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Slavica Slovaca
|
2016
|
vol. 51
|
issue 1
71 - 79
EN
The paper looks on the persona of a writer from the Age of Reason, who had a leading role in the cultural life of Slovakia J. I. Bajza in context with new research. The chosen objects of research belong to the exposition of his literature and biography in Dolné Dubové. The author compares her results with archival articles, which publish present findings in scientific literature.
EN
Slovak Slavistics has adopted the interdisciplinary research approach based on examining the processes involved in language, literature, history, culture, ethnics and religion. From a scholarly and investigative point of view, Slovak Slavistics is primarily concerned with researching Slovak and Slavic relations, and Slovak and non-Slavic relations. Although Slavistics at home and abroad has been affected by the recession, it maintains its role of accelerating systematic and comprehensive investigation. The priority of Slovak Slavistics, both in a domestic and international context, is to safeguard scholarly outputs and make them available in the competitive international arena. Ensuring continuity in Slavistic research is also important and is not merely a question of prestige, but is also a fundamental means of continually improving the quality of the academic discipline. Internationally recognised Slavistic research is conducted in collaboration with the Ján Stanislav Institute of Slavistics at the Slovak Academy of Sciences. The institute sees modern Slavistics in Slovakia as having currency and exigency. Slovak Slavistic research is indispensable, provides continuity and constitutes an inseparable component of wider Central European and international Slavistic research.
EN
In Jan Stanislav Institute of Slavistics of SAS in Bratislava the research associated with the systematic terrain collection and research of Cyrillic writings connected with the tradition of Byzantine-Slavic rite in Slovakia has been proceeding since 2000. The entire digitized set of collected origins represents Cyrillic manuscripts and printed texts from the 15th to the19th century as well. The major part of digitized collections consists of liturgical and sacral books written in the Cyrillic script in Church Slavic which has been using as a liturgical language of the church of Byzantine-Slavic rite up to the present day. In the database in addition to the liturgical books there are also non-liturgical Cyrillic writings, for example manuscript songbooks of para-liturgical songs, commentaries on the gospels, sermons and catechetical writings or administrative monuments. The basic characteristics of origins of the Cyrillic manuscripts and samples of the individual manuscripts are published in the fourth volume of an edition Monumenta Byzantino-Slavica et Latina Slovaciae (Roma – Bratislava – Košice 2013). Recipes describing folk healing practices in the household of farmers belong to the ethnographically valuable Cyrillic manuscripts. Within the supplementum of the journal Slavica Slovaca (2014) two Cyrillic manuscripts from 1790 and 1791 are published whose author is Mikuláš Teodorovič, Greek Catholic priest from Michalovce. In 1797 – 1804 both Teodorovič’s manuscripts held Ján Žatkovský, priest in Ďačov. In 1842 – 1854 manuscripts belonged to Anton Habin, priest in Pichne. The other information about the holding of manuscript we have from the Hiador Stripskij’s manuscript (he was an ethnographer, bibliographer, linguist, journalist, translator and a literary man; the author of many ethnographical works, linguistic essays and bibliographies) that is preserved in the archive of the St. Adalbert Society in Trnava. Manuscripts contain recipes and instructions for the treatment of human diseases and procedures for the protection of grain, fruit, vegetable and other agricultural plants in the field. They also include instructions for the healing diseases of domestic animals, especially cattle, horses, sheep and pigs. The special part of manuscripts represents mots and wise saws written by M. Teodorovič in the form of questions and answers. Both manuscript healing handbooks are written in Cyrillic cursive font that was commonly applied in quite a number of various manuscripts in the second half of the 18thcentury. We transliterate the text from manuscripts also with the original punctuation without any modifications.
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