Somogy megye múltjából - Levéltári évkönyv 28. (Kaposvár, 1997)
Rezümé
RÉSUMÉ Aradi Csilla: Additions to the history of landowning of the Várdai family in the 13th - 16th centuries. The Várdai family in Somogy county slowly emerged from the insignificant lower nobility of the period after the ravage of the Tartars into the middle nobility where its members were able to hold high-ranking posts in the country. In the first period of the family history schribe Babai Bereck, clever in politics, and his sons Várdai Pál and Tamás expanded their Várdabased estates as far as Nagybajom and Rinyabesenyő in the 15th and 16th centuries and held such high offices as the primate of Esztergom, the fortress captain of Korothna and Szenyér and senechal prothonotary During the Turkish wars, however, the estates of the family went to rack and ruin, its members scattered all around. Borsa Iván: The records of the convent in Somogy county in the National Archives (Source publication) (Third issue) 1331-1340. In the previous issues the author closed the publication of the abstracts of the records with 1330. This time he lets us know the extracts of the records between 1331-1340. From the extracts of the 99 published records, we understand the scope and the operation of the convent, the land suits of the nobility, the pawning of estates, the border marks. The author shows the transcription of the records, the condition thereof, and he precisely marks the shelf-marks. Szita László: The liberation of Hungary from the Turkish occupation. The troops of the Holy Leaugue recaptured Hungary in the seventeen years' struggle against the Turkish occupation. They reaped plenty of successes in the Balkan. In the campaigns from 1683, the allied forces made up of the groops of the Empire, the German principalities, Sweden, Denmark, Bohemia, Croatia, Poland and Hungary harvested a number of great vitories. The greatest victory came at Zenta near the river Tisza on September 11, 1697. This victory made the Turks sign a peace treaty with the allies. This study commemorates the 300th anniversary of the liberation by publishing a contemporary document. Szíjártó M. István: Additions to the questions of settling down in Somogy county in the 18th century. Takint the namelist of the 103 horse and 81 foot soldiers from nonnoble population made up for the occasion of the noble insurgency of 1744 by Somogy county as the representative sample of the population of the county, the article looks into the resettlement of the comitat in the 18th century. It concludes that the importance of the settling-in may have been greater than what had been presumed by Kováts Zoltán, who had examined this issue, and the offspring of the settlers into the county may have made up the bigger part of the population of Somogy at the end of the 18th century. Most of all, the other regions of Hungary served as the source of the settling-in, mainly Transdanubia, within which Zala and Vas counties played an arguably