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EN
The study presents complexly processed documentary material obtained by the research done for the purposes of the 'Ethnographic Atlas of Slovakia' (EAS) as well as by the research of the traditional culture of the Slovaks living in Poland, Ukraine, Romania, Croatia, Serbia and Bulgaria. Both types of the research were based on a questionnaire compiled for the needs of the EAS. The employed questions concerned the use of the V-address how directed from the wife to her husband, from the younger sibling to the older one, from the children to their parents, and also how the V-address was used by the godparents, parents-, brothers- and sisters-in-law. Up to now, both of them has been treated only partially and then published in the EAS and in a number of monographs on folk culture of Slovaks in Croatia and Ukraine, as well as in atlases on folk culture of Slovaks in Yugoslavia and Croatia. The topic of the T-V address used among relatives has also been dealt with in the Atlas of Traditional Culture of Slovak Minorities in Central and Southern Europe.
EN
For every museum, an indicator of its orientation is the character of its collection, research and exhibition activity. Collection activity was limited by the quantity of financial means in the 1950s and hence it does not provide a complete view of the museum's orientation. In this regard more can be learned from the museum's research and exhibition activity during the given period. The author deals in his paper with the changes which took place in the Slovak National Museum in Martin from its nationalisation in 1948 to its merger with the Slovak Museum in Bratislava in 1961. Research shows that the Museum responded to change political circumstances in its plans. These were influenced both by an organ of state - the Commissariat for Education and Culture - and by a professional organisation - the Union of Slovak Museums, which recommended dealing with the issue of new installation in Slovak museums.
Slavica Slovaca
|
2010
|
vol. 45
|
issue 2
129-135
EN
The paper summarises and at the same time compares the results of the three cartographical works - Atlas of Slovak Language, Ethnographical Atlas of Slovakia and Atlas of Traditional Culture of Slovak Minorities in Central and Southern Europe. The aim of the paper is to provide a spatial image of the occurrences of particular kinship terms, which are used in Slovakia, but also those terms that are used by Slovak minorities living in the countries of central and southern Europe.
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