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Slavica Slovaca
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2015
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vol. 50
|
issue 1
58 - 73
EN
The importance of these no-knowing documents from Šariš from 1775 is: it is a rare official ecclesiastical and administrative memory, which testifies above the tolerance and respect among Slovaks, Hungarians, Germans and Ruthens who they lived side by side. From the document is showed that there was a close link between the Church, respectively local spiritual and believers which was manifested in the use of languages. The seats of the Latin (Roman Catholic) parishes have been used Slovak language (with a few exceptions, when they used the Hungarian and German) and at the seats of the Uniate parishes (Greek Catholic) were registered Ruthenian language. This stereotype was transferred to general awareness, but at the lists of Zemplínska stool from the same period this rule does not apply fully, which is obvious from Barkoci visitation from the 18th century.
Musicologica Slovaca
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2022
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vol. 13 (39)
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issue 1
141 - 147
EN
The text presents new discoveries about three members of the Plotz family: Caspar Plotz (ca. 1580–1633), Johann Plotz (1608–1680), and Georg Plotz (1614–1661). All three were involved in music culture, worked as organists in Lutheran churches, and copied and owned music manuscripts. The parish registers from the Lutheran church in Brzeg/Brieg, hitherto not examined by musicologists, have provided new information on the Plotz family, and enabled identification of biographical details. The newly found source testimonies about Caspar Plotz’s life in Brzeg, and the baptism records of his sons, confirmed the relationships between Silesian music culture and that of Spiš and Šariš.
Mesto a dejiny
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2015
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vol. 4
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issue 1
52 – 77
EN
Šariš existed within the large county of Novum Castrum (Ujvár) in the 11th – 12th century. The author attempts to introduce more closely the crucial medieval royal estates of Lipovec and Solivar, which belonged to the domain of Árpád dynasty in 12th – 13th century. They were the part of the royal Šariš forest in the neighbourhood of the Slanské Hills. The proof of the existence of the royal Šariš forest can be found in historical sources in which it is mentioned mostly under the Latin term locus venationis or under the local Hungarian names, such as Nerlezhygh, Nyrlezhege, Nyrlyz; Bichachlesi, Bykachleswy, Bykachlesy; Keralzalasa, Kyralzallasa; Hulloudzalasa. All those names and terms suggest the existence of royal hunting lodges which were connected with royal road (via domini regis, magna via, via regalis) that kings used to move from one royal demesne to another. The royal roads linked the royal courts, villages and royal forests, where Hungarian rulers resided mostly because of hunting. On Árpád dynasty lands in middle Šariš, one could find churches or chapels the patrons saint of which were the saints symbolizing the dynasty tradition and the cult of saints from the royal family (Saint Stephen, Saint Imrich and Saint Ladislav). The historical presence of the churches demonstrates that the mentioned estates belonged to Árpád dynasty in the 12th century, if not sooner.
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