Cseri Miklós - Horváth Anita - Szabó Zsuzsanna (szerk.): Discover Rural Hungary!, Guide (Szentendre, Hungarian Open Air Museum, 2007)

II Upland Market Town

II Upland Market Town Upland is the historical name for the territory of the northern mountain range. The market towns, which developed in the region between the rivers Ipoly and Bodrog, were the character­istic settlements of the area. Their privileged position (rights to hold markets, electing magis­trates, freedom to travel and inherit) differentiated them from the serfs of the neighbouring vil­lages. Market towns were medi­ating culture between the rural peasants and nobles and the civilians of the free royal towns. The cultural significance of the region is indicated by the fact that Vizsoly was the birthplace of the preacher Gáspár Károlyi who first trans­lated the Bible into Hungarian. Ferenc Kazincy a prominent member of the Hungarian neologist movement also lived in Zemplén County. The Upland was also popu­lated by large numbers of Slovakian, Polish, Ruthenian, German, Greek and Jewish inhabitants. The Roman Catholic majority lived together with Protestant and Lutheran com­munities in some areas. The population was not high - maxi­mum 5000 persons more than

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