Костел Пресвятой Троицы

Church of the Holy Trinity in the village of Survilishki

In 1510 a Catholic parish was founded here, in the first half of the 16th century the settlement belonged to the Survil family, from which it got its name. In the second half of the 16th century, the Survilishki were owned by representatives of the Gaiko (Gaikovski) clan, and a wooden church of the Holy Trinity was erected at their expense.
According to the administrative-territorial reform of the middle of the 16th century, the settlement became part of the Oshmyany district of the Vilna voivodeship, in the 17th-18th centuries it changed owners many times.
As a result of the third partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1795), the village ended up in the Russian Empire, in the Oshmyany district. Since 1840 it has been the estate of the Poplavsky family, who built a manor in Surviliški during the 19th century. In 1880, a stone belfry was added to the Church of the Holy Trinity. In 1905 the village had 40 inhabitants.
In 1921-1939 Surviliski was part of the interwar Polish Republic.
In 1939, Surviliski became part of the BSSR, from June 26, 1941 to July 8, 1944, they were under fascist occupation.
The wooden church of the Holy Trinity, an architectural monument of the 16th century, burned down at the end of the 20th century, leaving only the ruins of the belfry. In 1992, a new Catholic church was built, it also burned in 2003, but was rebuilt.