Gedenktafeln für die Galeerensklaven des Reformierten Kollegiums Sárospatak
Author
View
Keywords
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Acta Neerlandica

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
How To Cite
Abstract
Sárospatak is a prominent academic town in eastern Hungary, where three memorial
plaques were unveiled between 1936 and 1939 in memory of the galley slaves. The college
itself is a place of remembrance, representing 500 years of Protestant culture. There are
memorial plaques here to the school’s patrons, former teachers, scholars, and the many
traumas of the 20th century (World War I and II, Trianon, the Gulag camps). It is therefore
surprising that, among the eight other memorial plaques located at the entrance, three
plaques commemorate the galley slaves. The study explores the context of their creation,
the idea, the application, and the unveiling, and interprets the phenomenon. The history of
galley slavery contains not only religious but also national elements of memory, and was
suitable for depicting the world of great cataclysms and tragedies in every age, as well as
for analogically showing the ways of escaping from them.
https://doi.org/10.36392/ACTANEERL/2024/21/8