Aldebrő

With the permission of King Sigismund in 1417, the surrounding villages were occupied by Stephen Kompolt [hu], and then became the Rozgonyi family [fr].

Stephen Rozgonyi sold Debrő Castle and the surrounding areas in 1493 to György Kanizsay, who in 1497 exchanged it with Bartolomeu Dragfi.

Due to the advancing Ottomans in 1544, the inhabitants of the villages of Balpüspüki and Csal left.

In 1575, King Maximilian pledged the dilapidated castle and its accessories to Baron Christoph von Ungnad, the chief captain of Eger.

His widow Anna Losonczi [hu] gifted the estate to her second husband Count Sigismund Forgách in 1590.

On August 22, 1747, Antal Grassalkovich obtained a deed of donation from Maria Theresa for the royal rights of the castle in Debrő and the entire estate.

One of Antal Grassalkovich's first actions was to bring a sufficient number of settlers to the sparsely populated area.

The Grassalkovich family died out in the male branch in 1841, after which the Debrő manor passed to Count János Forgách.

The last tenant Count György Károlyi [hu], bought the manor and the village of Aldebrő in 1847.

In the 19th century, tobacco cultivation declined, but grape growing and winemaking flourished.

[2] Nowadays the only uninhabited outskirt is "Erzsébet tér", what's 7,7 km far from the village, beside of the main road 3 and have a different postal code (3355).