Nincs a Macse-ban
LNincs hasonló a mormonoknál, aki passzolna, se születésre, se saját gyerekre
According to the 1869 Hungarian Census, Jakub Pavlik / Kuba Pavlik, b. 1808; and his second wife, Anna Seliga / Hanka Seliga, b. 1842; and the children of Jakub Pavlik with either his first or second wife: Jan Pavlik / Jass Pavlik, b. 1836; Francisek Pavlik / Franek Pavlik, b. 1841; Andrej Pavlik / Jendrek Pavlik, b. 1848; Valenty Pavlik / Valek Pavlik, b. 1850; Rozalia Pavlik / Rosa Pavlik, b. 1862; Anna Pavlik / Hanka Pavlik, b. 1864; and Josef Pavlik / Juzek Pavlik, b. 1868; lived in Fridman #16.
Also living in house #16 were: Jozef Pavlik, b. 1836, and his wife, Agnes Iglar, b. 1842, and their children: Maria Pavlik, b. 1863, and Michael Pavlik, b. 1865. Given that they lived together, Jakub Pavlik and Jozef Pavlik were probably related.
Jakub Pavlik is identified in the 1869 Hungarian Census as a farmer. The other members of the household are identified as “farmer’s helpers.” The house had a ground floor, two sleeping rooms and a pantry. Jakub Pavlik also had a barn and two stalls. There was no schedule of livestock in the census records. The census records also identify each member of the household as having been born in Fridman and as being Roman Catholic. Kuba Pavlik household, Fridman #16, “Vagyonosszeiras, 1869,” (Hungarian Census, 1869), FHL microfilm 2162284.