Cseri Miklós, Füzes Endre (szerk.): Ház és ember, A Szabadtéri Néprajzi Múzeum évkönyve 8. (Szentendre, Szabadtéri Néprajzi Múzeum, 1992)
MIKLÓS ZSUZSA-SABJÁN TIBOR: Késő középkori szemeskályha Galgahévíz-Szentandrás-parton
9). The cupola of the stove rested on a frame of boards propped against each other. The spaces between the boards were filled with wicker (111. 10). The fire in the stove consumed the frames but their imprints remain in the baked mud. Surveying the large number of similar finds, we can follow how the type of stove unearthed in Galgahévíz was gaining popularity in most of contemporary Hungary. These were the simple tile stoves, used mainly by the elite in the second half of the 15th century and the early years of the 16th. The majority of findings were discovered in forts, town houses and buildings owned by the Church, mainly by monasteries. Such stoves were not used in peasant houses; they occur only sporadically in villages.