Event calendar
2024. April
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2024.04.20. - 2024.11.24.
Budapest
2023.12.15. - 2024.02.18.
Budapest
2023.11.16. - 2024.01.21.
Budapest
2023.11.09. - 2024.03.17.
Budapest
2023.10.27. - 2024.02.11.
Budapest
2023.10.18. - 2024.02.18.
Budapest
2023.09.22. - 2024.01.21.
Budapest
2012.03.01. - 2012.03.31.
Vác
2012.02.01. - 2012.02.29.
Miskolc
2012.01.22. - 1970.01.01.
Budapest
2011.10.04. - 1970.01.01.
Nagykáta
2011.10.01. - 1970.01.01.
Nagykáta
2011.10.01. - 1970.01.01.
Nagykáta
2011.09.30. - 1970.01.01.
Nagykáta
2011.09.30. - 1970.01.01.
Nagykáta
2011.07.04. - 2011.07.08.
Budapest
Region History Collection - Iváncsa
Region History Collection
Address: 2454, Iváncsa Fő utca 3.
Phone number: (25) 256-001
Opening hours: Thu 14-17 (on prior notice)
The Local History Collection of Iváncsa belongs to the people of the village. My father, Gyula Fűrész (1909-1998), the retired school principal, began colleting the material at the end of the 1960's when significant changes took place in the lifestyle of village people that led to the tools formerly used by them loosing their function.

By 1972, a large number of objects were collected and we were given leave to show them at the local Cultural Centre.

In the 1980's, the collection was located in the School of the Reformed Church. In 1994, it was removed and transported to the Town Hall.

The material includes all sorts of relics. The oldest object is a mammoth tooth found near the River Danube. During harvest and agricultural work, urns, pots etc found prove that people lived in this region even in the Bronze Age. In the first centuries AD, Romans ruled this land. We have hundreds of finds, amphora, tile, terra sigillata etc that remind us of this era.

Iváncsa is an Árpád Age habitat. It was owned by the king and later on the queen. A charter proves that the queen Fennena bestowed the land then called Iwanch Bleak to the provost Tivadar in 1291. In the Anjou age a church was erected in the habitat. Archaeologists of the Intersica Museum recently found the base of the church that proves that the village was located between road no. 6 and the Danube and it was resettled after the occupation of the Turkish.