We are pleased to present to you a Residence in Hajowniki. The property is about 8 ha of park with old trees, a pond, sculptures, and two houses.
The house on the island is a Guest House fully equipped for independent functioning, accessible by a bridge and located a few hundred meters from the main residence.
The main residence is a house built from scratch based on its own design with three levels:
Basement:
laundry
pantry
library
relaxation room
wine cellar
technical room
toilets
Ground floor:
huge living room
dining room
beautiful kitchen
waiting room
offices
toilets
First floor:
bedrooms
children's room
toilets
The entire house is air-conditioned, with a heat pump and gas boiler (gas tank buried in the ground), a photovoltaic installation of 20KWP and storage of 54KW, a generator with a 700-liter tank, water from the network and additionally from a well, and a bio-treatment plant installed.
The entire residence is fenced. Nearby is a horse farm.
Hajowniki Park - historyThe village of Hajowniki is located on the eastern edge of the Skierbieszow Commune, by the Wolica River, within the Grabowieckie Divisions. In terms of landscape, this area is very diverse. The Grabowieckie Divisions are the highest part of the Lublin Upland, where absolute heights range from 190 to 311 m above sea level. This area is characterized by a hilly landscape with numerous deep ravines and valleys. The area around Hajowniki is characterized by good hydration, forestation, and the presence of fertile soils formed on loess substrate.
The first mention of the village dates back to 1436 when the Chelm Bishop Jan Biskupiec established and endowed the parish in Skierbieszow. The parish included the following villages: Skierbieszow, Moszczona, Hajowniki, Wola [Hajowicka], Cieszyn, Zukow, Ilowiec, Laziska, Czesniki, Huszczka Woloska, Huszczka Serbinowa, Huszczka Dzierzkowa, Sulmice, Zabytow, Drewniki, and Stryjow. In 1463, the village already had Magdeburg rights, and the mayor was Mikolaj. In 1525, Hajowniki was located in the Chelm County and was owned by the Uchanskis from Sluzew. In 1555, the village, along with Wysokie and Moszczona, was annexed to the Grabowiec County at the request of the owner.
In 1564, Hajowniki was also noted as Wola Hajownica, which had 6 and ½ lan of arable land and 4 landless tenants. According to the tax register from 1578, Trilewska, the then owner of Hajowniki, paid tax on 3 lan of arable land and 3 landless tenants and 3 lodgers. In the second half of the 16th century, the village belonged to Jakub Uchanski, the Chelm bishop, who bought it from Jakub Snopkowski along with Wola Hajownicka and Wysokie.
According to W. Bondyra, from 1590, the village belonged to the Danilowicz family. In 1629, the village belonged to Trilewski. In 1640, the village was leased by Andrzej Chaiński, who then attacked the local mill, leased by the Jew Lewko Aronowicz from Narol. Lewko received five wounds. The attack was to be revenge for insults thrown by the miller and his assistants at Choiński's wife - Dobycka and injuring her. Lewko Aronowicz appealed to King Wladyslaw IV, who summoned Choiński to trial in Warsaw by letter dated January 8, 1642.
In 1666, sources noted Adam A. Czarnoluski as the owner of Hajowniki, who also owned the neighboring village - Wysokie. In 1669, Hajowniki belonged to [Wojciech Alojzy] Zielinski, the buski voivode, who died in 1693. The estate was probably inherited by his son Jan.
In 1684, both villages had 42 houses, but only 24 were inhabited.
At the beginning of the 18th century, the estate [probably in part] passed into the hands of Adam Uliński, who leased it partly to the Zamosc Franciscans and partly to Swieborowski. At that time, there was a modest wooden manor house with a vegetable garden in the village. Descriptions from 1717 and 1724 note here:
A wooden manor house newly covered with brush surrounded by a fence, with two pigsties, a barn, a vineyard alias brewery, a mill with two wheels on the pond not dammed after the excavated dam, next to a fulling mill. The manor gardens were both for vegetables and hemp.The inventory from 1774 mentions:
The entire manor is very old and rotten, covered with old brush. A porch with 4 columns.In the manor lived the then owner Stanislaw Kostka Zielinski, while the estate was leased by Piotr Lubowiecki.
