Gyulai Éva - Viga Gyula (szerk.): Történet - muzeológia : Tanulmányok a múzeumi tudományok köréből a 60 éves Veres László tiszteletére (Miskolc, 2010)
KÉZMŰVESSÉG - IPARTÖRTÉNET - Csiffáry Gergely: Új adatok a Pruzsinszky család apátfalvi kőedénygyári bérletéhez
IRODALOM CSIFFÁRY Gergely 1997 Bélapátfalvi keménycserép. Szerk.: PETERCSÁK Tivadar. StudiaAgriensial 8. Eger KATONA Imre 1977 Miskolci kőedénygyárak. Szerk.: SZABADFALVI József. Borsod megyei Kismonográfiák 4. Miskolc LADÁNYI Miksa (szerk.) 1936 Hevesvármegyei Ismertető és Adattár. Budapest. A Magyar Városok és Vármegyék Monográfiája XX. Művészeti Lexikon 1975. IV. kötet. Főszerk.: ZÁDOR Anna-GENTHON István. Budapest Addenda to the lease of the Pruzsinszky family's stoneware factory at Apátfalva A small monograph. The stoneware factory at Bélapátfalva , was published by the present author in 1997. Although the new data discovered during the years since the publication have not altered the major strands of the factory's history, a few new documents discovered since the book's publication shed new light on the period when the factory was leased by the Pruzsinszky family. Photos depicting a group of the factory's workers have not yet been published either in the lengthier studies on the factory's history or in monographs on the ceramics industry in Flungary. Taken in 1917, the photo presented here portrays a group of fifty individuals (including István Pruzsinszky, the factory's leaseholder at the time), as well as fifteen female workers, among whom a few child workers can be seen. This photograph confirms that in contrast to the official statistics, the leaseholders had more workers than the number they had officially reported to the authorities. Another interesting aspect of the period when the factory was leased by the Pruzsinszky family (1909-1920) is that in addition to its traditional products, the Apátfalva ceramics factory occasionally accepted commissions for individual pieces as shown by a Seder plate brought to light in 1976, of which a photo and a description have survived. This vessel had been made in the factory during the period when it was leased by the Pruzsinszky family. Seder plates are used for arranging various symbolic foods used by Jews during the first two days of Passover. Gergely Csiffáry 136