Documents from these periods mention the village as CHETURTUC, CHETURTUCKHEIL, CHETERTEKHEL, later as Oppidum CHETERTEK, on the basis of which it is possible that the village had a different name in the earlier period, but it was forgotten and the new name was created by granting the right to Thursday , instead of the original Sunday. The German name of the village - VILLA LIUPOLDI, LEOPOLDSDORF - appeared in documents only in the 15th century.
It is probable, even though no written documents have been preserved about it, that the first settlers in the village came during the reign of St. Stephen. In a local chronicle in 1677, the local priest György Nérey states that St. Stephen ordered the construction of 12 churches in this part of the Danube region, and on that basis Thursday became a "church site". However, the first written mention of the church dates back to 1333, when the Bratislava Chapter states in its report to the king: “It is known that the western part of the village (villa) Chuturtuk, houses on it, belongs to Master Sebes, the eastern part of the same village remains at Péter , and although the church is located in the part of Péter, the church serves the faithful from both parts of the village ”. Nevertheless, Náray's information may be true, as evidenced by the finding from 1956, when during the reconstruction of the church they discovered its "portals", ie the entrance gate, which was built in Romanesque style, richly decorated and placed between two church towers. On both sides of the "portal" there are two round, smoothly processed columns, which are located in the ground below the church, unfortunately, they have not been researched to this day.