Among others, he was called up several times to Hungary, namely to the towns of Miskolc and Balássgyarmat. Our paper covers that period. Božena Němcová realized four travels to Hungary. The first one from April till May 1851 (Miskolc), the second one from August till October 1852 (Balássagyarmat), the third one from May till October 1853 (Balássagyarmat again), and the last one from August till October 1855 (mostly Slovak villages). She saw a great number of Slovak villages and became fond of Slovaks for life. She collected a lot of Slovak legends and fairy tales. The best known is Sůl nad zlato (The Salt Prince) or Dvanáct měsíčků (The Twelve Months). She also took notice of the life of Slovaks and their coexistence with the Hungarian ethnic group. This paper deals with the above mentioned issues, with remarks on everyday family and social life of both ethnic groups, keeping of the folk traditions and further ethnographic and travelling observations. Attention is paid to the works Vzpomínky z cesty po Uhřích (Hungary Travel Memories) (1854), Uherské město (Hungarian Town) (1858, 1859), Obrázky ze života slovenského (Pictures from the Slovak Life) (1859, 1860) and Z Uher (From Hungary) (1863).
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