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    PadĂĄnyi BĂ­rĂł MĂĄrton veszprĂ©mi pĂŒspök mƱvĂ©sz- Ă©s mesterköre (adalĂ©kok a 18. szĂĄzad közĂ©psƑ Ă©vtizedeinek dunĂĄntĂșli mƱvĂ©szetĂ©hez)

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    MĂĄrton PadĂĄnyi BĂ­rĂł led the diocese of VeszprĂ©m from 1745 to 1762. Earlier he was the deputy to the sickly bishop ÁdĂĄm AcsĂĄdy and the head of the chapter supporting the bishop. His aristocratic patron during his ecclesiastic career was chancellor of the Habsburg and the Hungarian court, Count Lajos BatthyĂĄny. As the charter issued by King Stephen I in 1009 proves, the diocese of VeszprĂ©m was one of the largest, and was still in the mid-18th century. It spread from the large curve of the Danube in the north to the Drava separating the country from Croatia in the south. From 1541 to the end of the 17th century the area belonged to the Ottoman Empire. Since remaining Hungary never acknowledged this officially, it was constantly a battlefield. The territory of the diocese got largely depopulated, the ecclesiastic organization with the buildings perished. Reconstruction could not begin before the end of the 17th century and could only make slow progress for the extensive destruction. The re-organization of the diocesan structure was begun by MĂĄrton BĂ­ró’s predecessors. In the surviving and re-populated villages, they reorganized the parishes and the construction of church also began, partly supported by the diocese and in greater part by the landowners in their private estates. MĂĄrton BĂ­rĂł took part in the construction spree as bishop AcsĂĄdy’s deputy and a member of the VeszprĂ©m chapter, rebuilding several ruined medieval churches. Since the middle ages the seat of the diocese was VeszprĂ©m, but at that time it was mainly inhabited by Protestants. As BĂ­rĂł was not on good terms with them, he shifted his seat to SĂŒmeg not far away on the northern shore of the Balaton, to another ancient centre of the diocese. Thus, for several decades, the small town at the foot of the medieval castle where the bishop’s predecessors lived during the 150 years of Turkish occupation became the centre from where he organized and controlled the construction of churches and parishes in his diocese the size of half Pannonia. The monumental project required building specialists in the first place. BĂ­rĂł settled masons, carpenters and other artisans the constructions needed in SĂŒmeg. If the necessary workers were not at hand, he borrowed some, particularly stone carvers, from the squires. He also contracted painters, sculptors and other artists of nationwide renown from larger cities, GyƑr, Sopron, even Buda. To decorate the interior of the SĂŒmeg parish church he had built, master builder who planned his buildings and supervised their construction was Paul Mojser, who arrived from South German or Austrian areas probably via GyƑr and settled in SĂŒmeg. In addition, other brick-layers, carpenters, brick-makers, tilers, blacksmiths, locksmiths, joiners settled also in SĂŒmeg, as well as painters, stone carvers, sculptors, stuccoists from VeszprĂ©m, KƑszeg, Keszthely, PĂĄpa, Pest and Zirc were involved in the completion of churches, parish and farm buildings. The employed artisans included Maulbertsch’s colleagues Andreas Brugger who had come with him from Vienna and painters Valentin Krautham who died in SĂŒmeg in 1758 and his pupil Johann Peckl. The latter bought a house and settled in SĂŒmeg, where he received the commissions from squires to decorate different churches all over Pannonia. In addition to ecclesiastic buildings the bishop had secular buildings, first of all his own residence, built in SĂŒmeg. The mansion, together with the outhouses, stables, granary, workshops for the craftsmen, were erected by the building specialists working on the churches. In addition, he also had dwellings for the overseers, school, schoolmaster’s house and pub built. Starting with the bishop’s mansion, all buildings were planned by Mojser and built by the artisans of SĂŒmeg, Keszthely and VeszprĂ©m. The interiors were decorated by artists and craftsmen borrowed from other locations. It is also possible that some rooms of the mansion were adorned by Maulbertsch’s frescoes. With the death of MĂĄrton BĂ­rĂł the leading role of SĂŒmeg declined. His successor bishop IgnĂĄc Koller restored the seat of the diocese to VeszprĂ©m where he had the still extant palace built by one of the most famous architects of his age, Jakab Fellner.</jats:p

    A kastĂ©lyĂ©pĂ­tĂ©s folyamata a 16–17. szĂĄzadi MagyarorszĂĄgon a kirĂĄlyi engedĂ©lytƑl a befejezĂ©sig

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    A kora Ășjkori, 16–17. szĂĄzadi levĂ©ltĂĄri forrĂĄsanyag, mind az Ă­rott, mind a kĂ©pi forrĂĄsok, lehetƑvĂ© teszik, hogy felvĂĄzolhatĂł legyen — elsƑsorban a KirĂĄlyi MagyarorszĂĄg terĂŒletĂ©n — a kastĂ©lyĂ©pĂ­tkezĂ©sek folyamata. Az a gyakorlat, amelynek sorĂĄn az Ă©pĂ­tĂ©si engedĂ©ly beszerzĂ©sĂ©tƑl, a tervezĂ©sen ĂĄt, a kivitelezĂ©sig bonyolĂ­tottĂĄk az Ă©pĂ­tkezĂ©st. A felhasznĂĄlt forrĂĄsanyag lehetƑsĂ©get teremt, hogy nĂ©hĂĄny ĂĄltalĂĄnosĂ­thatĂł megfigyelĂ©st tegyĂŒnk, ĂĄm nyilvĂĄnvalĂłan tovĂĄbbi forrĂĄs- Ă©s Ă©pĂŒletkutatĂĄsra van szĂŒksĂ©g ahhoz, hogy tovĂĄbb formĂĄlhassuk, gondolhassuk a 16–17. szĂĄzadi kastĂ©lyok Ă©pĂ­tĂ©störtĂ©netĂ©t. A rövid tanulmĂĄny elsƑsorban az Ă©pĂ­tkezĂ©sek hogyanjĂĄra Ă©s mikĂ©ntjĂ©re kĂ­vĂĄn koncentrĂĄlni, miközben az Ă­rott forrĂĄsanyagbĂłl felsejlik egy összetettebb kĂ©p a korszak mƱvelƑdĂ©s-, technika- Ă©s gazdasĂĄgtörtĂ©netĂ©rƑl, valamint mentalitĂĄstörtĂ©netĂ©rƑl
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