Rogalinpronounced[rɔˈɡalin] is a village in western Poland, situated on the river Warta. It lies approximately 7 kilometres (4 mi) east of the town of Mosina, and 19 km (12 mi) south of the metropolitan city of Poznań.[1] It is best known for the Rogalin Landscape Park (with the oldest oak trees in Poland[2]), the Baroque palace, art gallery, and neoclassical church with the mausoleum of the Raczyński family.
Overview
Rogalin is primarily famous for its 18th-century Polish Baroque palace of the Raczyński family, and the adjacent Raczyński Art Gallery, housing a permanent exhibition of paintings by the Polish and foreign artists of international renown including Paul Delaroche and Claude Monet as well as the famous Jan Matejko's large-size painting Joanna d'Arc(see a fragment below). The gallery was founded by Count Edward Aleksander Raczyński. Rogalin is also known for its putatively 800-year-old oak trees (Polish: Dęby Rogalińskie) on the flood plains of the Warta and the historical St. MarcellinusChurch, whose design was inspired by the Roman templeMaison Carrée in Nîmes, France.