A Gyurkovics-lányok (lit.'The Gyurkovics Girls') is an 1893 novel by the Hungarian writer Ferenc Herczeg.

In the novel, a Hungarian mother marries off her seven daughters in clever ways.[1] The book explores "the native traditions ... concerning matrimony as the single career open to women, the strict seniority rights to marriage in a family of many daughters, and the code of honor compelling a youth to marry the girl with whom he has been caught in a flirtation".[2]

Herczeg wrote two more novels about the Gyurkovics family. A Gyurkovics-fiuk (lit.'The Gyurkovics Boys') was published in 1895 and Gyurka és Sándor (lit.'Gyurka and Sándor') in 1899. A Gyurkovics-lányok was the basis for the 1911 play Seven Sisters written by Edith Ellis, which became successful internationally.[2] The novel and play have been adapted into the films The Seven Sisters (1915), Gyurkovicsarna (1920) and A Sister of Six (1926).[3]

References


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