Zalai Múzeum 12. 50 éves a Nagykanizsai Thúry György Múzeum (Zalaegerszeg, 2003)
Kovács Gyöngyi: Jegyzetek a kanizsai vár 16–17. századi kerámialeleteihez
166 Kovács Gyöngyi Turkish occupation period, although the majority of the latter were manufactured in the Balkanic tradition by southern Slavic potters who had arrived with the Turks. The hand-thrown pottery of the Turkish occupation period from Kanizsa includes coarse pots (Fig. 7. 1-6) and jugs. The so-called Bosnian jugs (Fig. 8) were found almost exclusively in the Topraklik. Their Bosnian parallels (FEHÉR 1959, 126-127, Pl. IL 4-7, Pl. VI. 2-3, PL IX. 10-13) suggest that they can be associated with a Bosnian population in Kanizsa (ср. EVLIA 1985, 570). The parallels of the 17 th century Hungarian pottery wares, here represented by a few glazed pot and the fragments of plates painted with a floral design (Fig. 10.1-2,5-7) reflect the emergence of folk pottery styles during the 17 th-18 th century. This study was enabled by a grant from the National Research Fund (OTKA grant no. T 025390).