H. Szilasi Ágota - Várkonyi Péter - Bujdosné Pap Györgyi - Császi Irén (szerk.): Agria 50. (Az egri Dobó István Vármúzeum Évkönyve - Annales Musei Agriensis, 2017)
Császi Irén: Bakszeker, járom, talyiga. Szán- és szekérformák a Dobó István Vármúzeum JátéKgyűjteményében
Takács Ferenc 1923 A hugyagi nyelvjárás alak- és mondattana. ELTE Magyar Nyelvtudományi Intézetének kéziratos anyaga. Tészabó Júlia 2011 Gyermekjátékok. Megtalálható: http://www.homoludens.hu/ node/30278. RÖVIDÍTÉSEK ENA Egri Néprajzi Adattár DIV N Dobó István Vármúzeum Néprajzi Gyűjtemény DÍVJ Dobó István Vármúzeum Játékgyűjtemény Irén Császi WOODEN CARTS, YOKES, WHEELBARROWS Different Types of Sledges and Carts in the Toy Collection of the Dobó István Castle Museum The wooden toys of the collection include toys made by children, items made for children by craftsmen or artisans, as well as manufactured products. These artefacts are imitations of full-size sledges and carts, called mimicking toys. They were made by children, boys aged 8-10, parents or grandparents. Mostly soft wood (pine, maple), sometimes hard wood (beech, oak) or green wicker was used to make them. The villages in the Bükkalja and Mátra regions, where the Palóc people lived, were characterised by activities and trades that used wood from the surrounding forests. These wooden products were mainly sold in the markets and fairs in Eger during the 18th and 19th centuries. One of the main activities here was the production of wooden yokes (in Felsőtárkány, Cserépfalu and Nagyvisnyó). This traditional craft was passed on from father to son, ensuring the survival of the tradition. Children made their own toys, thus learning the tricks of the trade they would inherit. This study presents the increased use of wooden carts, yokes, painted horse-carriages and toy carts from a historical and geographical perspective, and discusses the procedures applied later in time. 220