St. Alexander Nevsky Church
St. Alexander Nevsky Church is a wooden Orthodox church whose construction began in the 1990s and was completed in 2014. The prayer hall has a rectangular plan, the roof is topped by an onion-shaped bell tower.
St. Alexander Nevsky Church is a wooden Orthodox church whose construction began in the 1990s and was completed in 2014. The prayer hall has a rectangular plan, the roof is topped by an onion-shaped bell tower.
The Church of St. John the Baptist is a wooden Orthodox church built in 1789, presumably as a Uniate (Greek-Catholic) church. It was closed in the 1960s and reopened in the early 1990s. In front of the church, there is a two-pillar bell tower with a hanging bell.
The Church of the Protection of the Blessed Virgin is an Orthodox church built between 2010 and 2015. Construction of the church began on 1 October 2010 on the site of the former chapel of the Intercession of the Blessed Virgin. In May 2014, the icons of the "Shroud" and the "Inexhaustible Cup" were delivered from Mount Athos to the temple. The building is made of brick, its domes are made of titanium.
The Church of St. Nicholas is an Orthodox church and a monument of Belarusian vernacular architecture. The first mention of the church dates back to 1682, but in 1738, on the occasion of a fire, a new, medium-sized, wooden building without a dome, with an iron cross on the roof, was erected. After another fire, the church had to be rebuilt in 1771. In 1839 the church, which was then a Uniate (Greek Catholic) church, was converted to Orthodoxy.