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Acta onomastica
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2012
|
vol. 53
|
issue 1
101-117
EN
During the historical study of glassmaking in Jeseníky mountains it is necessary not only to work with the written archival sources that rarely occur in middle ages and early modern times but also with regional local history literature and cartographic sources. There were excerpted some toponyms relating to the history of glassmaking in the district in question from these written and cartographic sources. They helped to locate some habitats of extinct glassworks. Collecting of material from these sources has confirmed the legitimacy of these exploring sources. Pottery founded on one of these deposits helped to determinate dating of activities in glassworks and moved the beginning of the glassmaking in this part of northern Moravia already to the middle of the 14th century.
EN
During the historical study of glassmaking in the Jeseníky mountains it is necessary to work with the written archival sources (that rarely occur in Middle Ages and early modern times), old regional history literature and also with cartographic sources. There are some toponyms relating to the history of glassmaking excerpted from these written and cartographic sources. They would probably be able to locate some habitats of defunct glassworks.
EN
The article concerns a contract made in 1376 between glazier Mikołaj Queisser and Jan of Głogów for the supply of 3,200 pieces of glass for glazing windows to an unknown address. The author identifies the Silesian Mikołaj “from the Kwisa” and the dean of the Głogów collegiate, Jan, among the parties to the contract. She shows that the glass was most probably intended for St. George’s Chapel in Głogów.
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EN
The Křivoklát Highlands is especially known for metal mining. In the past centuries there were also glassworks on the tradition with glassworks Antonin Rückl and sons in Nižbor founded in 1903 and a small one Glasstar in Nenačovice since 1996. We excerpted several toponyms relating to the history of glassmaking in the past and present from written and cartographic sources. The oldest glassworks in monitored location (founded by an important member of the branched family of glassmakers foreman Kryštof Schürer in 1600) was near the village Broumy. They supply their products to Prague to the imperial court of Rudolf II.
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