Társadalomtörténeti múdszerek és forrástípusok. Salgótarján, 1986. szeptember 28-30. - Rendi társadalom, polgári társadalom 1. - Adatok, források és tanulmányok a Nógrád Megyei Levéltárból 15. (Salgótarján, 1987)
Angol nyelvi összefoglalók (English Summaries)
539 people registered, of these 0,76 % belonged to the church, 2,79 % were gentlemen, 26,92 % burghers and 69,53 % other residents of the city. In 1789 out of 4170 people registered there were 0,43 % clerics, 4,33 % gentlemen, 6,90 % burgher, 0,6 % " honoratiores " (intellectuals) and 87,74 % other residents of the city. It was only the number of burghers that did not grow. They exhibited a tendency to keep to themselves. They lived in the whole period under review in the inner city. 17,57 % of those registered in 1727 were artisans or merchants, whereas in 1789 22,45 %. The majority of the city population made its living out of wine-growing. Out of the 1730 residents of Eger registered in 1727, 1015 had a vineyard-plot. Of these 0,88 % were clerics, 0,69 % gentlemen, 39,21 % burghers. The legal status of 59,22 % of the wine-plot owners remained unidentified. In 1789 1754 residents out of a total of 4170 had a vineyard-plot. Clerics made up 0,96 %of the wine-growers, 6,9 % were gentlemen, 10,15 % burgher and 81,98 % sundry other persons. The separation of artisan industry other persons. The separation of artisan industry and agriculture had not taken place yet. In 1727 nearly 50 % of artisans, in 1789 still 32 % had a plot in the vineyard as well. TAMÁS P. HORVÁTH : A Burgher of the Market-town Keszthely at the Eve of the Reform Era (The Estate of the Tinsmith György Steindl The author intends to reconstruct the everyday life and the social and economic relationships of the stratum of the craftsmen in one of the most characteristic Transdanubian market-town, to wit, in Keszthely during the first decades of the nineteenth century. As Dr. Horváth points out, the analyses of the probates, the inventories, the protocols of the public auctions, and etc. allow us to reconstruct the micro-structure of the local communities. He sest forth his research method about the reconstruction of the internal structures of the local communities on the basis of the analysis of the estate of the deceased tinsmith György Steindl (1770-1827) in Keszthely. Dr. Horváth is a joint member of the research group led by Dr. Gyula Benda in the Museum of Ethnography; his essay is a part of their research project. As far as the sources are concerned, the essay examines the following records of the ethnological documentation relating to the deceased György Steindl: 1. The register of birth, marriage, and death of the Roman Catholic Church in Keszthely; 2. The list of the inhabitants and the tax-payers recorded in 1826-27; 3. The probate of the late tinsmith György Steindl; 4. The probate of the deceased Terézia Horváth, the widow of György Steindl; 5. The protocol of the public auction of the deceased György Steindl's estates; 6. The inventory of Julianna Eichner's dowry, the adopted daughter of Terézia Horváth. Dr. Horváth reconstructed the history of Steindl-Horváth family on the