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Magyar origins

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  Quote calvo Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: Magyar origins
    Posted: 16-Dec-2007 at 16:20
Originally posted by vibo

Turks, Magyars and Huns:
 
There is crediable evedience that the Magyars are decendents of Huns. The Magyars were originally called Turks.
 
Quotes from the Byzantine Emporer Constantine Porphyrogentitus in the "de Administrando Imperio" a book written for his son on how to govern the empire:
 
"The Turks preferred that Aprad should be prince rather than Almoutzis (Almos) his father....." he goes on describing the nation of the Turks is now in what is Hungary. He continously calls the Magyars, Turks in all his writings. "The Turks... came to great Moravia, expelled the inhabitants and live there to this day" This was written in about 950 ad.
 
He also states that the these Turks (Magyars) used to be called "Sabartoi Asphalio" in older times.
 
In Jordanes History of the Goth's written about 550 ad, he states that:
 
"From this region the Huns, like a fruitful root of bravest races, sprouted into two hordes of people. Some of these are called Altziagiri, others Sabiri; and they have different dwelling places."
 
The question is are the Constatine VII, "Sabartoi Asphalio" the same as Jordanes "Sabiri & Altziagiri"
 


While there is no doubt that the Magyar probably "looked like" the Huns, just as they "looked like" the Avars, Bulgars, and Onogurs, it does not automatically imply that they were their descendants.

The "White Huns" were another phenomenon by the mere fact that they were nomads from Central Asia, yet no evidence links them to the Huns that invaded Europe.
Many scholars, however, did give credit that probably all these groups had some connection, and might have been off-shoots of the Xiongnu, who were a confedaracy of tribes of several ethninities.
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  Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16-Dec-2007 at 05:15
Turks, Magyars and Huns:
 
There is crediable evedience that the Magyars are decendents of Huns. The Magyars were originally called Turks.
 
Quotes from the Byzantine Emporer Constantine Porphyrogentitus in the "de Administrando Imperio" a book written for his son on how to govern the empire:
 
"The Turks preferred that Aprad should be prince rather than Almoutzis (Almos) his father....." he goes on describing the nation of the Turks is now in what is Hungary. He continously calls the Magyars, Turks in all his writings. "The Turks... came to great Moravia, expelled the inhabitants and live there to this day" This was written in about 950 ad.
 
He also states that the these Turks (Magyars) used to be called "Sabartoi Asphalio" in older times.
 
In Jordanes History of the Goth's written about 550 ad, he states that:
 
"From this region the Huns, like a fruitful root of bravest races, sprouted into two hordes of people. Some of these are called Altziagiri, others Sabiri; and they have different dwelling places."
 
The question is are the Constatine VII, "Sabartoi Asphalio" the same as Jordanes "Sabiri & Altziagiri"
 


Edited by vibo - 16-Dec-2007 at 05:28
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  Quote Sarmat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 31-Oct-2007 at 17:22
Originally posted by groovy_merchant



Again, Saka clans - with more or less close phonetics - can be found in almost any Turkic nation, not only Kazakhs. I would rather call it a most common Turkic appelative found from Inner Mongolia (Fuyu Kyrgyz) to Moldova (Gagauz).

The simple conclusion would be that Sakas were Turkic. But we don't have any direct evidence to support that.
 
Yes, but the hypo about the origins of these Sakas clans from originally Irano-Sako-Skythians is also possible IMO.
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  Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 31-Oct-2007 at 08:31
Originally posted by Sarmat12

Yes, we don't have 100% evidence. But we have some proofs which say that Sakas spoke Iranic language and it's most commonly refered as such in scientific literature. More over there are books written in Iranic Saka language in kigdom of Khotan although at a later time then the times of Ancient Skythians



That is correct.

And equally correct is a simple fact that Khotanese never refered to themselves as Saka. They used the word hvatana- instead. In fact, there is no "Saka" in Khotanese language. (Or rather languages, there were  two or maybe three distinct dialects, some say languages).

It should be borne in mind that the term Saka was attributed to Khotanese in the 20 century and never attested in any genuine Khotanese texts. They simply never knew this word. Consequently, this is a very late convenience of Iranists, not a historical fact.

