The village of Horné Saliby was inhabited in the Neolithic. Excavations in the village document the existence of a settlement from the period of Lengyel culture. After the fall of the Great Moravian Empire in the 10th century, this area was settled by Hungarians. In the files of the lands of the Pannonhalm abbey, the village is mentioned under the name GREEN and in 1237 - 1240 together with the Lower Salibs as UTRAQUE GREEN, ie "Both Salia". It belonged to the monastery on Pannonian Mountain. In 1523 it received a charter, but it did not develop into a town.
The village of Horné Saliby was inhabited in the Neolithic. Excavations in the village document the existence of a settlement from the period of Lengyel culture. After the fall of the Great Moravian Empire in the 10th century, this area was settled by Hungarians. In the files of the lands of the Pannonhalm abbey, the village is mentioned under the name GREEN and in 1237 - 1240 together with the Lower Salibs as UTRAQUE GREEN, ie "Both Salia". It belonged to the monastery on Pannonian Mountain. In 1523 it received a charter, but it did not develop into a town.
In the 16th century the village belonged to the Thurz family and the Báthor family, in the 17th century it fell into the hands of the Eszterházy family as a part of the Šintava estate. After 1817, it was part of the Čeklín estate. The name of the village probably comes from landowners from the 14th century. In 1324, Coradus de ZYLI / Szeli / is mentioned.