Čunovo, Jarovce and Rusovce became the borders of Moson County and formed the border between Upper and Lower Hungary. At the turn of the 14th and 15th centuries. the epidemic depopulated entire settlements, including Čunovo. The monarch summoned the German population to settle in, and the name Čunova - Sándorf (Piesky) comes from that period. The tax register from 1518 also mentions the presence of Croats in Čunov. From 1497, the country was ravaged by cholera, and in the 16th century, anti-Turkish fighting took place. In 1514, as a result of the Doge's uprising, the Hungarian Parliament passed a law according to which the subject became a slave who was not allowed to leave his master's estate, he was not allowed to marry or marry without his consent. The owner's disgraceful right to the first night with the bride was ordered. The last blow was the defeat of the Hungarian army by the Turkish near the town of Mohács in 1526. During the march to Vienna, the Turkish troops also burned Čunovo. Then came the relocation of Croats from the Balkan Peninsula to this territory. It was an organized transfer of labor from one estate to another within the Kingdom of Hungary. The Croats found a second homeland and favorable conditions here, because they were exempt from taxes for 3 to 6 years. In the 16th century. owned by counts from Jur and Pezinok and partly by the Horwáth family, and we also meet with the name of the peasant Krištof Vajda. The population of the village subsisted mainly on carriages, ferries and mills. In the 17th century. we meet for the first time with an organized administration and a mayor who already owns a typarium - a general seal. During the reign of Maria Theresa, the roads were modified and one of them led through Čunovo to Mosoň and Hainburg.
In 1767, Maria Theresa issued an urbarial patent. Owners' land registers have been established. Secular registries were introduced and surnames began to be written. In 1905, Count Lonay, the husband of Princess Stefania of Belgium, bought the estates from the Zichy family. After the first St. During the war, Čunovo became part of Hungary and the name of the village was Dunacsun. After the end of the 2nd st. war On October 15, 1947, the Transdanubian part was annexed to the Czechoslovak Republic on the basis of the Paris Peace Conference. In 1972, it was connected as a city district to the capital. m. Bratislava.
Miestny úrad mestskej časti Bratislava - Čunovo
Hraničiarska
851 10 Bratislava-Čunovo
To improve our site and services we are using cookies.
Please confirm additional permissions to continue.