Bodrogkisfalud

[4] The village has a neo-Romanesque Roman Catholic church built in 1930, consecrated in honour of St Anne.

There was no church building in the town until 1772, when the Jesuits consecrated a small chapel there.

A full church was built in 1810, but by 1929 had reached such a state of disrepair that it had to be demolished, to be replaced by the current building.

[5] It also features a bust of György Klapka by Gyula Alpár Veres, and a 1896 monument to the 1848/1849 Hungarian Revolution.

Bodrogkisfalud had a significant Jewish population from the 18th century until the Second World War, when it was deported by the Nazis; very few returned.