The significance of the rural museum is to beautify the scenery of the countryside and to add to the increasingly "beautiful" countryside.
Take this as an opportunity to take advantage of the craze of rural tourism to attract more urban residents to come and "visit here". While expanding the horizons and enriching the spiritual life of urban residents, it also helps the countryside transform from "beautiful" to "rich".
The rural museums spawned by the "cultural museum craze" are a valuable spiritual wealth for the majority of children and young people. Whether they come from the countryside or the city, today's children know little or even nothing about traditional culture, especially traditional farming culture.
By visiting the rural museum, they not only learned about many customs, but also gained a more realistic understanding of the hardships of agricultural production. In this regard, the rural museums that have sprung up like mushrooms after a rain are also resources for us to guide and educate children to grow up healthily and comprehensively, thereby cultivating and strengthening their moral character of cherishing food, respecting nature, and respecting labor.
All of this is to continuously inject power into rural revitalization from different angles. To this end, while we attach great importance to the construction of rural museums, we should also base ourselves on local resources, make full use of local resources, and avoid being the same, so that every rural museum should not only shine, but also have its own style and fully demonstrate its unique charm.
History of the development of the Village Museum:
This small church was born during the most tyrannical era of the Ottoman Empire. It was also a witness to the abolition of slavery. It can be said that Romania resisted foreign aggression. A symbol of the struggle for national independence and liberation. The oldest farmhouse in the museum is the home of a prosperous farmer who was relocated from Satumare County.
It was built in the 1650s and is entirely of wooden structure. It is tall and spacious, with a pointed ridge and sloping roof. It is warm in winter and cool in summer. It is a typical snow-proof farmhouse in the Carpathian mountains. There is a well-furnished reception room in the wooden house, with thick carpets from Romania on the floor and colorful tapestries hanging on the walls. In the bedroom on the right, the dowry prepared by the hostess for her daughter is displayed. Floral shirts, long skirts, woolen scarves, and leather waistcoats all have skylark and flower patterns embroidered with gold and silver threads. The workmanship is exquisite and ingenious.