This temporary, roll-up exhibition was made for the centenary of the First World War, comprising 32 panels and no artefacts. It is easy to transport being packed in individual bags and a car’s boot can accomodate it. The exhibition exists in two languages: Hungarian and English. The display was launched in 2014, on the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the First World War, a conflict that influenced millions of lives and entire nations. Approximately 10 million people died and more than 20 million were wounded both phisically and mentally in the Great War. The destruction that the war brought along had never been experienced before, transforming human thinking and their view about war. Battles like Verdun or Ypern will never be forgotten in western Europe, while Hungarians have been fostering from generation to generation the heritage of those who fought in the battles of Doberdo, Isonzo and Przemysl. The exhibition discusses the origins of the Great War, introduces the belligerents, the alliances and the battlefields from a Hungarian perspective. Although the war was fought in the battlefields, the consequences reached the hinterland too. Those people’s lives who stayed behind, women and children, became harder and more difficult due to the war. This exhibition helps visitors remember all the 52 months of the Great War.