Located at 5350 Tiszafüred, 14 Malom Street, the Kiss Pál Museum presents a year-long slate of interactive programs, family days, and school-friendly sessions built around holidays and traditions. One of Hungary’s oldest rural museums pairs its two permanent exhibitions with hands-on events, while the Nyúzó Gáspár Pottery Folk House (Nyúzó Gáspár Fazekas Tájház) preserves the once-famous local craft with authentic tools and original living spaces. Accommodation and food-and-drink options are indicated in the program details, and dates may change.
March 6 kicks off with Be a Hussar!—a museum-education workshop that puts kids in the boots of 19th-century cavalry. From March 6–13, Antique and Nature Explorations in Tiszafüred invites primary school groups to investigate local history and the natural world. The March 15 holiday is marked on March 14–15 with commemorative programs across the museum. Easter in the 19th Century—workshops on March 20 and 27 guide visitors through festive customs. On April 1, that Easter session moves to the Nyúzó Gáspár Pottery Folk House (Nyúzó Gáspár Fazekas Tájház) for an immersive, old-world setting.
On April 10, Bring Grandma and Grandpa to the Museum! launches a shared family adventure at the Pottery Folk House. April 25 is the Day of Folk Houses: Be a Potter!—a family maker day paired with community garden building in the Folk House courtyard. The intergenerational tour returns on May 23 at the Darabos László Ethnographic and Local History Exhibition (Darabos László Néprajzi és Helytörténeti Kiállítás), adding new stories and spaces for family discovery.
June 20 marks Museum Night, a full family day in the Endre Tariczky Archaeological Exhibition (Tariczky Endre Régészeti Kiállítás). A week later, on June 27, Bring Grandma and Grandpa pops up again at the Archaeology venue. By August 20, the family tour circles back to the Darabos László exhibition, just in time for late-summer visitors.
September 18 celebrates Harvest with museum-education programs tailored to kindergarteners and primary pupils at the Pottery Folk House. October 23 features another Bring Grandma and Grandpa to the Museum! edition, focusing on shared memory and hands-on learning. November 11 hosts St. Martin’s Day for kindergarteners at the Endre Tariczky Archaeological Exhibition, tying legend, light, and local lore.
Advent Preparation workshops run on November 27 at the Archaeology venue, then on December 11 for children. Santa at the Museum arrives on December 4 with kid-focused activities. The year closes on December 18 with Christmas in the 19th Century, a museum-education session that unwraps period customs and cozy traditions.
Organizers reserve the right to change dates and programs.