Difference between revisions of "Ethnological Collection in Kasarna, Jesenice"
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− | Housed in the Kasarna, a workers’ residential building dating from the late 18th century, the [[Ethnological Collection in Kasarna, Jesenice]], arranged in [[established::2005]] by the [[Upper Sava Valley Museum, Jesenice]], depicts the culture and way of life of iron-worker's families, the history and way of life of the settlement and the history of the building, together with a reconstruction of a typical iron-workers' dwelling. | + | Housed in the Kasarna, a workers’ residential building dating from the late 18th century, the [[Ethnological Collection in Kasarna, Jesenice]], arranged in [[established::2005]] by the [[Upper Sava Valley Museum, Jesenice]], depicts the culture and way of life of iron-worker's families, the history and way of life of the settlement, and the history of the building, together with a reconstruction of a typical iron-workers' dwelling. |
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== History == | == History == | ||
− | + | The two-storey late Baroque building has three entrances and presents one of the earliest examples of workers' multi-residential housing in the inner Austrian territory. Together with other objects at Stara Sava it forms the entirety of the Bucelleni Ruard Manor, first established in the 16th century. | |
− | In Stara Sava one can | + | In Stara Sava one can also see the [[Iron-making, Mining and Palaeontologic Collection in Bucellini-Ruard Mansion, Jesenice|Bucellini-Ruard Mansion]], remnants of the blast furnace and puddling mill, the little ironworks' Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary and Roch, chimney, mill, and part of the concrete water trough. The complex is protected as a technical monument. |
== Collections == | == Collections == | ||
− | A family had a right to live in the Kasarna if one of its members was employed in the iron forge. On average 15 families lived in the building, sharing the kitchen, toilets, entrance hall, woodshed and other common places. The kitchen and a room of the workers' dwelling authentically document life in the 1930s and 1940s with the use of characteristic wooden furniture with ornaments in the bedroom and period kitchen equipment including a built-in wall range, grid iron, coffee grinding-mill and other implements which reflect the life of an iron-workers' family. | + | A family had a right to live in the Kasarna if one of its members was employed in the iron forge. On average, 15 families lived in the building, sharing the kitchen, toilets, entrance hall, woodshed and other common places. The kitchen and a room of the workers' dwelling authentically document life in the 1930s and 1940s with the use of characteristic wooden furniture with ornaments in the bedroom and period kitchen equipment including a built-in wall range, grid iron, coffee grinding-mill and other implements which reflect the life of an iron-workers' family. |
− | The building houses also a small photo gallery, the historic archives of the KID (Kranjska Industrial Society), the Jesenice Music School, a place for temporary exhibitions and various performances: workshops, summer nights, movie, theatre and music shows | + | The building houses also a small photo gallery, the historic archives of the KID (Kranjska Industrial Society), the Jesenice Music School, a place for temporary exhibitions and various performances: workshops, summer nights, movie, theatre and music shows. |
== See also == | == See also == |
Revision as of 23:09, 17 February 2010
History
The two-storey late Baroque building has three entrances and presents one of the earliest examples of workers' multi-residential housing in the inner Austrian territory. Together with other objects at Stara Sava it forms the entirety of the Bucelleni Ruard Manor, first established in the 16th century.
In Stara Sava one can also see the Bucellini-Ruard Mansion, remnants of the blast furnace and puddling mill, the little ironworks' Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary and Roch, chimney, mill, and part of the concrete water trough. The complex is protected as a technical monument.
Collections
A family had a right to live in the Kasarna if one of its members was employed in the iron forge. On average, 15 families lived in the building, sharing the kitchen, toilets, entrance hall, woodshed and other common places. The kitchen and a room of the workers' dwelling authentically document life in the 1930s and 1940s with the use of characteristic wooden furniture with ornaments in the bedroom and period kitchen equipment including a built-in wall range, grid iron, coffee grinding-mill and other implements which reflect the life of an iron-workers' family.
The building houses also a small photo gallery, the historic archives of the KID (Kranjska Industrial Society), the Jesenice Music School, a place for temporary exhibitions and various performances: workshops, summer nights, movie, theatre and music shows.
See also
- Upper Sava Valley Museum, Jesenice
- Iron-making, Mining and Palaeontologic Collection in Bucellini-Ruard Mansion, Jesenice in Stara Sava