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Town looked for: Székesfehérvár
Search result: 14
*King St. Stephen Museum (Székesfehérvár)
Among the 17 permanent exhibitions there are the most otstanding village museum of Palotaváros (Europa Nostra reward) and the archeological exhibition (Museum of Europe reward) held in the central building of the museum, the former Jesuit house. 
Black Eagle Pharmacy (Székesfehérvár)
The Black Eagle Pharmacy presents the baroque furniture and pharmacy equippments made by a Jesuit carving workshop in 1758. Besides the permanent exhibition a number of temporal exhibitions of a great variety of subjects welcome the visitors. Among those there are the fields of archeology, ethnography and fine arts. 
Doll's House of Fehérvár (Székesfehérvár)
The Doll's House of Fehérvár demonstrates plenty of boy's and girl's toys, dolls and doll rooms of past generations. The Moskovszky family - dr. Éva Moskovszky, retired librarian of the Hungarian National Museum and her mother - collected the toys of old days by 70 years of active work. 
Erzsébet Schaár Collection (Székesfehérvár)
The collection of the 60 small and large plastic art works was gifted to Székesfehérvár by the Ministry of Culture and the heirs of the artist. These materials were later supplemented by a series of works purchesed from Erzsébettől Schaár (Kóré, Sitting in the armchair), and the hairs (Ólomfal, Spaces opening into each other, Door with a figure, etc.) 
King St. Stephen Museum (Székesfehérvár)
The building was taken over by the museum in 1978. Today it is the center of the Board of Directors of the Museums of the County. Beside the roman stone collection a new Archeological exhibition is open for the visitors. The central studio of restorations, the photo laboratory, and the storage house are all situated in the main building. The anthropological collection and the stone collection of the museum that is the largest in Hungary as well as the rooms of the researchers and the auditoriums are located here. 
Medieval Ruin Garden - National Memorial Place (Székesfehérvár)
The basilica, the building of which was started by king Stephen, had been the most important and sanctified place of the medieval Hungarian government, right up to the Ottoman occupation (1543). Fifteen Hungarian kings had been crowned here (with King Stephan among them), and the crown, the royal treasury and archive were also kept here. 
New Hungarian Gallery (Székesfehérvár)
The materials reflecting the collecting and exhibiting works of nearly four decades mostly consists of works of the European school and its sphere of attraction. Works are displayed in chronological order, from the outstanding masters of the 60'ies up to our days 
The Budenz House - The Ybl-Collection (Székesfehérvár)
According to the interest and taste of Ybl, the collection mostly consists of the works of artists of the Hungarian plains and the representatives of post-impressionism in the 1930'ies. The plastic part of the collection presents almost every significant master of the first part of the 20th century. The paintings and statues are displayed on two floors of the house furnished with some pieces of furniture and applied arts items of the Ybl family. 
The Diocese Museum of Székesfehérvár (Székesfehérvár)
Since the birth of the Hungarian state (1000 A.D.) the city of Székesfehérvár, the Hungarian royal coronation and burial place had been one of the country's most important sacred centres. Saint Stephen (1000-1038) the first king of Hungary founded a privileged and independent priest association called the chapter of Székesfehérvár however the city did not have a bishop. The chapter was the guardian of the royal treasury and also the most important organisation of the state administration. 
The Open-air Ethnographic Museum in Palotaváros (Székesfehérvár)
In the protected group of buildings we show visitors the history and ethnography of Székesfehérvár - Palotaváros. Visitors can see the Rac room and kitchen left here from the original owner, the relics of various regional crafts (belt-maker, furrier, etc.), and the workshop of hat-maker István Dittrich. 
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