From 1605, apart from the oppression of the Turks, the village was not freed from the hardships caused by the royal and especially anti-Habsburg uprisings of Štefan Bocskai, Juraj Rákóczi, Imrich Thokoly, František Rákoczi, which lasted until 1711, the whole suffering ended with a plague epidemic. In 1710, only a few loins live in Ini, the area of the village is not sown at all. In 1715, the first census is conducted in Hungary. Inventories are stored by county. In the file of Tekovská župa, there are data about Ini on sheet number 194, in which it is stated: there are two jailers in the village and there are no farmers. In 1720, the census is repeated and on letter no. 234 states that Eny-Iňa has all the corners depopulated. According to the tax return from 1736, there are 11 inhabitants in the village with the free right to move and 4 housekeepers. There is no elected mayor in the village. These citizens own 23 oxen, 10 cows, 5 heifers and 16 sheep. In 1745, pipe smokers were registered for tax, all paying the same smoke tax. In 1763 he was the mayor of the village Ondrej Chrenovszky. There is one craftsman in the village, and 4 shepherds (cows, horses, oxen and pigs) a) other inhabitants. On January 23, 1767, the Hungarian queen Mária Terézia issued an urban edict for Hungary. Urbár meeting in Ini took place on May 31, 1769 in the presence of the conspirators of the Tekov County, landowners, oaths and mayor Jakab János. In 1786 a census is carried out where it is stated that: in the village live 46 families in 35 houses. The population is 190, of which 100 are men. The men are 11 peasants, 13 peasants, 14 peasant and civil heirs, 28 jailers and others. In 1798 Iňa burned down. In 1828, there were 29 houses in Ini, with 203 inhabitants. By 1843, the population had increased to 289. In 1848, slavery was abolished, and after 1853, the first plans of the district and the land register, which included the lands of the inhabitants, were carried out in the village.