Minca Krkovič

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Born
Minca Krkovič

(1858-06-02)June 2, 1858
Vrh pri Fari, Austrian Empire
Died(1933-04-13)April 13, 1933 (aged 84)
Hrib pri Fari, Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Occupationsfield labourer, folk singer
Minca Krkovič – Minca Hatova
Born
Minca Krkovič

(1858-06-02)June 2, 1858
Vrh pri Fari, Austrian Empire
Died(1933-04-13)April 13, 1933 (aged 84)
Hrib pri Fari, Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Occupationsfield labourer, folk singer

Minca Krkovič, also known as Minca Hatova, (2 June 1858–13 April 1933) was a Slovenian field labourer and folk singer. Most of the folk songs of Kostel have been preserved through her.[1]

She was born on 2 June 1858 into a Slovenian family in Vrh pri Fari, at a house known as "pri Liščevih".[2][3] Her mother was the innkeeper and grocer Neža Lisac (1827–1894) from Vrh pri Fari, and her father was the innkeeper and grocer Jože Krkovič (1819–1894) from Selnik.[2][3] She had one older and one younger sister.[2] In his youth, her father had probably worked in Hungary, where he picked up the frequent conversational use of the Hungarian word "hat", meaning "so, then, well". Because of this he acquired the nickname "Hat", and his daughters became known as "Hatove" (Hat girls).[2] Her parents were uneducated and unable to calculate accounts, and therefore managed the inn poorly, which led to its failure.[2] Shortly thereafter, their grocery was robbed.[2] They were forced to sell their house and land, move into a small hut, and support themselves through field labour on other farms.[2] Minca did not attend school and remained illiterate throughout her life.[2]

Work

Later life and death

References

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