BIAŁYSTOK, POLAND—Science in Poland reports that sections of a field stone floor thought to date to the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries has been unearthed in the parade courtyard of the Branicki Palace. Maciej Karczewski of the University of Białystok said the very solid floor was probably part of a wooden building constructed by the Raczkowicz family, the first owners of the estate. “The layout of the manor complex remained completely unknown until now,” Karczewski said. “The size of this anomaly indicates it must have been a large building, and the tiles found in this place may indicate that the building could have been located close to the manor house,” he explained. The sixteenth-century layer was found right under the current surface, suggesting that layers from the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries had been cleared away sometime during the twentieth century. The palace that stands on the property today was constructed in the eighteenth century, along with a baroque garden. To read about another discovery in Poland, go to "Viking Knights, Polish Days."
Traces of Original Manor Found at Poland’s Branicki Palace
News October 5, 2022
Recommended Articles
Top 10 Discoveries of 2020 January/February 2021
Largest Viking DNA Study
Northern Europe and Greenland
Digs & Discoveries November/December 2020
Honoring the Dead
Digs & Discoveries November/December 2020
Piggy Playthings
Artifacts May/June 2020
Torah Shield and Pointer
-
Features September/October 2022
1,000 Fathoms Down
In the Gulf of Mexico, archaeologists believe they have identified a nineteenth-century whaling ship crewed by a diverse group of New Englanders
(Courtesy the New Bedford Whaling Museum) -
Letter from Germany September/October 2022
Berlin's Medieval Origins
In the midst of modern construction, archaeologists search for evidence of the city’s earliest days
(Courtesy Landesdenkmalamt Berlin/Michael Malliaris) -
Artifacts September/October 2022
Nordic Bronze Age Figurine
(Courtesy Thomas Terberger) -
Digs & Discoveries September/October 2022
The Case of Tut's Missing Collar
(Courtesy Marc Gabolde)