Originally posted by Sarmat12


Kazakh clan, which I mentioned is very often referred as the direct evidence of Sakas influense on Kazakh in Kazakh history books. Moreover there is enough evidence of cultural continuity between ancient Sakas and modern Kazakhs. Genetic tests showed that Sakas and modern Kazakh in some areas have almost identical genetic pool.
 


Again, Saka clans - with more or less close phonetics - can be found in almost any Turkic nation, not only Kazakhs. I would rather call it a most common Turkic appelative found from Inner Mongolia (Fuyu Kyrgyz) to Moldova (Gagauz).

The simple conclusion would be that Sakas were Turkic. But we don't have any direct evidence to support that.
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  Quote Tar Szernd Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 31-Oct-2007 at 07:53
If someone is interested, one of the legends about Holy Ladislaus  (H.L. and the cuman) has the same end like on these golden saka jewelry.
After killing the cuman soldier, he led his head under a tree in the rescued girls lap, while his servant is holding the bridle of the kings horse.
This and the fighting scene is painted in many of the old hung. and szekler temples in the Charpatian basin.


Edited by Tar Szernd - 31-Oct-2007 at 07:54
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  Quote Sarmat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 31-Oct-2007 at 01:31
I think we have departed from our original topic which was "Magyar origins," so I openinf a new thread about Pazaryk culture and moving the related posts there.
 


Edited by Sarmat12 - 31-Oct-2007 at 01:39
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  Quote Sarmat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30-Oct-2007 at 20:54
I didn't say they were monoethnic. They very likely included Turkic components as well. However, seems that they were mainly Iranian speakers.
 
Actually, I think this kind of wery lond conic hats is a specific feature of Kazakh national costume as well as an item frequently found in Sakas kurgans in Kazakhstan.
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  Quote Bulldog Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30-Oct-2007 at 19:39

Sarmat similar types of hats are pretty widely used by various Turkic groups but I've yet to see that style among Iranic groups.

There is no evidence that Saka were a mono-ethnic, mono-linguistic group, the reality is there is no 100% proof that they spoke Iranic languages. Also there were peoples from the Altay region among the tribal-confederation, its likely there were Turkic tribes aswell.



Edited by Bulldog - 30-Oct-2007 at 19:40
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  Quote Temujin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30-Oct-2007 at 19:18
i didn't found any Qzaq tribe with the name Saka or similar here:

http://img220.imageshack.us/img220/578/qazaqxc2.jpg
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  Quote Sarmat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30-Oct-2007 at 18:44

Yes, we don't have 100% evidence. But we have some proofs which say that Sakas spoke Iranic language and it's most commonly refered as such in scientific literature. More over there are books written in Iranic Saka language in kigdom of Khotan although at a later time then the times of Ancient Skythians

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scythian_languages

Kazakh clan, which I mentioned is very often referred as the direct evidence of Sakas influense on Kazakh in Kazakh history books. Moreover there is enough evidence of cultural continuity between ancient Sakas and modern Kazakhs. Genetic tests showed that Sakas and modern Kazakh in some areas have almost identical genetic pool.
 
About the cultural continuity here is just one example to illustrate my point.
 
This is an ancient Saka figure of women wearing a distinct cone shaped hat (3 BC).
 
 
 
This is the traditional Kazakh bridal hat
 


Edited by Sarmat12 - 30-Oct-2007 at 19:01
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  Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30-Oct-2007 at 12:53
Turkic Kazakhs don't have  a clan Saka, that's a mistake of some kind. They have Shaga clan.

In fact, almost all Turkic nations have "Saka" clans - Saka and Sake among  Kyrgyzes, Shakai among Uzbeks, etc. Sakha is a self appelative of Yakuts (Yakut being of course the name Russians called them in the 18 cent).

There is nothing in these numerous Turkic "Saka" that points to any Iranian influence. Moreover, there's no "Saka" among the Iranians and almost any Turkic nation  has a clan or a tribe "Saka" or something real close.

It should be remembered that there is no proof or direct evidence that the Sakas of old spoke any kind of Iranian languages. Or Turkic in this respect. We simply don't have sufficient data to conclude anything with certainty.
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  Quote Sarmat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30-Oct-2007 at 05:39
"Iranian meaning" is very natural.  Most of the ancient nomands of Central Asia and Eastern Europe were Iranian speakers.
 
