Csanádpalota (in Romanian: Palatul Cenad) is a town in the Makó-region of Csongrád county, in Hungary's Southern Great Plain.
Six years later, in 1427, Sigismund of Luxemburg granted the lands of Csanádpalota to Albert Nagymihályi, the viceroy of Dalmatia and Croatia.
The lands surrounding the village belonged to the Hunyadi family, and were maintained until 1552 when Turkish invaders under the control of Suleiman the Magnificent devastated it.
Between 1646 and 1649, during the reign of Prince Georg Rákóczi of Transylvania, the land was owned by Bishop Thomas Pálffy and had been repopulated by Hungarians.
After 7 years (in 1763), due to the efforts of Supreme judge György Fekete the village erected a Roman Catholic church.
The town's two-story school was built in 1857, and preschool educational facilities received a home in the kindergarten building which was completed in 1893.
After World War I the village was occupied by Romanian forces for a short period and, as stipulated by the Treaty of Trianon, part of the lands of Csanádpalota were given to Romania.
Internal Hungarian restructuring immediately following Trianon led to the reapportionment of land such that outlying areas of the village Nagylak were given to Csanádpalota to increase its size.
[4] Csanádpalota is home to Napsugár ("sunshine") Kindergarten and the István Déri General School (grade 1–8), the latter of which is located in two buildings.
[7] The László Kelemen Culture Center contains a library with a floor area of 237 square meters, and it is open 6 days a week including Saturdays.