Its name
comes from the ancient personal name Lelu.
Some sources are introducing it as the village of the Holy Spirit, and its name
comes from the words lél or lélek (soul). Leles belongs to the
oldest ang largest settlements in the Bodrogköz.
According
to archaeological records, its area has been inhabited since the Stone Age.
First written records are from 1132 king Béla II. era. Bishop Boleszló of Vác
founded the Premonstratensian provostship
in 1180. The monastery is from the 13th century to 1567 the place, where
a lot of important certificates were written. In 1241 it was destroyed by the
Mongols, but it was soon rebuilt and continued in its important role. In the
beginning of the 16th century the monastery was robbed out an since
then it was strengthened like a fortress. Until the end of the First World War
it belonged to the Jászó prepostery. The Premonstrarensians valuable archives, which
contained more than a century old documents, were often replaced to other
places. Rákóczi Ferenc II. took them to
Munkács, then Joseph II. in 1802 to Buda. A part of the documents were placed
to Jászó.
Petőfi visited this region in 1847. The poet wrote about this place as
very good ‘’pig fattening place’’ aiming on, how good you can eat in the
vicarage.
The number of inhabitants of Leles is approximately 1870 mostly with Hungarian
nationality. It has several shops, doctors surgery, pharmacy, post office,
catholic and protestant churches.
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