2024. December 22. Sunday
The Museum of Local History of Marcali - Marcali
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Address: 8700, Marcali Múzeum köz 5.
Phone number: (85) 510-520, (85) 510-521
E-mail: info@marcalimuzeum.hu
Opening hours: Mon-Fri 8-16
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Museum tickets, service costs:
Ticket for adults
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200 HUF
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Ticket for students
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100 HUF
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Ticket for pensioners
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100 HUF
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The Grammar School of Marcali celebrated its 50th birthday in the autumn of 2001. The ad lip exhibition presenting the history of the school was outstanding. The material for the showing was collected buy the teacher Zsuzsanna Szalma. Objects preserved with care and objects from the storage rooms are shown on the occasion. The variable material was perfect for a permanent exhibition. The principle Mrs. Olasz offered a room for the showing. The organization work was awaiting the employees of the Municipal Museum.
The first secondary school opened in Marcali in 1952 when the Secondary School of Economy of Kaposvár opened a class in town. A few years later high school education began. In the sixties and seventies, most of the students studied in the secondary school. Industrial and agricultural plants welcomed young workers.
Beginning with the eighties, the number of those attending the grammar school rose since it was easier to continue studies at collages. With the change of regime of the ninetieth, a new way of training reached the institutions. The students were able to enrol grammar school at age ten. Thus, their education was more purposive. First a building on "Templom" Square, then the so-called Mayer House hosted classes. The building hosting the grammar school at present was finished in 1965. Afterwards dormitory was attached to it.
The institution was named for the teacher János Lady who suffered a martyr death in 1919. The name of the school changed to Dániel Berzsenyi Grammar School in 1989. The education changed with the time. At the beginning, the main objective was to train student to "work". Later, "patriot education", nowadays preparation for collage is the aim. Before the change of regime, the students were members of the "Communist Youth Association". Thus, they were supposed to spend their free time in this framework. During summers, young people worked in camps, in autumns they did agricultural work. However, in dormitories doarders formed communities.
In the past fifty years, over four-thousand students graduated from the school in Marcali. Many did evening classes. Many of the teachers of the school and organizers of the exhibition studied in this school.
The exhibition is open at 16 Petőfi Sándor Street.
The first secondary school opened in Marcali in 1952 when the Secondary School of Economy of Kaposvár opened a class in town. A few years later high school education began. In the sixties and seventies, most of the students studied in the secondary school. Industrial and agricultural plants welcomed young workers.
Beginning with the eighties, the number of those attending the grammar school rose since it was easier to continue studies at collages. With the change of regime of the ninetieth, a new way of training reached the institutions. The students were able to enrol grammar school at age ten. Thus, their education was more purposive. First a building on "Templom" Square, then the so-called Mayer House hosted classes. The building hosting the grammar school at present was finished in 1965. Afterwards dormitory was attached to it.
The institution was named for the teacher János Lady who suffered a martyr death in 1919. The name of the school changed to Dániel Berzsenyi Grammar School in 1989. The education changed with the time. At the beginning, the main objective was to train student to "work". Later, "patriot education", nowadays preparation for collage is the aim. Before the change of regime, the students were members of the "Communist Youth Association". Thus, they were supposed to spend their free time in this framework. During summers, young people worked in camps, in autumns they did agricultural work. However, in dormitories doarders formed communities.
In the past fifty years, over four-thousand students graduated from the school in Marcali. Many did evening classes. Many of the teachers of the school and organizers of the exhibition studied in this school.
The exhibition is open at 16 Petőfi Sándor Street.