Their impact actually is felt as far as China. Of course, they didn't just disappear. Iranian nomades like Skythians, Sarmatians, Alans etc. became an important element contributing to the formation of new Turkic, Finno-ugrian and Mongolian speaking Nomadic ethnicities.
 
For example, Turkic Kazakhs still have a clan called "Saka" (the name of Central Asian Skythians).
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  Quote Xianpei Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30-Oct-2007 at 04:26
Sarmat12,  

You have made some very goods points, I believe.

Nevertheless, can Tar Szerend or you elaborate a little bit on that: Magyars is Finno-Ugric-Iranian- Turkic orgin (posted above by Tar)?
I just do not  know "Iranian" meaning exactly here.    tks!
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  Quote Sarmat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 29-Oct-2007 at 17:58
Originally posted by Xianpei

Folks,

The American Chinese James Zhu , an advocate of the fact that Magyars' ancestors are from the Far East Mogher (Malgal) who are originally inhabited in the present-day North East of China.  See his supporting argument details via:

http://www.iacd.or.kr/pdf/journal/04/4-02.pdf

When I first time read his book in Chinese two years ago, that was really striking to me.   However,  much of debates have to be continued regarding this "new" idea of the origins of Magyars.

My question is: Do you buy this?
 
 
I basically agree with Tar Szernd and don't buy it. First of all, the author of the article seems to ignore some important elements related to Hungarian/Magyar history. Firstly, Hungarian connection to Hunns, which is evidenced for example by a huge part of Hungarian folklore related to Hunns and Attila, which proves that Magyars have historic memory much earlier than 7th century, which is according to the author of the article is the time of the alleged migration of tungusic Moghers from North-Eastern China.
 
Secondly there is evidence of proto-Magyar language present in Europe around 6 century AD, which again is earlier than 7 AD
 
 
Thirdly, author ignores the point that all the similarities between Hungarian and Mongolian, Manzhur and other Tungusian languages can be easily explained by Altaic language theory.
 
Furhter more, the author simply lacks sufficient comparative linguistic training to make conclusions. For example he traces Hungarian surname Kovasc to some Tungusic tribe name, although I can clearly see that the origin of this word is from the Slavic verb "kovat" (to smith, to forge. In Hungarian it's  kovcsol ). Kovasc should be simply "Smith" in Hungarian.



Edited by Sarmat12 - 30-Oct-2007 at 05:43
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  Quote Sarmat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 29-Oct-2007 at 17:20
Originally posted by mohawk

the Hungarians are Turks, the ancestors of them were the black bulgars, they are onogurs, the organizing clan was the Dulo dynasty, started with Kovrat, Batbayan-Bezmer, Ugek, Almosh etc.
There is a label on the Hungarian crown from 1071, which declare under the small picture of the king, that this is , the Geyza, the first, the king of Turkia.
The name of the country is still today Hungary= Onoguria.
The Onogurs were western type turks like the chuvash, bashkir and others.
The Hugarians changed their Tengrism to christianit, they changed their turkish language to the today spoken mixture, but the hunnic live coals burns in them.
 
Althoug Hungarians indeed have very close connections to Turks, linguistically speaking their language belongs to Finno-Ugrian group.


Edited by Sarmat12 - 29-Oct-2007 at 17:40
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  Quote Tar Szernd Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 29-Oct-2007 at 15:08
It would be great if the writer could speak hungarian, because many of his arguments (f.e. the surname-compearings) are ...huhh... a little bit ridiculous. It could be a very interesting theory, if it had a stabil grammatical base.
 
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  Quote mohawk Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 29-Oct-2007 at 11:07
the Hungarians are Turks, the ancestors of them were the black bulgars, they are onogurs, the organizing clan was the Dulo dynasty, started with Kovrat, Batbayan-Bezmer, Ugek, Almosh etc.
There is a label on the Hungarian crown from 1071, which declare under the small picture of the king, that this is , the Geyza, the first, the king of Turkia.
The name of the country is still today Hungary= Onoguria.
The Onogurs were western type turks like the chuvash, bashkir and others.
The Hugarians changed their Tengrism to christianit, they changed their turkish language to the today spoken mixture, but the hunnic live coals burns in them.
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  Quote Xianpei Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 29-Oct-2007 at 03:45
Folks,

The American Chinese James Zhu , an advocate of the fact that Magyars' ancestors are from the Far East Mogher (Malgal) who are originally inhabited in the present-day North East of China.  See his supporting argument details via:

http://www.iacd.or.kr/pdf/journal/04/4-02.pdf

When I first time read his book in Chinese two years ago, that was really striking to me.   However,  much of debates have to be continued regarding this "new" idea of the origins of Magyars.

