Döringháza Pesten a Bétsi utcában

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Javaslati Harmintzadház szerepel a kép alján.

Dörling House in Bétsi Street of Pest. Suggested as a Harmincadház (for taxes). The thirtieth or thirtieth customs (Hungarian: harmincad, Latin: tricesima) was a tax on foreign trade in the Kingdom of Hungary.

A charter that Andrew II of Hungary issued for the Benedictine Lébény Abbey in 1208 preserved the earliest reference to the thirtieth. According to the charter, wine and foodstuffs delivered for the monks and their guests were exempt from all tolls and the thirtieth at Győr and on the bridges of the rivers Rába and Rábca. Royal revenue from the thirtieth amounted at 1,500 marks when Andrew II granted it to his daughter, Yolanda in 1235. According to a scholarly theory, the granting of customs and tolls to ecclesiastic institutions from the late 12th century gave rise to the collection of the thirtieth, because it represented the part of the revenues that the kings preserved for themselves or for their queens.

Title(s), language
language hungarian
language english
Subject, content, audience
subject Városkép
Time and places
temporal reference Pest
Attributes
medium paper
extent 11 x 15 cm
colour image black and white
format jpeg
Legal information
rightsholder MKVM
access rights research permit needed
Source and data identifiers
source MKVM
registration number KF_74_27
registration number 9. Cégér, Emlékmű, Városkép, Épület, Síremlék