Historical and Cultural Tourism
Apidomy:
Apidomy Old Believer Church — originally built in the late 18th century, restored after a fire in 1920–1921.
Old Believer Cemetery — founded in the early 18th century.
Grave of a partisan and victims of Nazism — the grave contains the partisan Rysev, who died while performing a combat mission, as well as his wife and sister, killed by the Nazis.
Voropaevo:
Orthodox Resurrection Church, wooden (early 20th century);
Watermill (early 20th century);
Park (early 20th century): northern gate, western gate, icehouse, and arched bridge, manor farm (19th century);
Fragments of a fruit nursery where the famous gardener and breeder I. P. Sikora worked in the 1930s;
Music school, founded in 1959 as a result of the success of Voropaevo choirs under the direction of Iosif Sushko;
Roman Catholic Church of St. Michael (1997);
Interesting fact: Voropaevo land is famous for its dulcimer traditions. Musicians pass down the secrets of playing diatonic (authentic) dulcimers from generation to generation. This tradition is listed in the intangible cultural heritage of the Republic of Belarus under code 23AK000176.
Gruzdovo:
Orthodox Church of the Nativity of John the Baptist (1875)
Exaltation of the Holy Cross Catholic Church (operates in a former administrative building built in the 20th century)
Dunilovichi:
Catholic Trinity Church (1773);
Obelisk on the grave of fascism victims (1958);
Monument to 34 fellow villagers who died during the Great Patriotic War (1967);
Polish military cemetery;
Catholic cemetery; chapel-tomb (19th century)
Kamai:
Catholic Church of John the Baptist (1603—1606)
Stone cross of the 15th—16th centuries
Mass grave of Soviet soldiers and partisans (1953);
Old Jewish cemetery;
Monument to fellow villagers (1967).
Karolinovo:
Wooden manor of the Romer family.
Kozlovshchina:
Chapel-tomb of the Drucki-Lubecki family (1843);
Watermill (1859);
Chapel-tomb of the Drucki-Lubecki family (1843);
Watermill (1859);
Memorial stone in honor of the 1900th anniversary of Christianity (1933);
Manor gate and outbuildings of the 19th century.
Krikaly:
Landscape manor park of the 18th—19th centuries.
Lasitsa:
Church of the Intercession of the Holy Mother of God (1830).
Luchai:
Catholic Church of St. Thaddeus (1766—1776);
Rectory at the church (19th century);
Obelisk in memory of 39 fellow villagers who died during World War II.
Lyntupy:
Burial mound of Balts of the 10th—11th centuries (north-west of the village);
Mass grave, Markova street;
Historical buildings of the village (late 19th — early 20th centuries; fragments);
Church of St. Andrew the Apostle, including the gate and fence (1908—1914);
Manor and park complex: Bishevsky manor house, outbuilding, icehouse, service building, park, park pavilion, water system (ponds, canals, bridges), smokehouse tower, distillery, alcohol storage, arched bridge, auxiliary premises;
Cemetery of German soldiers (1915—1918) — located near the fence of the Catholic cemetery;
Christian cemetery, including Catholic chapels (19th century), graves of Polish soldiers (1919—1920), stone cross;
Bust of the "king of the narrow-gauge railway", engineer, deputy of the first State Duma Boleslav Antonovich Yalovetsky (at the railway station).
Mankovichi:
Manor and park complex of the Drucki-Lubecki family (19th century);
Chapel-tomb of the Drucki-Lubecki family;
Orthodox Assumption Church (1871);
Obelisk. Almost in the center of the village there is an obelisk (1958), erected in memory of soldiers and partisans who died during the Great Patriotic War.
Myaguny:
Catholic chapel (19th century)
Noritsa:
One of the oldest parks in Belarus, probably laid out in the mid-18th century on the Sulistrovsky estate.
Brewery building (late 19th century).
Krynitsa Gremyaki (hydrological natural monument of republican significance);
Large oak in Verkhovye
Osinogorodok:
Archaeological settlement "Gorodok" (early Iron Age (5th century BC – 5th century AD);
Wooden Orthodox Intercession Church (early 20th century);
Two-tiered freestanding bell tower (lower tier — stone, upper — wood, early 20th century);
Cemetery Orthodox chapel of St. Vladimir;
Chapel (2005) on the mass grave of Russian soldiers of 1812.
Paraski:
Cemetery of World War I soldiers (1915—18).
Paris:
Copy of the Eiffel Tower (30 m high);
Two-meter figures of saints and a cross with a crucifix at the entrance to the non-operating Museum of John Paul II;
Church. The one-story building was converted from a shop into a church on the initiative