Tófalu

After the death of Miklós Debrei childless in 1417, with the consent of King Sigismund, it became the property of Stephen Kompolt [hu].

In 1438, it came into the possession of the Rozgonyi family [fr] from the hands of its owners, who were guilty of infidelity.

It was the mortgaged property of Eger castle captain Baron Christoph von Ungnad from 1575.

Ungnad's widow, Anna Losonczi [hu], gives it to her third husband, Count Sigismund Forgách in 1590.

In the first years, the farmers made a living by brewing brandy and harvesting forest wood.

After the Rákóczi's War of Independence, the prince's property was confiscated by the ruler and it donates to Michael Friedrich von Althann.

The landlord's ninth and the church's tithe are given by the serfs in kind from grain crops, as well as from peas, lentils, hemp, corn, tobacco, cabbage, pumpkin, linseed, beans, and lamb.