Gyuricza Anna: Reneszánsz kályhacsempék Északkelet-Magyarországról (Borsodi Kismonográfiák 37. Miskolc, 1992)

- yellow, green, brown, textile imprint on the back). The remain showing the coat-of­arms of Kosice dates this group back to the end of the 15th century (illustration no. II). The glazed tiles and remains from one of the earliest groups are made of lute, with green glaze (illustrations no. 17-22), with figures of animals and plants or patterns of tracery. This group can be dated back to the beginning of the 16th century. The remains no. 23-27. are made of brick clay, with coloured glaze (brown, gre­en, light blue, yellow), and are dated from the end of the 15th century. Glazed tiles from the middle of the J 6th century The tiles on the illustrations no. 241-243. are from Szerencs, one showing the Czech Lion, the other with the pattern of a garland with a string of pearls, and the third crest-tile with acanthus leaves. They are made of lute, with green-yellow-white tin-gla­ze. The first tile stove in the fortress of Szerencs has been possibly built of these glazed tiles, in the middle of the 16th century. Glazed tiles with figures, from the 16th century In the second half of the 16th century, the representation of figures in renaissance frame has been popular -and wide-spread all over Europe. More varieties of these tiles with similar patterns could have been separated in Füzér (illustrations no. 28-50). A tile with a date of year (-559) - illustration no. 33. - showing Jephthah (Jud­ges, Old Testament) has been found in Füzér. Similar remains have been found in Sze­rencs (ill. no. 244.) and in Boldogkő (ill. no. VI-VII.). A variety of the same representation is known from the fortress of Sáros (ill. no. VIII.) as well. The remains on the illustrations no. 48-50. belonged to a tile showing a king, pos­sibly King Solomon from the Old Testament. Its reconstruction in illustration has been made on the basis of a photo of a tile found in Füzér, in 1934-36. This tile has been lost since then (illustr. no. X.). These tiles, discussed in this chapter, are made without glaze, or with green glaze. Glazed tiles from the end of the 16th century and from the beginning of the 17th century A) Glazed tiles with central patterns The glazed tiles in this group are connected to each other by the same type of ornament. Their common feature is the central composition, which is related to the re­naissance panels. Tiles no. 51-80. from Füzér, no. 227-230. from Kéked, no. 123­166

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