founded in 1969, the museum contains over 300 pieces of folk architecture brought here from all parts of Ukraine and carefully reassembled. The picturesque hill with several windmills is the museum centerpiece and the entire territory of the museum is divided into sectors, each representing the folk architecture and life of a specific Ukrainian region.

Commoner's homes, buildings of small trade, commerce and local administration, and old wooden village churches contain authentic items that represent the everyday lifestyle of Ukrainian villagers and townsfolk. Local volunteers and modern Ukrainian artisans selling their wares dress in old-style clothes and demonstrate the use of authentic everyday items to visitors.

Pyrohiv museum has been accorded the status of State Museum of Ukraine and is affiliated with the Institute of Arts, Folklore and Ethnology of the National Academy of Science of Ukraine.

Recent controversies

File:Pirogiv yard.jpg
Fire safety is a significant concern as most of the museum's structures are wooden, and many houses have thatched roofs.

In recent years, several of the museum's wooden buildings were damaged by fires. The most recent fire on September 15, 2006 compeletely destroyed one house and heavily damaged two others. According to both Institute Director Hanna Skrypnyk and the Ukrainian Ministry of Emergencies, the fire was the result of arson, set to cover up the theft of a valuable collection of the eighteenth-century cassones which were exhibited in the burned building. Skrypnyk noted that in Soviet times the museum had a designated security group and fire house, which ceased to exist after the Soviet collapse due to negligent financing by the Ukrainian authorities.

The land usage in the vicinity of the museum has become the center of scandal as the local authorities approved several commercial construction projects, including a luxurious high-rise entertainment complex and a gasoline filling station. The building construction is now stalled due to the public outrage but the filling station construction near the museum entrance went ahead.

References

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