Russian troops destroyed the Dontsiv-Zakharzhevsky Manor, a local architectural monument in the Kharkiv region, on Tuesday, April 7 – a site that had survived two world wars.
The head of the Kharkiv Regional Military Administration (OVA), Oleh Synehubov, reported on Telegram:
“The occupiers continue their attempts to destroy everything Ukrainian – our memory, our history, our identity. Today they ‘defeated’ a local architectural monument in the village of Velykyi Burluk – the Dontsiv-Zakharzhevsky Manor.”
According to him, the two-story building, constructed in 1835, was targeted by the Russian army. Synehubov wrote:
“Almost 2,000 square meters of the site were engulfed in flames. Our rescuers, despite the constant threat of repeated [attack], fought the fire for several hours to preserve at least part of this history. The final damage will be determined by experts.”
He added that no one was injured and noted that this was not the first strike by Russian troops on the estate.
“Russia is a country of vandals and terrorists who are fighting not only against our cities and villages, but also against our memory,” Synehubov said.
The head of the Kupiansk District Military Administration, Andrii Kanashevych, wrote on Facebook:
“A monument of 19th-century architecture, the Dontsiv-Zakharzhevsky estate – completed around 1835 – which survived the turbulent 20th century, two terrible world wars, and the Soviet Union with its hatred of national memory, was destroyed on April 7, 2026, by the same horde invasion.”
The estate belonged to representatives of a branch of the Sloboda Cossack elder family, the Dontsiv-Zakharzhevskys – the Zadonskys. The building was constructed in the first quarter of the 19th century and completed around 1835, in a classical architectural style.
Other elements of the estate, including outbuildings and the park, have not survived to this day.
According to one version, tablets with inscriptions allegedly linked to the so-called “Veles Book” were once found there.
In 1980, the building was officially included in the list of architectural monuments of local importance.
According to an Air Force report, from 6 p.m. (03:00 UTC) on April 7, Russian forces attacked Ukraine from six directions using 176 Shahed, Gerbera, Italmas, and other types of drones, around 120 of them Shahed.
The aerial attack was repelled by Ukrainian Air Force fighter pilots, anti-aircraft missile troops, electronic warfare and unmanned systems units, as well as mobile fire groups of the Ukrainian Defense Forces.
As of 8:00 a.m. (05:00 UTC) on Wednesday, April 8, air defenses had shot down or suppressed 146 Russian unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in the north, south, and east of the country.
At the same time, 24 attack UAVs hit 12 locations, and debris from downed drones was recorded at one additional site.
Russian forces targeted multiple regions of Ukraine with drones.
According to the State Emergency Service (DSNS), a fire broke out at a civilian enterprise in the Kharkiv region following a drone strike on a settlement in the Kharkiv district. Rescuers are working to extinguish the fire. No casualties have been reported.
Russia also launched a massive drone attack on the Odesa region. As a result of the strikes, fires broke out in port infrastructure and warehouse facilities. Rescuers quickly extinguished all fires. No casualties were reported.
In the Sumy region, one person was killed and three others were wounded in a Russian UAV attack.
According to the DSNS, residential areas and infrastructure in the Romny community were hit. A house and non-residential buildings caught fire, forcing rescuers to work simultaneously at multiple locations.
“Due to the threat of repeated enemy [bombardment], operations were periodically suspended. Despite the difficult security situation, all fires were extinguished,” the report said.