Rogalin Palace Museum
The Rogalin Palace Museum is located in the former seat of the Raczynski family. It consists of an 18th-century palace and garden complex and a later landscape park, which is naturally connected to the picturesque floodplains of the Warta River. Apart from its charming location, the beauty of the place is also determined by the magnificent monumental oak trees and the ancient in form church-mausoleum. Rogalin has long been an inspiration for numerous artists, whose works can be seen, among others, in the Edward A. Raczyński Picture Gallery, added to the palace in 1910. In addition to Polish paintings from the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, foreign works from the same period can also be admired here. The historical interiors of the Raczynski House are complemented by the London Cabinet of Edward B. Raczynski, President of the Republic of Poland in Exile, reconstructed in the right wing of the palace. Thanks to the Raczynski Foundation established by him at the MNP, the palace and the gallery are home to the family's formerly preserved collections.
The unique artistic, historical and landscape value of the entire architectural complex, together with the former estate and the extraordinary group of monumental, primeval oak trees, determined its inclusion in the prestigious group of Polish Monuments of History.