Reformed church
Building, structure
The Protestant religion took deep roots in the village as early as the middle of the 16th century, initially the services were held in the old church. In the turbulent 17th century, it was a completely Reformed settlement for a while, when the congregation prayed in its own oratory. From 1718, after the liquidation of the Reformed parish (the rector and the schoolmaster were expelled), the believers went to church in Madar. Only after the publication of the Türelmi Rendelet, from 1781, were they allowed to practice their religion freely. A wooden prayer house was built in the courtyard of István Bese (today's house at 19 Fő utca), and then between 1784-1786 the Türelmi Reformed Church was completed (i.e. without a tower and outside the village). In 1787, a tower with two bells was erected, and in 1820 a turban was added. The tower was built in 1841 and in 1840 the church was expanded with a perpendicular extension oriented towards the west. Apart from minor repairs, the church has preserved its contemporary condition to this day. The church was originally a hall-room, which acquired a three-cross shape as a result of the expansion, when the new room was divided into two by two tall grooved columns. ; ; There are three Protestant galleries in the church. The classicist pulpit with a resonant roof dates from the time of the church's construction and was later renovated. A commemorative plaque on the wall of the church announces the 400th anniversary of the church reformation. The Lord's table is made of red marble, the work of the stonemason József Müller from Süttő for the 100th anniversary of the establishment of the Reformed congregation. The red marble baptismal font was made by the Reformed choir in 1937 by the stonemason Fellner from Érsekújvár. The small bell was cast in Pest in 1787 for the Reformed church, at the expense of Ferenc Nyikos and András Gallai.