Ópusztaszer

Ópusztaszer ( until 1974 Sövényháza ) is a municipality in Csongrád, in the Southern Great Plain in the south of Hungary, known by the " Feszty Panorama " on the 55 -acre outdoor museum.

Geography

Geographical Location

Ópusztaszer situated in the 22,000 hectare nature reserve Pusztaszer with groves, meadows and rivers between the highway E75 and the Tisza.

Early 1970s was the place created and expanded Ópusztaszer on the initiative of the German Socio graph Ferenc Erdei. The work has been to 1995, led by the Directorate of Museums in Csongrád until they were taken over by the Company to public utility. The architect György Csete is one who built in 1992 the Forest church with a museum to commemorate the conquest in the 11th century.

The Feszty panorama

After his return from Paris and on the advice of his father, the writer Mór Jókai, began in 1892 Árpád Feszty on the giant screen supplied from Belgium, designed by architect Adolf Feszty building for the panorama image to paint.

The 120 m long, 15 m high and forming in a circle of 38 m diameter panorama, the episodes of the Conquest to 896 shows for two years, from 1892 to 1894 worked Árpád Feszty, László Pál Mednyánszky and Vágó on the panoramic image.

Going clockwise, the visitor can watch the scenes with the matching sound effects, the most important episodes are illuminated with light rays.

Open-Air Museum and Ruin Garden

The museum contains the different variants of peasant culture and the typical scenes of public life around the 18th century are shown. On display are a school, a farm with stables, sheds, granaries, wine and fruit and vegetable garden.

A fishing, wrought with Wagner and saddlery with the still associated farms, a windmill, village shop, fire engines and the garden of ruins can be visited. According to tradition, the conquering Hungarians have pitched their Zellte in the year 896 at this point and determines the fields for the individual tribes. At the turn of the 10th to the 11th century as the Landhahme was completed, were the followers of the tribal leader Ond build a church.

The yurt -shaped building, where the treasures of nature are visible, are made ​​of pine and were bent with an ancient technique to the house.

Village street in the open-air museum of Ópusztaszer.

Information board at the Open Air Museum of Ópusztaszer.

Genealogy family tree on display at the Panopticon.

Floor plans of the monastery and the church of Ópusztaszer.

Wood slice of a sequoia with 5.4 to 6.3 m in diameter, 80 cm thick section weighs 7.5 tons.

Gallery of the Hungarian princes in the Open Air Museum

Géza ( 972-997 )

István I. (997-1038)

András I. (1046-1060)

Béla I. (1060-1063)

Sámuel Aba (1041-1044)

Ladislaus I (1077-1095)

Béla III. (1172-1196)

Andrew II (1205-1235)

Béla IV (1235-1270)

László IV (1272-1290)

Louis the Great (1342-1382)

Sigismund of Luxembourg (1387-1437)

Hunyadi János

Hunyadi Mátyás (1458-1490)

István Báthory (1571-1575)

Bocskai István (1604-1606)

Ferenc Rákóczi II (1702-1711)

Lajos Batthyány

Count István Széchenyi (1791-1860)

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