Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

The Story of Fényeslitke Country House

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 1

The Story of Fényeslitke Country house

The family:
Ferenc V. Nagy (born 1850) built the house. From her first marriage, boys were born but died
early. His second marriage was to Tibezdédi Kai Veronika, from whom his three daughters
Ida, Jolán and Mariska were born.
Their eldest daughter, Ida, was taken by István Gonda from Tornyospálca, and later, in the
absence of his son's heir, he became the porter, the house, and with it many acres of land. He
was captured in German warfare during the First World War, a book mentioned in captivity.
Sons born on September 25, 1919, József Gonda, who married Ilona D. Gyüre (Ilust Dobos)
on January 1, 1941. Their first child József Oct 1944 He was born on the 3rd, just at the time
of the Russian invasion. Their daughter Ica was born on July 4, 1951.

The garden:
The house once in a blue moon, was built in 1898. The front and back houses were made of
patch wall (a wall woven with hedge) and the furnace in the atrium. Between 1920-30, the
windows were replaced as the first major renovation. He made on the good ball. The first
house and porch were paved and floored between 1940-51, and the atrium was separated. At
the top of the room, at the bottom of the back house, was the master beam, which was cut out
in the 50s. The barn stood at the well in the middle of the yard, then in 1951 it was
supplemented with a pigsty so that the chariot could be completely turned around on the unit.
This construction was carried out by József Jóni, the family transported the necessary sand
from the land of Imre Csonka (Szabadság út) in a cart. The pots for the cave were made by
Ferenc Szabó from the sticky Tisza land and the water of the canal. In 1957, a small house
was erected above the cellar. In front of a small room, resp. at the back with the granary. The
granary was a concreted room with partitions in which wheat, barley, rye and oats could be
stored separately. The flour and bran were stored on the big bench, where the ham and bacon
also hung. Between the two houses was the furnace and the susus. The last threshing in the
yard took place in August 1956. Plumbing was introduced in the 1960s.
The house located in front the romanian chatolic church. The yard was beautiful. It was full of
fruit trees, a huge mulberry tree, the fruits of which were mostly enjoyed by ducks and
poultry, in the shade the horses rested, it is a dime a dozen in Fényeslitke. There was a small
garden house in the basement, surrounded by lilacs with lots of organs. Not a single blade of
grass could grow in the yard, his land was swept.
Dikos were never used in the house, everyone had their own brothel. There were sofas, a sofa
bed, wicker and tonet chairs, and hockey sticks in the kitchen.

You might also like