Next to the manor, there were old outbuildings and farm buildings. The courtyard was surrounded by a fence with three gates: from the guest side, to the village, and from the barn. The garden behind the outbuildings had 13 plots of carrots, 7 of parsnips, and nothing grew on 17 plots, under the palisades there were 3 plots of cucumbers and two plots were stelmachowskie.In 1796, part of the village was bought from Aleksander Zielinski by Antoni Romanowski, married to Teresa Nowicka, after whom the estate in 1816 was received by their son Feliks, in part of the inheritance, and in part bought from siblings: Joanna from Romanowski Malczewska, wife of Onufry, Magdalena from Romanowski Jaworska, and from mother Teresa.
The census in 1827 noted the village in the Krasnystaw County and the Skierbieszow parish.
At that time, it had 25 houses and 178 inhabitants. In 1845, there was a tavern here that obtained a patent for further alcohol sales.
In 1836, these goods were bought for 427,346 zlotys by
Kornel Malczewski, from whom in 1845 his son Kajetan bought for 200 thousand zlotys
probably one of them founded a manor-park complex in Hajowniki.Kajetan Malczewski sold Hajowniki in 1849 to Jan Kaczkowski, who the next year resold it to Romuald Horodyński. In 1855, Hajowniki was bought by Adam Laniewski and used it until the January Uprising. He founded a family tomb chapel in the cemetery in Skierbieszow. In 1863, the owner of the village became Bazyli Hemasiuk, and in 1872 Wladyslaw Kielczewski, whose ownership is mentioned in the Geographical Dictionary of the Kingdom of Poland from 1882. At that time, there were 5 manor houses and a water mill with 2 stones from 1877. In the village, there were 5 manor buildings and 32 peasant houses, and 290 inhabitants, including 166 Orthodox and 11 Jews.
In 1901, the owner of the village became Adam Tuszowski, and after him, during the interwar period, the Kostkowscy. According to the census from 1921, the village had 50 houses and 299 inhabitants, including 11 Jews and 154 Ukrainians, while the farm - 3 houses and 82 inhabitants, exclusively Poles.
In 1929, Jan Zofia Kostkowski owned 386 ha of land in Hajowniki. There was a mill in the village owned by Granasiuk, which was later taken over by the Municipal Cooperative.
During World War I, the surroundings of Hajowniki were the site of fierce battles, and evidence of this is the cemetery of fallen soldiers. On an area of about 0.16 ha, there are 48 mass graves, in which 1650 Russian soldiers are buried.
According to the census from 1928, the manor buildings along with the orchards occupied 16.8 ha, fish ponds 25.2 ha, including old 16.8 ha and new 8.4 ha.
The period of World War II was exceptionally difficult for Hajowniki. Skierbieszow and the surrounding villages were among the first to be evacuated in Zamosc. Hajowniki were evacuated on November 27-30, 1942. Poles were taken to the Auschwitz camp or to work in Germany, while Ukrainians were resettled to the nearby village of Skomorochy. Some residents were resettled to the local manor where a German farm was established.
In 1945, as a result of land reform, the Hajowniki estate was parcelled, and the manor and farm buildings were demolished. From the entire manor-park complex, the park with a historic tree stand has survived, which still in the 1980s had about 400 trees (now significantly less), represented by 23 species. The most valuable are individual horse chestnuts, linden-maple, poplar, and hornbeam alleys with black alders and ashes. Fragments of alleys and landscape interiors have also survived. The entire complex is focused around the ponds.
Specifications:
Area: 500.0 m²
Bedrooms: 8
Seller: Maciej Smerecki
Data source: https://www.otodom.pl/pl/oferta/piekna-rezydencja-dla-wymagajacych-ID4uDm9