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Markučiai Manor

Subačiaus St. 124, Vilnius

II–V 15–19 val.
VI–VII 11–19 val.

Markučiai Manor (formerly the Markučiai Manor Museum, the Alexander Pushkin Literary Museum) is a branch of the Vilnius City Museum, housed in the main residential building on the historic Markučiai estate. Nestling in a park, the building is a good example of 19th-century wooden architecture and interior design. Markučiai Manor seeks to dissociate itself from the legacy of the Alexander Pushkin Museum, which was established in Soviet times, and focuses on the controversial legacy of the Russian Empire in Vilnius.

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Visit the department

Arrival

Markučiai Manor is located at Subačiaus St 124. You can get there on foot, by bicycle or by car, or by buses No 10 or 13 (get off at the ‘Markučiai’ stop).

Cyclists and visitors with physical disabilities can drive or ride all the way up to the manor. As you go down Subačiaus St and approach the hill, you will see to your left a turning and a sign prohibiting cars. If you turn on to this road, you will be able to drive all the way up to the house.

If you are coming by car from the Old Town along Subačiaus St, turn into Pavilnio St. There is a free car park to your left.

There is a long staircase leading from the bus stop and the car park to the house; there are also some steps just by the entrance to the house.

Important details

Visitors will find a bicycle stand in front of the museum entrance where they can lock their bikes.

Outerwear can be hung by the ticket office or in the cloakroom located in the hallway. During educational activities, please leave rucksacks with the coats.

There is a WC on the basement floor (-1 floor). Unfortunately, it can only be accessed by a staircase, and there is no lift.

Temporary exhibitions are held in the ground-floor rooms and in the first-floor exhibition spaces.

Markučiai has two recreation areas. There is a lounge on the ground floor for families with babies and pre-school children. On the first floor, visitors will find the White Hall, which is suitable for visitors of all ages who need a break from noise and visual stimulation. Unfortunately, the first floor can only be accessed by a staircase.

Our volunteers are an important part of the museum community. Almost every weekend you can ask them questions and hear them telling stories about the exhibitions. You can identify volunteers by their volunteer IDs.

There are fewer visitors to the museum on workdays from 3pm to 5pm. If you prefer to visit the museum at a quiet time, we recommend you choose a day other than the last Sunday of the month.

Most of the events that take place at the museum (book presentations, lectures, discussions, etc) are free of charge. Visitors are allowed in free of charge half an hour before the beginning of an event (but bear in mind that we may be preparing the venue for visitors, and, for example, arranging chairs).

Visitors can visit the museum free of charge on the last Sunday of the month. The museum’s working hours on this day, as on other Sundays, are from 11am to 7pm.

In keeping with the old manor house tradition, we invite guests to write their comments in the guest book. 

All the guest books are kept in the museum’s archive. 

Observations and comments can also be sent to info.markuciai@vilniausmuziejus.lt.

For children 
The ground-floor lounge for families offers a play area for toddlers and pre-school children. Look through an interactive watercolour book with short descriptions in order to learn about the history of Markučiai and the construction of the house, and try your hand at various railway engineering and architecture-related tasks, such as building a railway and railway infrastructure.

Prams
It is possible to get round the entire ground floor with a pram. The museum entrance has a step: if necessary, a member of staff can bring a mobile ramp to help you. Please ask the museum staff in the ticket office, or call +370 622 97 260.

Changing station
A folding changing table is available in the bathroom area in the basement.

Feeding infants 
You can feed your baby anywhere in the museum, but the quietest area is in the White Hall on the first floor. It is safe to leave a pram by the ticket office, or by the stairs on the ground floor.

The estate consists of a house and an 18-hectare park, complete with ponds, a chapel dedicated to St Barbara, and a small family graveyard beside the chapel. Inside the house are six well-preserved rooms dating from the late 19th-century. They contain household items, works of art, and historical images of the house itself and its owners. 

In the future, Markučiai Manor will pay more attention to Varvara Pushkina (1855–1935), her father Aleksey Melnikov (1808–1879), the Imperial Russian engineer who built the house, and his family, the period, and the cultural context they lived in, and also the history and the current situation of the Markučiai district, and the house and the park around it. 

Markučiai Manor works together with the communities of Markučiai and Ribiškės, as well as the Markučiai Day Centre, and often provides a space for their events. Alongside regular educational activities and tours, Markučiai Manor hosts various exhibitions, lectures and gatherings. You can follow the latest updates on the Markučiai Manor Facebook page.

In 1867, General Aleksey Melnikov (1808–1879), one of the builders of the St Petersburg-to-Vilnius railway line, purchased a plot of land at Markučiai from the Polish doctor Ignacy Godlewski.