My question is: Do you buy this?
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  Quote calvo Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27-Oct-2007 at 10:11
Thanks for such a detailed reply!!!
 
The truth is that there are many theories about the origin of Magyars and greatly influenced by the version one subjectively wants to believe in.
 
Regarding the issue of the percentage of "ethnic Magyars" living in the Carpathian basin during the Middle Ages, the figures are greatly manipulated by nationalistic politics.
 
My personal interpretation (which might not be correct) is the following:
 
As in all migration waves, the number of migrants are usually numerically modest compared to the local inhabitants. THe Magyar migration should be no exception.
The number of Magyars arriving from Russia were probably small compared to the indigenous inhabitants of Panonia, be them Latin-Roman, Slavic, or a mixture of the 2. However, when Arpad founded the Hungarian state, many of these indigenous ethnicies became assimilated by Magyars, and thus came to identify themselves as Magyars, although those who held onto their original identities still formed a (varying percentage) way into the modern age.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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  Quote Darius of Parsa Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27-Oct-2007 at 03:44
over

 
The Hungarians migrated in the path seen above. The peoples crossed the Ural mountains from Asia and into Europe.
 
The Hungarian nation traces its history to the Magyars, a pagan Finno-
Ugric tribe that arose in central Russia and spoke a language that evolved into modern Hungarian. Historians dispute the exact location of the early Magyars' original homeland, but it is likely to be an area between the Volga River and the Ural Mountains. In ancient times, the Magyars probably lived as nomadic tent-dwelling hunters and fishers. Some scholars argue that they engaged in agriculture beginning in the second millennium B.C.

Before the fifth century A.D., the Magyars' ancestors gradually migrated southward onto the Russian steppes, where they wandered into the lands near the Volga River bend, at present-day Kazan, as nomadic herders. Later, probably under pressure from hostile tribes to the east, they migrated to the area between the Don and lower Dnepr rivers. There they lived close to, and perhaps were dominated by, the Bulgar-Turks from about the fifth to the seventh century. During this period, the Magyars became a semisedentary people who lived by raising cattle and sheep, planting crops, and fishing. The Bulgar-Turkish influence on the Magyars was significant, especially in agriculture. Most Hungarian words dealing with agriculture and animal husbandry have Turkic roots. By contrast, the etymology of the word Hungary has been traced to a Slavicized form of the Turkic words on ogur, meaning "ten arrows," which may have referred to the number of Magyar tribes.

The Magyars lived on lands controlled by the Khazars (a Turkish people whose realm stretched from the lower Volga and the lower Don rivers to the Caucasus) from about the seventh to the ninth century, when they freed themselves from Khazar rule. The Khazars attempted to reconquer the Magyars both by themselves and with the help of the Pechenegs, another Turkish tribe. This tribe drove the Magyars from their homes westward to lands between the Dnepr and lower Danube rivers in 889. In 895 the Magyars joined Byzantine armies under Emperor Leo VI in a war against the Bulgars. However, the Bulgars emerged victorious. Their allies, the Pechenegs, attacked the weakened Magyars and forced them westward yet again in 895 or 896. This migration took the Magyars over the Carpathian Mountains and into the basin drained by the Danube and Tisza rivers, a region that corresponds roughly to present-day Hungary. Romans, Goths, Huns, Slavs, and other peoples had previously occupied the region, but at the time of the Magyar migration, the land was inhabited only by a sparse population of Slavs, numbering about 200,000.

Tradition holds that the Magyar clan chiefs chose a chieftain named rpad to lead the migration and that they swore by sipping from a cup of their commingled blood to accept rpad's male descendants as the Magyars' hereditary chieftains. The Magyars probably knew of the lands in the Carpathian Basin because from 892 to 894 Magyar mercenaries had fought there for King Arnulph of East Francia in a struggle with the duke of Moravia. Estimates are that about 400,000 people made up the exodus, in seven Magyar, one Kabar, and other smaller tribes.

