Onuškis Manor, Classicist manor ruins in Rokiškis District, Lithuania.
Onuškis Manor is a 19th-century classicist residence in Rokiškis District, where today eleven columns mark the ruins of the original building. The grounds include a large park with two ponds and varied plantings that surround the site.
The manor was first documented in 1522 and belonged to the Rajeckai family in the 1700s. It later passed to Joseph Komaras, who rebuilt it in classicist style.
The name refers to the village where this residence once stood and shaped the local identity. Today, the surviving classical columns show how wealthy families displayed their status through architecture.
The ruins spread across spacious grounds that are easy to explore on foot, with clear paths for walking. Visit on a dry day, as the park can become muddy after rain.
A fire during World War I severely damaged the building, yet the classicist columns remarkably survived intact. These preserved structures stand as rare material evidence from that era in the region.
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