Németh Szandra - Saly Noémi: Catering for guests, being a guest. Permanent exhibition on Hungarian hospitality (Budapest, 2016)

Council in 1838 to open his own confectionery. He went bankrupt in 1844 but he tried again to save his business, so he continued his work in Urak Street (now PetőfiSándor Street), then in Király Street. He was last seen as an independent confectioner in the Register of Companies and Traders in Pest in 1852. In 1850 his shop furniture was bought by a confectioner in Buda, Ede Ferenc Friedl, who was just opening his shop at 142 Fő Street (now 20 Fő Street). ?is beautiful furniture served three generations of his family, even when moving to 6 Corvin Square, until it was confiscated during nationalisation of their business in 1952. ?is furniture then was moved back to 20 Fő Street, and later in the mid-60ies it was col­lected by the Museum of Catering. ?eir shop sign depicting goddess Flora was painted by Jakab Varságh in 1839 and it is currently owned by the Budapest History Museum. 12 ◆‍ A portal to Friedl’s Confectionery, 1910s ◆‍ ‍ Brass bowl for wafer tubes, 1890s

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