The name of the town is taken from that of the
Franciscan hermitage of
La Verna () in
Tuscany,
Italy. It was bestowed on the locality in 1616 by the castellan Krzysztof Koryciński. A
monastery of the order of the Stigmata of
Saint Francis of Assisi was built on high ground between 1625 and 1656. The church dates from the period between 1630 and 1676. Below the monastery a settlement developed which in 1776 received the right to hold a
market. In 1796 Alwernia is mentioned as being a small commercial and administrative centre. After the
Third Partition of Poland, the town became a part of the
Austrian Empire, and since 1867 of
Austria-Hungary. In the
newly-reborn Poland, Alwernia administratively belonged to
Kraków Voivodeship. After
World War II, the town once again became a part of Kraków Voivodeship until 1998. On 15 September 1993 Alwernia received its town charter. ==Economy==