2024. May 4. Saturday
House of Terror Museum - Budapest
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Address: 1062, Budapest Andrássy út 60.
Phone number: (1) 374-2600
E-mail: muzeum@terrorhaza.hu
Opening hours: Tue-Sun 10.00-18.00
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The exhibition has closed for visitors.
2006.10.21. - 2007.10.23.
Museum tickets, service costs:
Ticket
(valid for the temporary exhibitions, the permanent exhibition is not included )
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1000 HUF
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/ capita
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Ticket for adults
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2000 HUF
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Group ticket for adults
(from over 20 people)
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1500 HUF
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/ capita
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Ticket for students
(EU citizens from the age of 2 to 26 or with ISIC Card )
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1000 HUF
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Group ticket for students
(from over 20 people)
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800 HUF
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/ capita
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Ticket for pensioners
(EU citizens from the age of 62 to 70)
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1000 HUF
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Group ticket for pensioners
(from over 20 people)
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800 HUF
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/ capita
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Supplementary fee
(valid for the temporary exhibitions, extra ticket for the permanent exhibition )
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500 HUF
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/ capita
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Group guide
(max. 30 people)
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6000 HUF
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Group guide
(2 groups, max. 60 people)
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8000 HUF
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Group guide
(max. 30 people)
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8000 HUF
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Group guide
(2 groups, max. 60 people)
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15000 HUF
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Audio guide
(in English, German)
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1500 HUF
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Young men of March, Guys from Pest. 100 years separated them, but their youth, their belief in freedom and bravery were the same.
They opposed tyranny, censorship and the foreign invaders in 1848 to help Hungary become Hungary. They wanted it to be a country that solved her own problem, who had a responsible government and politicians. In 1956, they faced communist dictatorship for an independent and free Hungary.
Who were these Guys from Pest? They where teenagers, almost kids, who, in their teens, knew everything of how to be silent, of tyranny, the continuous and unbearable terror, as well as social insecurity. They were teenagers who owned the fears and the codes of terror of their parents. They knew the taste of lies as at school they had to live through the never-ceasing and terrorizing brainwashing. They knew how to be careful, just as how to trust as one simple word could put them and their families into hell.
The Guys from Pest were the youngest heroes of the Revolution and War of Independence of 1956. They had nothing to loose. Some of them could hardly carry his gun. They upraised against tyranny with the stubbornness of teenagers, as they wanted to live a life without fear and anxiety. We show their fate at the temporary exhibition of the House of Terror Museum.
They opposed tyranny, censorship and the foreign invaders in 1848 to help Hungary become Hungary. They wanted it to be a country that solved her own problem, who had a responsible government and politicians. In 1956, they faced communist dictatorship for an independent and free Hungary.
Who were these Guys from Pest? They where teenagers, almost kids, who, in their teens, knew everything of how to be silent, of tyranny, the continuous and unbearable terror, as well as social insecurity. They were teenagers who owned the fears and the codes of terror of their parents. They knew the taste of lies as at school they had to live through the never-ceasing and terrorizing brainwashing. They knew how to be careful, just as how to trust as one simple word could put them and their families into hell.
The Guys from Pest were the youngest heroes of the Revolution and War of Independence of 1956. They had nothing to loose. Some of them could hardly carry his gun. They upraised against tyranny with the stubbornness of teenagers, as they wanted to live a life without fear and anxiety. We show their fate at the temporary exhibition of the House of Terror Museum.