The Carpathian Basin and parts of Transylvania southsouthwest of the basin had been settled for thousands of years before the Magyars' arrival. A rich Bronze Age culture thrived there until horsemen from the steppes destroyed it in the middle of the thirteenth century B.C. Celts later occupied parts of the land, and in the first century A.D. the Romans conquered and divided it between the imperial provinces of Pannonia and Dacia. In the fourth century, the Goths ousted the Romans, and Attila the Hun later made the Carpathian Basin the hub of his short-lived empire. Thereafter, Avars, Bulgars, Germans, and Slavs settled the region. In the late ninth century A.D., only scattered settlements of Slavs occupied the Carpathian Basin. The Magyar forces, light cavalrymen who used Central Asian-style bows, quickly conquered the Slavs, whom they either assimilated or enslaved.

Romanian and Hungarian historians disagree about the ethnicity of Transylvania's population before the Magyars' arrival. The Romanians establish their claims to Transylvania by arguing that their Latin ancestors inhabited Transylvania and survived there through the Dark Ages. The Hungarians, by contrast, maintain that Transylvania was inhabited not by the ancestors of the Romanians but by Slavs and point out that the first mention of the Romanians' ancestors in Hungarian records, which appeared in the thirteenth century, described them as drifting herders.

Hungarians (Hungarian: Magyarok) or Magyars are an ethnic group primarily associated with Hungary. There are around 9.97 million Magyars in Hungary (2001).[1] Magyars have been the main inhabitants of the Kingdom of Hungary that existed through most of the second millennium. After the Treaty of Trianon Magyars have become minority inhabitants on the territory of present-day Romania (1,440,000; see: Hungarian minority in Romania), Slovakia (520,500), Serbia (293,000; largely in Vojvodina), Ukraine and Russia (170,000), Austria (40,583), Croatia (16,500), the Czech Republic (14,600) and Slovenia (10,000). Significant groups of people with Magyar ancestry live in various other parts of the world (e.g. 1,400,000 in the United States), but unlike the Magyars living within the former Kingdom of Hungary, only a minority of these preserves the Hungarian language and tradition.

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[edit] Etymology

The word "Hungarian" is thought to be derived from the Bulgar-Turkic Onogur, possibly because the Magyars were neighbours (or confederates) of the Empire of the Onogurs in the sixth century, whose leading tribal union was called the "Onogurs" (meaning "ten tribes" in Old Turkic).

The "H-" prefix in many languages (Hungarians, Hongrois, Hungarus etc.) is a later addition. It was taken over from the name of the "Huns", a semi-nomadic tribe that briefly lived in the area of present-day Hungary and, according to legends originating in the medieval period, was the people from which the Magyars arose. The identification of the "Hungarians" with the "Huns" has often occurred in historiography and literature. Even today, Hun names like Attila and Rka are popular among Hungarians. This identification began to be disputed in the late nineteenth century, and is still a source of major controversy among scholars who insist that there could be no direct connection between the two.

The word Magyar in the Hungarian language refers both to the ethnicity and the language. In English and many other languages, however, "Magyar" is only used to refer to the ethnicity and is most common in certain contexts, for example, when distinguishing ethnic Hungarians (i.e. the Magyars) from the other nationalities living in the Kingdom of Hungary.

[edit] Ethnic affiliations and origins

The origin of the Hungarians is partly disputed. The most widely accepted Finno-Ugric theory from the late nineteenth century is based primarily on linguistic and ethnographical arguments, while it is criticised by some as relying too much on linguistics. There are also other theories stating that the Magyars are descendants of Scythians, Huns, Avars, and/or Sumerians. These are primarily based on medieval legends, whose authenticity and scientific reliability is strongly questionable, as well as non-systematic linguistic similarities. Most scholars dismiss these claims as speculation.

The following section presents the Finno-Ugric theory of the origin of modern Hungarian people. For some other theories see Hungarian prehistory.

Finno-Ugric is a group of related languages, which does not necessarily mean that the peoples speaking those languages are equally related in terms of ethnicity. The same holds true for Indo-European languages.

