Vasyl Nahirnyi

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Born
Vasyl Stepanovych Nahirnyi

(1848-01-11)11 January 1848
Hirne, Austrian Empire (now Ukraine)
Died25 February 1921(1921-02-25) (aged 73)
AlmamaterLviv Technical Academy, Fédérale Polytechnique de Lausanne.
OccupationsArchitect, public figure
Vasyl Nahirnyi
Василь Нагірний
Born
Vasyl Stepanovych Nahirnyi

(1848-01-11)11 January 1848
Hirne, Austrian Empire (now Ukraine)
Died25 February 1921(1921-02-25) (aged 73)
Alma materLviv Technical Academy, Fédérale Polytechnique de Lausanne.
OccupationsArchitect, public figure

Vasyl Nahirnyi (Ukrainian: Василь Степанович Нагірний; 11 January 1848 – 25 February 1921) was a Ukrainian architect, public figure.

Family

Vasyl Nahirnyi was born on 11 January 1848 in Hirne, now the Hrabovets-Duliby rural hromada of Stryi Raion, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine.[1]

In 1871 he graduated from the Lviv Technical Academy, and in 1875 from the Fédérale Polytechnique de Lausanne. Nahirnyi lived in Zurich, worked in design offices and government agencies in Switzerland.[1][2]

From 1882 in Lviv. He co-founded societies, including "Narodna Torhivlia [uk]" (1883), "Zoria [uk]" (1884), "Dnister [uk]" (1892), "Sokil [uk]" (1894), "Narodna Hostynytisa", and the Society for the Development of Rus' Art [uk] (1898, together with Ivan Trush, Mykhailo Hrushevsky and Yuliian Pankevych). In 1885-1890 he was the editor-in-chief of the newspaper "Batkivshchyna".[1][2]

Father of architect Yevhen Nahirnyi,[1] great-grandfather of singer Kvitka Cisyk.[3]

Works

In 1898 he participated in the "First Rus' exhibition of art", where he presented his architectural works.[1]

The author of more than 200 churches (mostly brick), with forms of neo-Romantic and neo-Byzantine styles and techniques of folk wooden architecture. From 1905 he worked together with his son Yevhen.[1]

Nahirnyi is also the author of the People's House in Borshchiv, Ternopil Oblast (1908).[1]

Memorials

References

Sources

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