The picturesque village, surrounded by fields, lies in the lower part of Žitný ostrov on the main road about halfway between Komárno and Dunajská Streda. It is first mentioned as the property of Komárno Castle in 1268.
The picturesque village, surrounded by fields, lies in the lower part of Žitný ostrov on the main road about halfway between Komárno and Dunajská Streda. It is first mentioned as the property of Komárno Castle in 1268.
From the first half of the seventeenth century it belonged to several aristocratic families. The original inhabitants were fishermen and later farmers. Cereal ears remained in the emblem of the village of Dodes. In 1460, Tôň is mentioned as a town with the right to collect tolls. In the middle of the nineteenth century, a sugar factory began to operate here, in 1890 a factory for processing flax was added and ten years later a brickyard was established. The village got a new face after the Second World War, after the wetlands and wetlands that surrounded it dried up. The village quickly rose even after the devastating flood in 1965 and today it is a modern residence with the necessary civic amenities. Its visitors are especially attracted by the reconstructed church of the Reformed Church.