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BARDEJOV

SKANZEN-OPEN AIR MUSEUM

By: Martin Mešša

 

The origins of Slovakia’s oldest exposition of folk architecture were efforts of Eastern Slovak museum employees. The idea to build a skanzen in this important centuries old spa was born in the 1920’s, where the disappearing relics of the folk architecture of northeastern Slovakia could be saved. Transfer of the church from Mikulášová in 1926-32 was the first accomplishment in this effort. Though they could not master enough resources to continue saving architectural relics, the idea survived, and finally at the end of the 1950’s matured to solid projects.

The aim, besides the protection and preservation of folk architecture, was also to increase the attraction of the spa for tourists; and establishing the connection of the spa and tourism with the presentation of rescued relics of folk architecture was an important contribution to visitors of this exposition, which rose on the margin of the valley between 1960 and 1965. In the ensuing years other buildings were added. Among the conservationists who took part in the preparation and realization were the project’s authors, Imrich Puškár and Blanka Pušakárová; as well as Šariš Museum employees A. Frický, J. Mihál, T. Weisz and A. Koval; and a whole range of village carpenters, builders and farmers from the villages of Frička, Bardejovská Nová Ves, Zborov, and Dlhá Lúka. Thanks to the fact that the first exhibits were built by people experienced in timber construction, the first open-air museum in Slovakia grew quite quickly. The small area, and the limited possibilities of activity in a zone for preservation of mineral waters influence the park-like method of presentation.

 

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The exhibition of the folk architecture of upper Šariš and northern Zemplín includes a rare technical relic from Bardejov, a borer for wooden water pipes. Original houses and outbuildings as well as sacred buildings and small architecture, transferred here from different parts of northeastern Slovakia, demonstrate widespread variants of timber structures as well as pile construction. The most characteristic element of folk structures of this region is the same proportion of roof material to wall material. This portion is slightly different from the neighboring regions of Spiš and Sub-Carpathian Ukraine, south Zemplín and Abov, and the northern and southern parts of Poland. The proportion of the roof to the walls is given by the horizontal division of the building as well as by the spread angle of the roof slope, which was influenced by roofing material. The location of buildings from different parts of the area together in the Museum makes this feature obvious. The largest part is devoted to the characteristic three-room house (main chamber, parlor and storage room) with subsequent addition of outbuildings (stable, barnyard sheds). This type of house is represented in the museum by a building from Kračúnovce (not far from Giraltovce), characteristic for the Topľa River basin. In most villages, the inner as well as outer walls were daubed with clay and blue-wash. Decorated in the same way is a three-room house from Hrabová Roztoka by Humenné, which does not have a chimney, so smoke from the ovens rises freely to the ceiling and then on to the attic space.

 

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The attic was used for storing the house production of corn, in chests and corn baskets daubed with clay. First the living space was built from the best quality wood and from the wood of lesser quality, under a common roof, other out-spaces were added: storage room, stable, barn, and wagon house. This continuous method of building is demonstrated in an unfinished house from Maľcovo, west of Bardejov. The space for the storage room was made by the temporary division of the parlor-though building did not continue, and at this stage the structure was transferred to the museum. It has a ridge roof with plank gable & bargeboard, thatched. The furnishing of the interior is original and shows life from the mid 20th century. Houses in Šariš were built on a high stone underpinning, and the interior was sprinkled with gravel and sand, and surfaced with clay scrabble-true of all living areas as well as of the barn. This floor is also characteristic of the widespread Lemko type, demonstrated in the park by the house of a farmer from Petrová, near Bardejov.

Houses in most of the Ruthenian villages had a storage room placed next to the main chamber. Storage rooms placed like this also have more simple variants in the same type or house from Frička and Hutka. The peculiarity of the house from Petrová is the narrow timber space (pričulok) built along the storage room, which protected the timber house against snowdrifts, and the melting from warmth coming from the storage room. Such spaces were built mostly in the valleys opening to the north. Houses around Giraltovce also have this space but constructed of wickerwork, and called a pľetar or piľetar. For better insulation, chaff was stored during the winter, as well as ľetnina, leaves on twigs, which at the end of the winter-fed the cattle. A combination of both types covers the side and back wall of the house from Hutja, which is far outside the sightseeing circle-like the belfry of 1700 from Janovce, the house from Richvald, and the Bardejov timber house with carriage-way, which are in the unfinished second part of the museum above the road.

