Trip to the “Last capital of Russian Empire”, Mogilev city where the Russian tzar Nickolas II spent the last days of his emperorship.
Visit to Brest (350 km from Minsk), an administrative centre of the Brest region. The city is located on the right bank of the Western Boog River. Brest is the traditional "western gate" of the country. The first mentioning of it is dated to 1019. In 1390 it was the first city in Belarus that obtained self-government on the basis of the Magdeburg Law. The historical Union, which reconciled and united catholic and orthodox confessions in Belarus, was concluded here in 1596.
Gomel is the second largest city in Belarus.
Vitebsk is known today as the cultural capital of Belarus. Founded in 974 on the high banks of the Western Dvina, the city was badly damaged during World War II. Nevertheless, the city has a number of historic places of interest.
Visit to the Lida castle – fortress, which was built in 1323—1325 by the Grand Duke Gedimin and which for many centuries used to be an inaccessible citadel over the western lands of Belarus.
Grodno is one of the most ancient cities of Belarus. Its name is tightly connected with the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Polotsk town (228 km from Minsk) is situated on the Dvina river, 100 km to the North-West of Vitebsk. Polotsk is the most ancient city on Belarusian territory, it was first mentioned in the chronicles of 862.
Visit to the historical town of Slonim and the orthodox Zhirovichy Convent. Slonim town (210 km from Minsk) is the centre of the Slonim district, Grodno region, situated at the confluence of the Shchara and Isa rivers.
Visit to the famous monuments, included into the UNESCO Cultural Heritage List.
The museum displays the original pieces of rural architecture from various regions of Belarus as well as numerous domestic utensils, articles of applied arts and agricultural implements used by the rural population in the past.

