Tákos

Tákos is a village in Szabolcs-Szatmár-Bereg county, in the Northern Great Plain region of eastern Hungary.

[citation needed] The first written mention of Tákos dates back to a lawsuit from 1321, according to which Ubul Kállai destroyed the estate of his son, Master Sándor of the Kaplon family, in Tákos.

In 1500, a part of the village was received by János Murgai as a royal donation.

In the tax census of 1567, Pál Tákosi, Imre Szalmadi and László Görbedi were the landlords of the settlement.

[2][1] The church was expanded with walls made of sticks covered on both sides with clay and mud; it is believed that these materials were used following Maria Theresa's ban of stone and brick to followers of the Reformation.