uins of a tower-tower castle on the Wiar River from the second half of the 16th century. Built on a quadrilateral plan by the Kormanicki family, it was to have four cylindrical corner towers. It was built of stone. At the turn of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the castle was bought by the starost of Przemyśl Jan Tomasz Drohojewski, and then he renovated it. Marcin Stadnicki captured the castle and imprisoned the widow Jadwiga née Herbut. Later, the castle became the scene of fights between the Devil and Łukasz Opaliński. The former stayed several times at the castle in the years 1608-1610, from where he set off on August 6, 1610 on his last expedition. Around 1638, the castle was taken over by Mikołaj Ossoliński. Łukasz Opaliński's second wife, Katarzyna Starołęska, was imprisoned in the Rybotycki castle and in the nearby Trójca. Destroyed in the eighteenth century, it fell into ruin. By 1868, the remains of the ruins were demolished for material for the construction of the church. At the beginning of the twentieth century, the Tyszkowski family erected a manor house and farm buildings on part of the foundations. However, it was destroyed and after World War II only the walls of the ground floor of two towers were visible here.