Vohnja

Vohnja is a village in Kadrina Parish, Lääne-Viru County, in northeastern Estonia. It lies on the left bank of the Loobu River.

Vohnja
Village
Vohnja manor main building
Vohnja
Location in Estonia
Coordinates: 59°22′00″N 26°03′00″E
Country Estonia
CountyLääne-Viru County
ParishKadrina Parish
Population
 (2019)
  Total119
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)

Vohnja manor

Vohnja (German: Fonal) manor has a history going back to at least 1504, when the estate was owned by the van der Heyde family. Later, in 1629 during the time of Swedish rule in Estonia, it is recorded to have belonged to the Oxenstierna family. Later it belonged to different Baltic German families, the last of which was Tiesenhausen. The family acquired the estate in 1837 and it stayed in the family until the land reform that followed the Estonian Declaration of Independence in 1919. After the Soviet invasion of Estonia the main building became the office of a kolkhoz, and it stayed so until Estonia re-gained its independence. In 1991, it was turned into a kindergarten.[1]

The presently visible main building dates from the 1830s and is designed in a Neoclassical style. The interiors have largely been destroyed. Adjacent to the main building are also a number of preserved annexes, such as the estate manager's house (1904), granary (1805) and distillery (19th century).[1]

gollark: osmarks.tk is not actually vulnerable to zero-day exploits, see, because we use time travel to make them several-week exploits, which are fine.
gollark: ```osmarks@loki ~/epicbot/epicbot % ls -l antimemetic-gtech -rw-r--r-- 1 osmarks osmarks 0 Nov 26 21:10 antimemetic-gtech```
gollark: Troubling. However, I created decoy files for this eventuality.
gollark: Oh, I worked that out ages ago and reused that extra [REDACTED] for EXULTED STANDOFFS.
gollark: I have now limited it to 10% of memory.

References

  1. Sakk, Ivar (2004). Estonian Manors - A Travelogue. Tallinn: Sakk & Sakk OÜ. p. 137. ISBN 9949-10-117-4.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.