He began building a house, completing it before the end of the year. He also built several outbuildings: a smaller building for the servants’ quarters, stables, and a coach house.  

In 1875, Melnikov’s daughter Varvara married Vasily Moshkov. Her father gave her the house at Markučiai as a dowry. The deed of gift details all the assets that were handed over: woods, bodies of water, arable and non-arable land, the main house, and all the estate buildings. Melnikov estimated that the entire property was worth 100,000 silver roubles.

The estate buildings stood at the foot of the hill: a quadrangular courtyard framed by stables for six horses, a wooden ice house, an aviary, a garden shed, and a cellar. There was a large orchard nearby. The enclosed 15-hectare park was meticulously maintained. It boasted four ponds, a croquet lawn, a wine cellar, an ice house, a conservatory planted with palms, ficus trees, oleander bushes, roses and cacti, and peacocks roaming freely around.

Melnikov’s daughter did not immediately settle at Markučiai. After divorcing Moshkov in 1877, she and her daughter, also called Varvara, lived for a while in St Petersburg, where in 1880 she met Grigory (1835–1905), the younger son of the famous Russian poet Alexander and Natalia Pushkin. The couple married in Vilnius on 24 October 1883.

After their wedding, Varvara and Grigory spent more time at Mikhailovskoye in the Pskov region, the summer residence of Alexander Pushkin’s family which they had inherited. The mistress of Markučiai only visited Vilnius for short periods of time, mostly in the summer. However, in 1899 the Pushkins sold the Mikhailovskoye estate and moved permanently to Markučiai. 

The estate at Markučiai had a number of summer houses and wooden villas, which Varvara and Grigory rented out to other people. Not only did they let out summer houses on the estate, but also various plots of land. Restaurants, cafés and shops appeared on these plots. In 1901 the couple provided two houses, a cellar, an ice house and a plot of land for the use of the Dobrochotnaya Kopeika (Kopek of Good Will) charity free of charge. Varvara Pushkina was the chairwoman of the Paplauja branch of the organisation. 

After Grigory’s death, Varvara managed the estate on her own. She lived by letting out holiday homes and selling off plots of land. The estate buildings and land had also been parcelled out to a lesser extent when Grigory was alive.

In 1910, the estate was included in the city of Vilnius. 

During the First World War, Varvara lived in St Petersburg for several years. The Markučiai estate suffered considerably in the war. According to a list of losses drawn up by the mistress of the estate, two summer houses were burnt down, several other buildings were destroyed, and large swathes of woodland were cleared. The park and garden, and the main house, were badly damaged. A valuable collection of Grigory Pushkin’s hunting trophies and weapons, and a number of paintings, books and other items, were lost. The ravaged estate never recovered financially. Varvara had to fight until her death to keep it from going bankrupt.

Without a regular income, apart from her husband’s pension, which she inherited on his death, and unable to pare down her lifestyle, Varvara continued selling off parts of the estate, but her financial situation did not improve, and she fell deeper and deeper into debt. The suburb of Markučiai grew up on land that had once belonged to the estate, developing into a network of about 20 streets. Eventually, the suburb began to encroach on the house itself. In the final years of Varvara’s life, she had just a little over three hectares to her name. In her will in 1935 she bequeathed the estate, its outbuildings and all their contents to the Russian Society of Vilnius.

Varvara died in 1935, leaving the estate in debt and subject to claims. Vladimir Nazimov, her trustee and executor of her will, continued to manage the affairs of the bankrupt estate. He prepared a liquidation plan for it, but then the Second World War broke out. 

Soviet Russia occupied Lithuania, and the estate was nationalised in 1940. The government of the LSSR decided to make it into a museum, but the country’s occupation by the Nazis delayed its plans. The museum first opened in 1946–1948 under the title the Alexander Pushkin Literary Museum. Due to the selective emphasis on the poet’s political views and his influence over Russian revolutionaries, the Soviets portrayed Pushkin as an opponent of bourgeois literature and culture, and as a pioneer of Soviet literature and poetry. 

In 1992, a bust of Alexander Pushkin (sculpted by Bronius Vyšniauskas, with architectural design by Vytautas Nasvytis) that stood in the city centre in Sereikiškės Park from 1955 to 1992 was moved to the estate. 

The Alexander Pushkin Museum at Markučiai operated until 2023, when it became the Markučiai Manor Museum, and the events, tours and educational activities organised by it began to change. In 2025 the Markučiai Manor Museum merged with the Vilnius City Museum and became one of its four branches. 

In 2020, Markučiai Manor published a book entitled ‘The Story of the Construction of the Wooden Manor House at Markučiai’. The publication is available for purchase at Markučiai Manor and in major Lithuanian libraries.