Its meadows are rich and well-suited to growing a wide variety of agricultural produce, crops, fruits, and poultry.
The prefix "Nemes-" (meaning "noble") was later added to the name of the village to reflect the fact that many of its inhabitants belonged to the lower- or middle-nobility.
Contemporaneously, another village in Szolnok-Doboka County of Hungary's Transylvanian region (today known as Bőd or Beudiu) was known as Beud by as early as 1214.
According to traditional accounts, Saint Gellért, together with his fellow bishops Bőd and Beneta/Beszteréd and with Lord Lieutenant Szolnok, hurried outward from Fehérvár to greet Prince András who was returning home from Kijev.
[nb 2] The bishops and Lord Szolnok spent the night in the residents' building of the Sabina Church (Kamaraerdő, foothill of Kőérbek) on 24 September 1046.
It is worth mentioning that this Abbey, located at the German border, received its staff from the areas inhabited by ethnic Hungarians.
Among them, in a document issued by King Imre in 1194, the following names had been quoted as living in Bőd: Arud, Bek, Szolgad, Szombat, Varsa, Varo".
Vas County created a registry in 1907 to list coats of arms approved by the state offices for official use in rubber stamps and seals.
The Nemesbőd coat of arms depicts images suggesting its past history of frequently fighting against invading Turks.