Kiss Kitti: Kovácsolt és öntöttvas edények a magyar szabadtéri múzeumokban (A Szabadtéri Néprajzi Múzeum tárgykatalógusai, Skanzen könyvek. Szentendre, Szabadtéri Néprajzi Múzeum, 2012)

Melléklet

Weiss Manfréd: 1 vessel bears this mark. Weiss Manfréd Steel and Metalworks Ltd. was founded in 1892; it manu­factured vessels since 1922. The trademark was a con­nected W M monogram. Teschen: 1 vessel bears this mark (in Czech Tesin, in Polish Cieszyn); it was the headquarters of an Austrian­Silesian district station with the same name, the capital of the former Teschen principality on the right bank of the river Olsa, at the northern foot of Beskidek, along the railway. According to Pallas Lexicon, they traded with ironware. In the area there were several ironworks. Kamienna Skarzysko: 1 vessel bears this mark. It is a town in Poland; its foundry worked between 1836 and 1901. Fejérpatak: 1 vessel bears it. Terebesfejérpatak is situ­ated in Sub-Carpathia; in the 1850 it had a treasury iron­works which was completed in 1861 and produced iron vessels too. It was sold in 1892 and a glass factory was built in its place. VESSEL TYPES IN THE CATALOGUE Most of the iron vessels are to be found in the Upland Mar­ket Town region bourgeois equipments. There are many, mostly cast-iron vessels in the North-Hungarian Village and the Southern Transdanubia region. Least in the houses of Upper-Tisza region. The distribution of vessels is of course connected with the number of finished houses or the size of regions, the firing equipments of museum buildings and the presented year, the social status, as well as the opportuni­ties and period of collection or the changes of museologi­cal approach. Museologists collected in 1969 2 pieces, in the 1970s 62 pieces in the 1980s 52 pieces and in the 1990s 36 pieces; from 2000 96 piece of wrought and cast iron vessels. Buying from antique dealers is significant since the year of 2000, first of all from traders working in given collection ar­eas or nearby. Previously objects used to get to the museum from the house equipped or from their settlement and from villages quite near. On grounds of the catalogue's subject­matter and the chart given above it turns out that certain vessel types are countrywide current but by other types re­gional spreading shows. X. II. VII. I. III. IX. VIII. VI. R. Total Iron pot 6 16 6 10 2 3 1 2 6 50 Iron pan 8 25 11 13 6 7 7 8 9 92 3-legged pan 2 8 10 6 ­8 2 5 6 63 Tarkedli pan 1 6 ­2 1 2 2 2 2 8 Cast iron mug 6 6 ­8 1 ­­­3 22 Frying pan ­1 ­­1 ­5 ­3 10 Duck roasting pan ­1 ­­­1 ­­1 3 Bánát saucepan ­1 6 ­­­­2 1 8 Press cooker ­­­1 ­­­­­1 Total 16 62 31 38 9 19 15 17 27 237 1. chart: The vessel types in the Hungarian Open Air Museum Collection. The numbers refer to the regions: X. Kisalföld, II. Upland Market Town, VII. Southern Transdanubia, I North-Hungarian Village, III. Upper-Tisza, IX. Western Transdanubia, VIII. Bakony, Balaton-Uplands, VI. Great Plains, R. Repository. 38

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