[edit] East of the Ural mountains (pre-fourth century AD)

Migration%20of%20the%20Magyars
Migration of the Magyars

During the fourth millennium BC, some of the earliest settlements of the Finno-Ugric-speaking peoples were situated east of the Ural Mountains, where they hunted and fished. From there, the Ugrians, settled in the wood-steppe parts of western Siberia (i.e. to the east of the Ural Mountains) from at least 2000 BC onwards. Their settlements closely resembled those of the north-western Andronovo Culture. More advanced tribes arriving from the southern steppes taught them how to farm, breed cattle and produce bronze objects. Around 1500 BC, they started to breed horses and horse riding became one of their typical activities.

Due to climatic changes in the early first millennium BC, the northern Ugrian subgroup (the Ob-Ugrians) moved to the lower Ob River, while southern Ugrians remained in the south and became nomadic herdsmen. Since these southern Ugrians became the ancestors of the proto-Magyars, this division marks the beginning of the Magyars as a distinct ethnic group. During the following centuries, the proto-Magyars continued to live in the wood-steppes and steppes southeast of the Ural Mountains, strongly influenced by their immediate neighbours, the ancient Sarmatians.

[edit] Bashkiria and the Khazar khaganate (fourth century to c.830 AD)

Main articles: Yugra, Magna Hungaria, and Levedia

In the fourth and fifth centuries AD, the proto-Magyars moved to the west of the Ural Mountains to the area between the southern Ural Mountains and the Volga River known as Bashkiria (Bashkortostan).

Eastern%20Hemisphere,%20600ad.
Eastern Hemisphere, 600ad.

In the early eighth century, some of the proto-Magyars moved to the Don River to an area between the Volga, Don and the Seversky Donets rivers called Levedia. Meanwhile, the descendants of those proto-Magyars who stayed in Bashkiria remained there as late as 1241. As a consequence, earlier scholarship considered the Magyars and the Bashkirs as two branches of the same nation. The earlier Bashkirs, however, were decimated during the Mongol invasion of Europe (thirteenth century) and assimilated into Turkic peoples.


The proto-Magyars around the Don River were subordinates of the Khazar khaganate. Their neighbours were the archaeological Saltov Culture, i.e. Bulgars (Proto-Bulgarians, descendants of the Onogurs) and the Alans, from whom they learned gardening, elements of cattle breeding and of agriculture. The Bulgars and Magyars shared a long-lasting relationship in Khazaria, either by alliance or rivalry. The system of two rulers (later known as kende and gyula) is also thought to be a major inheritance from the Khazars. Tradition holds that the Magyars were organized in a confederacy of tribes called the Ht Magyar. The tribes of the Htmagyar were; Jenő, Kr, Keszi, Krt-Gyarmat, Megyer (Magyar), Nyk, and Tarjn. The confederacy was formed as a border defending allies of Khazaria mainly during the reign of Khagan Bulan and Ovadyah, with the Magyar tribe as ascendant.

[edit] Etelkz (c.830 to c.895)

Main article: Etelkz

Around 830, a civil war broke out in the Khazar khaganate. As a result, three Kabar tribes out of the Khazars joined the Magyars and they moved to what the Magyars call the Etelkz, i.e. the territory between the Carpathians and the Dnieper River (today's Ukraine). Around 854, the Magyars had to face a first attack by the Pechenegs. (According to other sources, the reason for the departure of the Magyars to Etelkz was the attack of the Pechenegs.) Both the Kabars and earlier the Bulgars may have taught the Magyars their Turkic languages; according to the Finno-Ugric theory, this is used to account for at least three hundred Turkic words and names still in modern Hungarian. The new neighbours of the Magyars were the Vikings and the eastern Slavs. Archaeological findings suggest that the Magyars entered into intense interaction with both groups. From 862 onwards, the Magyars (already referred to as the Ungri) along with their allies, the Kabars, started a series of looting raids from the Etelkz to the Carpathian Basinmostly against the Eastern Frankish Empire (Germany) and Great Moravia, but also against the Balaton principality and Bulgaria.

