COUNTRY HOUSE – BUGYI MUNICIPALITY

The Tájház was built to meet the needs of today, but it has the atmosphere of the old farmhouses. It presents the folk art traditions and customs of the village, as well as the crafts of its ancestors. But the locals are not content with just making a shelf for the scythe, the disc and the wooden spoon, they also have plans for an old-fashioned harvest, a pottery camp and jam-making.

REFORMED CHURCH – BUGYI MUNICIPALITY

The Reformed Church is also in the centre of the village. It is a single tower Baroque building, the foundations of which were laid in 1801 and consecrated in 1803. The parish has existed since 1730. The congregation also has a primary school, which since 1 September 2010 has been called the Beleznay János Bocskai István Reformed Primary School. The interior and exterior of the church were renovated in the summer of 2010 with the help of a grant.

REFORMED CHURCH – OCSA

Ócsa Nagyközség is located 25 km south of Budapest. The settlement has been inhabited since ancient times, as evidenced by the artefacts in the National Museum.
Its most notable building is the 13th century Romanesque three-nave basilica with cross nave, built for the Premonstratensian monks. The village was a royal estate under the Árpád rulers. Its rapid development was halted by the Turkish invasion 150 years ago. The population converted to the Reformed faith at the beginning of the 17th century. The church has been owned and used by the Reformed parish of Ócsa since 1560. On 29 October 1994, the National Office for the Protection of Historical Monuments handed over the renewed church to the Reformed Congregation. In 1995, the Reformed Monument Church of Ócsa was awarded the Europa Nostra Prize and the accompanying diploma for its accurate and careful restoration.

SAINT ADALBERT ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH – BUGYI MUNICIPALITY

The Roman Catholic Church stands in the centre of the village on the triangular Baroque square. The foundation stone was laid in 1761. It was built by Gr. The church was founded in the beginning of the 17th century by the bishops Károly Eszterházy and Kristóf Migazzi of Vác. The single-towered, free-standing Baroque church with a straight-ended sanctuary was consecrated on 29 September 1763 in honour of St. Adalbert, who was chosen as its patron saint.