Mrs Iván Kovács warmly invites all those who love and are interested in Hungarian folk art to view her private ethnographic collection. Among other things, visitors can see a traditional kitchen corner, a summer open-air painting workshop where handmade small...
Built in 1905 and renovated in 1997, the Fridrich Photography Museum (the museum’s industrial history exhibition space) is the country’s only rural photo museum. The building, which is a significant feature of the townscape, houses photographs, equipment, tools and instruments...
The Private Collection of Mrs László Pallagi. When she opened her exhibition in 2018, she displayed 400 pieces; since then, this number has grown to 700. Among the colourful figures, a few distinctive characters stand out: cheerful Venetian and Harlequin...
The Southern Great Plain Postal History Memorial Room is housed in the Post Office building on the town’s main street. The exhibition was established in 2003 by a group of postal workers as the result of several decades of collecting....
The Gyuricza Vintage Vehicle and Antiques Museum is an unmissable exhibition venue when strolling through the town centre. We find ourselves transported to a forgotten world that preserves a small island of the past. The gleaming chrome and marvellous designs...
One of Szentes’s oldest brick houses, built around 1830, was originally a prestigious town house; one of the Károlyi family’s stewards lived here, and indeed, oral tradition holds that Petőfi’s father-in-law, Ignác Szendrey, also resided here. From around 1920, Péter...
This beautiful bridge connects Széchenyi Grove with Liget Street. In 1982, our town hosted the National Esperanto Peace Meeting, and the bridge, built in 1981, was named in honour of this event. Almost four decades later, in 2019, it was...
Where culture and entertainment meet. Szentes’s main square, in the heart of the town, hosts various festivals, events and fairs, and from here you can also step straight into the József Koszta Museum; the Great Reformed Church is also located...
Szentes’s first artesian well was drilled almost 140 years ago The water source, opened in 1886, was complemented a year later by a group of statues brought from France. This work of unparalleled beauty graced the town’s main square until...
Adjacent to Kossuth Square is the slightly smaller, regularly landscaped Erzsébet Square. It was formerly known as Holy Trinity Square, named after the Holy Trinity statue erected on its western side in 1886.