Most interesting are the structures of the wooden timber churches, or cerkva. Outside the opened part of the area is the church from Niklová-Mikulášová, near Bardejov, already referred to, from 1730. It belongs to the group of Lemko churches with expressive front tower divided into a Baroque, so-called Wallachian cap with polychrome cornices, a balustrade, and painted clock, symbolically showing half past eleven. The church is dedicated to St. Nicolas the Bishop. Dominating the interior is a Baroque iconostasis ornamented with rich gilded carving of grape tendrils and fruit. 

 

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A second church or cerkev is also devoted to St. Nicolas, and is from the village of Zboj in the easternmost valley of northeastern Slovakia, on the Ukraine and Polish borders. This little church, also with, a very expressive tower, belongs structurally to the Boykov type. It was built in Zboj in 1706, and after 260 years was transferred to the Museum in Bardejov Spa. The whole structure is made of beams 52-58 by 12 centimeters. The fundamental base of the pile-construction tower rests on a timber choir above the entrance. All three spaces in the church are joined together and are constructed of timber. The nave has several levels, and each level has a corresponding roof, which spreads and graduates the material of the roof as well as of the whole structure. The original Baroque iconostasis has been restored from damage during a theft in 1933. It is the only original Rococo iconostasis in complete form in Slovakia. 

 

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Another interesting structure is a little belfry-gate to the church area, which was transferred to the Museum from the Ruthenian village of Nižný Orlík in upper Šariš. It was built sometime between the late 1680’s and the early 1700’s.

Proof of this is the Gothic binding of supporting piles, which creates an interesting portal from both sides. There is also a beautiful spherical roof on an octagonal base, wooden ribbed lantern, and onion dome forming the tower, with a good iron-plated cross. The little belfry from Nemcovice is of the most widespread type of belfry in the environs of Bardejov, where they were built in villages that did not have church. In Nemcovice it stood in the middle of the village and served the great estate as well as the farmers.

Today the most commonly preserved buildings from the collection of folk architecture in upper Šariš are granaries or sipance. They stored cereals, which during storage were turned with wooden shovels so as not to become musty. In granaries smoked meat was also stored, the more valuable tools, festive dress, woven textiles, important papers and money. The granary’s construction and location had to protect valuables against fire, ground and atmospheric humidity, and rain and sun. Archaic timber construction, an airy base, daubing with clay, double-plated doors and triple locks secured these conditions. All variations of this archaic type of building preserved in upper Šariš are in the museum. One can also find here a half-smoked timber drying-shed for fruit, from Buclovany, near Bardejov, and timber forge from Abrahamovce. Among the technical structures at the Ethno park (though non-functioning) is also a fuelling-mill or foľuš from Livov, west of Bardejov. It is only a reconstruction, because the original was in very bad condition. Basic parts of the interior, however, are authentic elements, which were used in the Livov mill by the miller Škripek.

Slovakia’s earliest exhibition of traditional buildings has been showing its visitors the values of folk architecture of the country’s northwestern part since the summer season of 1965. Gradually its curators have managed to install all spaces and buildings to the form that documents a particular era in the development of housing in this region, in the development of its life and architecture. Buildings in the open-air museum are a permanent source for learning about the crafts, skills, and aesthetic feelings of the inhabitants of this part of Slovakia; as well as for providing a sense for simple beauty; and an inspiration for creating an aesthetic environment in the dwellings of people today.

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Published in the Slovak Heritage Live newsletter Volume 11, No. 4, Winter 2003
Copyright © Vladimir Linder 2003 
3804 Yale Street, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5C 1P6
The above article and photographs may not be copied, reproduced, republished, or redistributed by any means including electronic, without the express written permission of Vladimir Linder. All rights reserved.