Let's get to know each other...
Welcome to Adomynė Manor, one of the best-preserved wooden manors in Lithuania.
There is no exact data on when the manor house was built. The building has retained many old structural and decorative elements from the 18th and 19th centuries. A very interesting combination of wooden and brick partition walls, based on clear functions. Brick walls are not only supports for the ceiling and other main structures, but also very important in solving the entire heating system. They are equipped with flues for stoves and fireplaces. An interesting plan of one body - it is divided by a wall into two parts: an economic-production and living rooms. The characteristic 19th century double-leaf filing doors, beautifully ornamented parquet floors, several Dutch-type brick ovens made of large white and green bricks with a fireplace, a bread oven, stoves, a hearth where a huge boiler was placed, a warehouse with wooden shelves, cellars, etc. have survived. The wound could have been used for beer or mead production, as the manor had a large apiary, and parts of large wine bottles were found. The manor was engaged in the commercial production of intoxicating beverages. There were at least two breweries in the manor, which transported bitters and vodka even to Riga (this is recalled by the former owner of the manor, Barbora Vilėniškytė).
Most of the rooms in the central part of the palace were decorated with decorative wall paintings. The basis of the wall decor is friezes, window and door frames, supraporta, panels. The ceiling is a complex composition of plafonds, in the centers of which there are rosettes. Painted on plaster with adhesive paints. Decorative wall paintings were one of the main means of artistic expression of the palace interior. This is a monument of artistic culture of romantic classicism, protected by the state, and now covered with the Blue Shield.
Open the door on the left and let's get acquainted with the family's palocias - the economic and production part of the manor.