Compared to the surrounding villages listed in the Zobor Charter, where the Benedictines owned their property at the beginning of the 12th century, Malženice has the peculiarity that in addition to the property, they also had a monastery and the seat of one of the organizational members in the hierarchy. The Benedictine and St. John's monastery was probably destroyed by the Tatars and has not been restored. In 1268, the Hungarian king Bela IV. The village of Malženice is the son of the Trnava mayor Conch-Kunza. In the deed of gift, the village is called Maniga. Malženice was already the seat of the parish at the beginning of the 14th century. At the undoubtedly the oldest church in the area, the existence of a rectory from 1332 is also documented.
The function and seriousness of the village increased in the 14th - 16th century by granting privileges that were not typical even for the population of the larger village at that time. It was the right to establish and collect tolls, the right to organize regular markets and, in particular, the right to use the designation of a municipality as an town. At that time a serf town. A copy of this document can be found at the parish in Malženice.