Baklaga [1] (from the Tat . Baklak - “water vessel” [2] ) - a small wooden , ceramic or metal (tin) flat travel vessel with a narrow short neck and ears on the body for threading a belt, similar to a flask for carrying and storage of liquids [3] .
A flat cylindrical or disc-shaped shape makes the baclagus comfortable to wear on the belt. Sometimes ceramic buckles have low conical legs and are decorated with colorful glazes or embossed circles, and metal buckles with engraved or chased patterns. In a number of provinces of Russia, a wooden cylindrical vessel, in which sabiten or kvass was carried on holidays, was called buccal [4] .
Notes
- ↑ Baclagus // Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language : in 4 volumes / auth. V.I. Dahl . - 2nd ed. - SPb. : Printing house of M.O. Wolf , 1880-1882.
- ↑ Fasmer M. Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language / Transl. with him. and add. O. N. Trubacheva / ed. and with the foreword. B.A. Larina . - M .: Progress , 1986. - T. I (A – D). - S. 110. - 576 p.
- ↑ L.V. Belovinsky . Baklaga // Illustrated encyclopedic historical and everyday dictionary of the Russian people. XVIII - beginning of XIX century / ed. N. Ereminoy . - M .: Eksmo, 2007 .-- S. 31 .-- 784 p.: - ill. from. - 5,000 copies. - ISBN 978-5-699-24458-4 .
- ↑ I.I.Sangin. Baklaga // Russian traditional life: Encyclopedic dictionary. - SPb. : The ABC of Classic, 2003 .-- S. 359-360. - 688 p. - 5,000 copies. - ISBN 5-352-00337-X .
Literature
- I.I.Shangina. Baklaga // Russian traditional life: Encyclopedic dictionary. - SPb. : The ABC of Classic, 2003 .-- S. 359-360. - 688 p. - 5,000 copies. - ISBN 5-352-00337-X .
- L.V. Belovinsky . Baklaga // Illustrated encyclopedic historical and everyday dictionary of the Russian people. XVIII - beginning of XIX century / ed. N. Ereminoy . - M .: Eksmo, 2007 .-- S. 31 .-- 784 p.: - ill. from. - 5,000 copies. - ISBN 978-5-699-24458-4 .