Pribenik
today's village, was originally a market settlement. The first documented mention was in 1323 as Perbenyk. The owners changed frequently in the 15th century, the owners were members of the noble family Nagytarkányi Perényiovci, in the 18th century the Sennyey family, in the 19th century members of the Klobuszick family and the Mailáth family. At the beginning of the 18th century, the abandoned village was settled by 14 families who practiced agriculture. From 1809 they specialized in horse breeding on the local farm. There were also hunting grounds on the farm.
There was also a mill and a brickworks in the district. A consumer cooperative has been active in the village since 1898. In the interwar period, local people worked on Jozef Mailath's large estate. Until 1951 hemp spreaders and fans also worked in the village.
The village and its surroundings were annexed to Hungary between 1938 and 1944, after liberation they were finally incorporated into Czechoslovakia.
Synagogue in Pribenik
It was a two-storey building, mainly in the late baroque style, a building from the 1880s.