Demeter Zsófia - Gelencsér Ferenc: Örvendezz király város! - Szent István Király Múzeum közleményei. B. sorozat 51. A Fejér Megyei Múzeumegyesült kiadványai 8. (Székesfehérvár, 2002)

A tanulmány forrásai

and the orphanage are in the back­ground, left you can see the Home for the Aged and the Weigh House still can be seen in front of the orphanage (photo by Tibor Molnár). 72. Hotel King of Hungary after the recon­struction in the 1920s. Ford Company had an agency in the building from 1927. The nice forged candelabra in front of the Hotel were made by Jungferr Budapest. 73. Nádor Street, with Schlammadinger House next to the Cistercian Convent in the foreground, the former was de­stroyed in the 2nd World War. In front of the door of the hardware shop a woman is seen with a milk cart being a characteristic transport vehicle of the market-women of Upper Town. The building of the Commercial Bank can be seen opposite the Convent. 74. Kossuth Street in 1938, with pavement made in the 1930s, from Ferenc Schmidl’s album (photo by Károly Tóth). 75. The restaurant in Árpád Baths in 1935 (photo by Lajos Szabó). 76. The Szőgyény-Marich Street, Ferenc Liszt Street today, viewed from the City Hall Square in 1936. There is Zsig­­mond Keresztes Store on the left and, on the other side, the Diocese Society House, i.e. the St. Stephen Education Center, with the Montskó blue dyeing textile shop on its ground floor. 77. The Hiemer House at the end of the 1930s, from Ferenc Schmidl’s album (photo by Károly Tóth). 78. The building of the Savings Bank of Székesfehérvár in the mouth of the City Hall Square. 79. Szabó Palace on Budai Road. Szabó as a contractor built and utilized the build­ing as a tenement house, it is the Police Headquarters today. Beside you can see the reserve cavalry barracks demol­ished recently. The early 1930s. 80. Native house of János Simor, Prince Archbishop, on the Market Square, de­molished in 1936 (photo by Tibor Molnár). 81. Széchenyi Street in 1935 (photo by József Matolcsi). 82. House at 15 Castle Boulevard demol­ished in 1934 in association with the construction of National Flag Square (photo by Zoltán Fekete). 83. Opposite the house above, there was Fekete’s photographer studio on the comer of Bognár Street and on the left of the photo you can see the building of the Museum. This also explains the fig­ures in the photo: Zoltán Fekete pho­tographer in front of the studio and József Lencsés museum guard and his children behind. The old houses were demolished to make the National Flag Square in 1936, though its size was then only half of its size today (photo by Zoltán Fekete). 84. National Flag Square with the National Flag with Relic inaugurated in 1936. Behind the monument, and where Bástya Street joins the Square, you can still see the houses which were swept away by the bombarding attacks in 1944, and the present Square occupies their places. 85. Participants in the inauguration cere­mony of the National Banner, with a new tenement house built by Géza Grünfeld in the place of the demolished houses in 1936 (photo by Jenő Ko­­váts). 86. The Museum in 1935, before the recon­struction of the facade. The reconstruc­tion also involved extension: the new picture gallery wing towards Bástya Street was connected to the Museum this time through a separate staircase from the 2nd floor of the old building. The new facade was made by dr. István Kotsis, the extension was built by Ferenc Schmidl and the new wing was constructed by Tibor Molnár. 87. The Székesfehérvár Room in the exhi­bition of the reconstructed Museum ex­tended with a new wing towards Bástya Street in 1937, with the mock-up of Prohászka Church being constructed 245

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