Original title:
Život na slovenské vesnici v 19. století
Translated title:
Life in the Slovak village in the 19th century
Authors:
Medvecová, Mária ; Štaif, Jiří (advisor) ; Pullmann, Michal (referee) Document type: Bachelor's theses
Year:
2011
Language:
slo Abstract:
[eng][cze] This work centers on the traditional way of life in a Slovak village in the 19th century. It primarily shows the position of people in the family and the community life of the village. From a historical perspective, the work follows the changes that occurred in village society after the collapse of the feudal system and the transition to a capitalistic one which led to changes in the traditional life of the villagers. The main part of this work aims to describe the traditions, customs and irrational superstitions associated with the major phases of human life such as birth, childhood, youth, marriage and death. At the same time, it also tries to capture the transformation with the rising of capitalism that influenced well established traditions. Key words: Tradition, customs, family, Slovakia, 19th century, village, communityPráca zachytáva tradičný spôsob života na Slovenskej dedine v 19. storočí. Zobrazuje hlavne postavenie človeka v rodinnom a spoločenskom živote na dedine. Z historického hľadiska sleduje zmeny, ktoré nastali v dedinskej spoločnosti po rozpade feudálneho systému na kapitalistický a viedli tak k prevratom v tradičnom živote vidiečanov. Hlavná časť práce je zameraná na opis tradícií, zvykov a iracionálnych povier, ktoré sa spájali s najdôležitejšími fázami života človeka, a to s narodením, detstvom, mladosťou, svadbou a smrťou. Snaží sa pritom zachytiť aj premeny, ktoré ovplyvnili zaužívané tradície s nástupom kapitalizmu. Kľúčové slová: Tradície, Zvyky, Rodina, Slovensko, 19. storočie, Dedina, Spoločenstvo
Keywords:
19th century; Community; Customs; Family; Slovakia; Tradition; Village; 19. storočie; Dedina; Rodina; Slovensko; Spoločenstvo; Tradície; Zvyky
Institution: Charles University Faculties (theses)
(web)
Document availability information: Available in the Charles University Digital Repository. Original record: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/37857