[edit] Entering the Carpathian Basin (after 895)

Prince%20rpd%20crossing%20the%20Carpathians.%20A%20detail%20from%20rpd%20Feszty%20and%20his%20assistants%20vast%20canvas%20%28over%201800 m%29,%20painted%20to%20celebrate%20the%20one-thousandth%20anniversary%20of%20the%20Magyar%20conquest%20of%20Hungary,%20now%20displayed%20at%20the%20pusztaszer%20National%20Memorial%20Site%20in%20Hungary.
Prince rpd crossing the Carpathians. A detail from rpd Feszty and his assistants' vast canvas (over 1800 m), painted to celebrate the one-thousandth anniversary of the Magyar conquest of Hungary, now displayed at the pusztaszer National Memorial Site in Hungary.
The%20entry%20of%20the%20Magyars%20into%20the%20Carpathian%20basin,%20from%20the%20Chronicon%20Pictum,%201360.
The entry of the Magyars into the Carpathian basin, from the Chronicon Pictum, 1360.

In 895/896, probably under the leadership of rpd, some Magyars crossed the Carpathians and entered the Carpathian Basin. The tribe called Magyars (Megyer) was the leading tribe of the Magyar alliance that conquered the center of the basin. At the same time (c.895), due to their involvement in the 894-896 Bulgaro-Byzantine war, Magyars in Etelkz were attacked by Bulgaria and then by their old enemies the Pechenegs. It is uncertain whether or not those conflicts were the cause of the Magyar departure from Etelkz.

In the Carpathian Basin, the Magyars initially occupied the Great Moravian territory at the upper/middle Tisza river, a scarcely populated territory, where, according to Arabian sources, Great Moravia used to send its criminals, and where the Roman Empire had settled the Iazyges centuries earlier. From there, they intensified their looting raids across continental Europe. In 900, they moved from the upper Tisza river to Transdanubia (Pannonia), which later became the core of the arising Hungarian state. Their allies, the Kabars (probably led by Kursan), appear to have settled in the region around Bihar.[citation needed] Upon entering the Carpathian Basin, the Magyars found a mainly Slavic population there.

Remnants of the Avars lived in the southwest and Romanians in the east and southeast, although the latter is a matter of controversy (see Origin of the Romanians). After the battle of Augsburg (956), the Magyars gradually changed their pastoral way of life to an agricultural one and borrowed hundreds of agricultural Slavic words. See History of Hungary for a continuation, and Hungary before the Magyars for the background.

Many of the Magyars, however, remained to the north of the Carpathians after 895/896, as archaeological findings suggest (e.g. Polish Przemysl). They seem to have joined the other Magyars in 900. There is also a consistent Hungarian population in Transylvania that is historically unrelated to the Magyars led by rpd: the Szkelys, 40% of the Hungarian minority in Romania. They are fully acknowledged as Magyars. The Szkely people's origin, and in particular the time of their settlement in Transylvania, is a matter of historical controversy (see Szkely for details).

[edit] History after 900

The Magyar leader rpd is believed to have led the Hungarians into the Carpathian Basin in 896. In 907, the Magyars destroyed a Bavarian army at Pressburg and laid Germany, France and Italy open to Magyar raids. These raids were fast and devastating. The Magyars defeated Louis the Child's Imperial Army near Augsburg in 910. From 917-925, Magyars raided through Basle, Alsace, Burgundy, Saxony, and Provence. Magyar expansion was checked at the Battle of Lechfeld in 955. Although the battle at Lechfeld stopped the Magyar raids against western Europe, the raids on the Balkan Peninsula continued until 970.[11] Hungarian settlement in the area was approved by the Pope when their leaders accepted Christianity, and Stephen I the Saint (Szent Istvn) was crowned King of Hungary in 1001. The century between the Magyars' arrival from the eastern European plains and the consolidation of the Kingdom of Hungary in 1001 was dominated by pillaging campaigns across Europe, from Dania (Denmark) to the Iberian peninsula (Spain).[12]

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Eastern Hemisphere, 1025ad.

At this time, the Hungarian nation numbered between 25,000[13] and 1,000,000 people[14]. The Slavic population in present-day Hungary were culturally assimilated by the Magyar culture.

