Ethnographic Museum
Ethnographic Museum
4.5
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4.5
5 anmeldelser
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Josef O
48 bidrag
jun. 2017 • Venner
Rimetea (called Torockó in Hungarian and Eisenmarkt in German) being a village like no other in its neighborhood has a local ethnographic museum like no other in the whole region. This village wasn't always a village. For a few centuries it used to be a town. Till the beginning of the second half of the 19th century, it was a rather flourishing town, because it was the main iron ore mining and iron smelting site in Transylvania. The blacksmiths of Rimetea produced tools and weapons which were sold on a large area, some 300 km around this place. Then the iron ore went extinguished and the town turned poorer and poorer till it lost its urban status and became a village...
The local ethnographic museum reflects all this historical evolution. The first 2 rooms are dedicated to the mining and metallurgical past of this place. In the third room you'll find on the left side of it an exhibition dedicated to some additional manly occupations (shoemaker, plowman etc.), but most objects in this room and in the following 2 rooms reflect the work of women (for instance, you have a "kitchen corner"). The fourth room is arranged like a dwelling room (bed, pillows, painted furniture etc.) while in the fourth room you'll find several traditional costumes (for young unmarried, young married and older couples - it's interesting to see how the clothes changed in order to reflect the age of the one who wore them).
Another interesting thing about this place is that at various historical times this flourishing town needed skilled workforce (miners and smiths) impossible to find in the region, so they brought people from other parts of Central Europe, where they spoke mainly Czech and German. Eventually the newcomers mixed up with the local Hungarian speaking population and this mixture was and still is to be seen in the clothes they wore or in the manner they painted their furniture.
All the artifacts you see here belonged to real people from this village.
The museum is opened every day (though I'm not really sure about week-ends, I wasn't there during the week-end) and the price of the ticket is about an euro or so. In my opinion, the museum is one of the main attractions of this village.
The local ethnographic museum reflects all this historical evolution. The first 2 rooms are dedicated to the mining and metallurgical past of this place. In the third room you'll find on the left side of it an exhibition dedicated to some additional manly occupations (shoemaker, plowman etc.), but most objects in this room and in the following 2 rooms reflect the work of women (for instance, you have a "kitchen corner"). The fourth room is arranged like a dwelling room (bed, pillows, painted furniture etc.) while in the fourth room you'll find several traditional costumes (for young unmarried, young married and older couples - it's interesting to see how the clothes changed in order to reflect the age of the one who wore them).
Another interesting thing about this place is that at various historical times this flourishing town needed skilled workforce (miners and smiths) impossible to find in the region, so they brought people from other parts of Central Europe, where they spoke mainly Czech and German. Eventually the newcomers mixed up with the local Hungarian speaking population and this mixture was and still is to be seen in the clothes they wore or in the manner they painted their furniture.
All the artifacts you see here belonged to real people from this village.
The museum is opened every day (though I'm not really sure about week-ends, I wasn't there during the week-end) and the price of the ticket is about an euro or so. In my opinion, the museum is one of the main attractions of this village.
Skrevet 9. februar 2018
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
MihaelaBDogaru
Brasov, Romania2 bidrag
apr. 2016 • Venner
Ethnographic Museum is located in the City Hall. Spread over 5 rooms, the museum heritage includes traditional ports, vessels, painted furniture the region etc. A must-see place if you are in the zone.
Skrevet 10. april 2016
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Romulus P
Romania126 bidrag
mar. 2013 • Forretning
The museum is open on call, so you actually have to call before visiting. I think the numbers of tourists are too low for anyone to stay there all day/week long
Skrevet 5. juni 2013
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
bfg1943
Cleveland, OH494 bidrag
sep. 2012 • Par
We found the Ethnographic Museum to be very interesting. It provided an informative insight into the life of the significant Hungarian population in the northwest part of present day Romania.
Skrevet 28. mars 2013
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Gabriella A
Cluj-Napoca, Romania230 bidrag
For all those who love history it's a must see. You can see a nice collection of tools and also see some great Hungarian costumes. Can have a glimpse of what life was like more than 100 years ago in that area.
Skrevet 6. desember 2012
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
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