The name "Hungarian" has also a wider meaning, as it once referred to all inhabitants of the Kingdom of Hungary irrespective of their ethnicity.[15]

The first accurate measurements of the population of the Kingdom of Hungary including ethnic composition were carried out in 1850-51. There is a debate among Magyar and non-Magyar (especially Slovak and Romanian) historians about the possible changes in the ethnic structure throughout history:

  • Some historians, especially Hungarians, support the theory that the Magyars' percentage in the Carpathian Basin was at an almost constant 80% during the Middle Ages, and began to decrease only at the time of the Ottoman conquest, reaching as low as around 39% (or 29% according to historians from outside Hungary) in the end of the eighteenth century. The decline of the Magyars was due to the constant wars, famines and plagues during the 150 years of Ottoman rule. The main zones of war were the territories inhabited by the Magyars, so the death toll among them was much higher than among other nationalities. In the 18th century their percentage declined further because of the influx of new settlers from Germany, Serbia, and other countries.
  • Others, particularly Slovak and Romanian historians, tend to emphasise the multi-ethnic nature of the Kingdom even in the Middle Ages and argue that the drastic change in the ethnic structure hypothesized by Hungarian historians in fact did not occur. Therefore, the Magyars are supposed to have accounted only for about 30-40% of the Kingdom's population since its establishment. In particular, there is a fierce debate among Magyar and Romanian historians about the ethnic composition of Transylvania through the times; see Origin of the Romanians.

In the nineteenth century, the percentage of Magyars in the Kingdom of Hungary rose gradually, reaching over 50% by 1900 (see Magyarization). Spontaneous assimilation was an important factor, especially between the German and Jewish minorities and the citizens of the bigger towns. On the other hand, about 1,5 million people (of whom about two-thirds were non-Hungarian) left the Kingdom of Hungary between 1890-1910 to escape from poverty.[16]

The years 1918 to 1920 were a turning point in the Magyars' history. By the Treaty of Trianon, the Kingdom had been cut into several parts, leaving only a quarter of its original size. One third of the Magyars became minorities in the neighbouring countries. During the remainder of the twentieth century, the Magyar population of Hungary grew from 7,1 million (1920) to around 10,4 million (1980), in spite of losses during the Second World War and the wave of emigration after the attempted revolution in 1956. The number of Hungarians in the neighbouring countries mostly remained the same or slightly decreased, mostly due to assimilation (sometimes forced; see Slovakization and Romanianization) and emigration to Hungary (in the 1990s, especially from Transylvania and Vojvodina).

After the "baby boom" of the 1960s, a serious demographic crisis began to develop in Hungary and its neighbours. The Magyar population reached its greatest in 1980, after which it began to decline. This is expected to continue at least until 2050, when the population would number around seven to eight million.[citation needed]

Today, the Magyars represent around 35% of the population of the Carpathian Basin. Their number is around twelve to thirteen million (2006), almost the same as in 1910. While other ethnic groups increased their numbers two, three or even more times during the twentieth century, the Magyar population stagnated. Between 1950 and 2000, the increase in Hungary's population was the third slowest in the world, after Bulgaria and St. Kitts and Nevis: 8.6% (from 9,338,000 to 10,137,000).

There was a referendum in Hungary in December 2004 on whether to grant Hungarian citizenship to Magyars living outside Hungary's borders (i.e. without requiring a permanent residence in Hungary). The referendum failed due to the insufficient voter turnout.

[edit] Later influences

An%20embossed%20stone%20in%20the%20pusztaszer%20National%20Memorial%20Park%20showing%20a%20worldwide%20Hungarian%20population%20count.
An embossed stone in the pusztaszer National Memorial Park showing a worldwide Hungarian population count.

Besides the various peoples mentioned above, the Magyars assimilated or were influenced by subsequent peoples arriving in the Carpathian Basin. Among these are the Cumanians, Pechenegs, Jazones, Germans and other Western European settlers in the Middle Ages. Romanians and Slovaks have lived together and blended with Magyars since early medieval times. Turks, who occupied the central part of present-day Hungary from c.1541 until c.1699, inevitably exerted an influence, as did the various nations (Germans, Slovaks, Serbs, Croats and others) that resettled depopulated territories after their departure. The advanced economic and political conditions of the Slavs, who had preceded the Magyars' arrival but continued to migrate thereafter, exerted a significant influence; several Hungarian words relating to agriculture, politics, religion and handicrafts were borrowed from Slavic languages. Both Jewish and Roma (Gypsy) minorities have been living in Hungary since the Middle Ages.

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