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Hungarians

Hungarians, also known as Magyars (/ˈmæɡjɑːrz/ MAG-yarz;[26] Hungarian: magyarok [ˈmɒɟɒrok]), are a nation and ethnic group native to Hungary (Hungarian: Magyarország) and historical Hungarian lands who share a common culture, history, ancestry, and language. The Hungarian language belongs to the Uralic language family. There are an estimated 15 million ethnic Hungarians and their descendants worldwide, of whom 9.6 million live in today's Hungary.[1] About 2–3 million Hungarians live in areas that were part of the Kingdom of Hungary before the Treaty of Trianon in 1920 and are now parts of Hungary's seven neighbouring countries, Slovakia, Ukraine, Romania, Serbia, Croatia, Slovenia, and Austria. Significant groups of people with Hungarian ancestry live in various other parts of the world, most of them in the United States, Canada, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Chile, Brazil, Australia, and Argentina.

Hungarians
Magyarok
The arriving at the Carpathian Basin. Detail from Árpád Feszty's cyclorama titled the Arrival of the Hungarians.
Total population
c. 15 million
Regions with significant populations
Hungary 9,632,744[1]
Other countries
Europe
 Romania1,227,623[2]
 Slovakia[note 1]458,467[3]
 Germany296,000[4]
 Serbia253,899[5]
 France200,000–250,000[6][7]
 United Kingdom200,000–220,000[8]
 Ukraine156,566[9]
 Austria73,411[citation needed]
 Russia55,500[10]
 Switzerland27,000[11]
 Netherlands26,172[12]
 Czech Republic20,000[13]
 Belgium15,000[13]
 Croatia14,048[14]
 Sweden13,000[11]
 Slovenia10,500[15]
 Spain10,000[11]
 Ireland9,000[11]
 Norway8,316[16]
 Denmark6,000[11]
 Bosnia and Herzegovina4,000[17]
 Finland3,000[11]
 Greece2,000[11]
 Luxembourg2,000[11]
 Poland1,728[18]
North and Central America
 United States1,437,694[citation needed]
 Canada348,085[19]
 Mexico3,500[citation needed]
South America
 Brazil80,000[20]
 Chile50,000[21]
 Argentina40,000 to 50,000[22]
 Venezuela4,000[13]
 Uruguay3,000[13]
Rest of the world
 Israel200,000[citation needed]
 China86,600[23]
 Australia69,167[24]
 New Zealand7,000[13]
 Turkey6,800[citation needed]
 South Africa4,000[13]
 Jordan1,000[11]
Languages
Hungarian
Religion
Majority Christianity (Roman Catholicism;[25]
Protestantism (chiefly Calvinism, Unitarianism, and Lutheranism); Greek Catholicism)
Minority Judaism; Islam; irreligious

Hungarians can be divided into several subgroups according to local linguistic and cultural characteristics; subgroups with distinct identities include the Székelys (in eastern Transylvania), the Csángós (in Western Moldavia), the Palóc, and the Matyó.

Name

The Hungarians' own ethnonym to denote themselves in the Early Middle Ages is uncertain. The exonym "Hungarian" is thought to be derived from Oghur-Turkic On-Ogur (literally "Ten Arrows" or "Ten Tribes"). Another possible explanation comes from the Old East Slavic "Yugra" ("Югра"). It may refer to the Hungarians during a time when they dwelt east of the Ural Mountains along the natural borders of Europe and Asia before their conquest of the Carpathian Basin.[27]

Prior to the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin in 895/6 and while they lived on the steppes of Eastern Europe east of the Carpathian Mountains, written sources called the Magyars "Hungarians", specifically: "Ungri" by Georgius Monachus in 837, "Ungri" by Annales Bertiniani in 862, and "Ungari" by the Annales ex Annalibus Iuvavensibus in 881. The Magyars/Hungarians probably belonged to the Onogur tribal alliance, and it is possible that they became its ethnic majority.[28] In the Early Middle Ages, the Hungarians had many names, including "Węgrzy" (Polish), "Ungherese" (Italian), "Ungar" (German), and "Hungarus".[29] The "H-" prefix is a later addition of Medieval Latin.

The Hungarian people refer to themselves by the demonym "Magyar" rather than "Hungarian".[28] "Magyar" possibly derived from the name of the most prominent Hungarian tribe, the "Megyer". The tribal name "Megyer" became "Magyar" in reference to the Hungarian people as a whole.[30][31][32]

The Greek cognate of "Tourkia" (Greek: Τουρκία) was used by the scholar and Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII "Porphyrogenitus" in his De Administrando Imperio of c. AD 950,[33][34] though in his use, "Turks" always referred to Magyars.[35] This was a misnomer, as while the Magyars do have some Turkic genetic and cultural influence, including their historical social structure being of Turkic origin,[36] they still are not widely considered as part of the Turkic people.[37]

The obscure name kerel or keral, found in the 13th-century work the Secret History of the Mongols, possibly referred to Hungarians and derived from the Hungarian title király 'king'.[38]

The historical Latin phrase "Natio Hungarica" ("Hungarian nation") had a wider and political meaning because it once referred to all nobles of the Kingdom of Hungary, regardless of their ethnicity or mother tongue.[39]

History

Origin

The origin of Hungarians, the place and time of their ethnogenesis, has been a matter of debate. The Hungarian language is classified as an Ugric language, and Hungarians are commonly considered an Ugric people that originated from the Ural Mountains, Western Siberia or the Middle Volga region. The relatedness of Hungarians with other Ugric peoples is confirmed by linguistic and genetic data, but modern Hungarians have substantial admixture from local European populations.[40] The consensus among linguists is that the Hungarian language is a member of the Uralic family and that it diverged from its Ugric relatives in the first half of the 1st millennium BC, in western Siberia, east of the southern Urals, and arrived into Central Europe by the historical Magyar or Hungarian "conquerors". The historical Magyars were found to show significant affinity to modern Mansi and Khanty people, and stood also in contact with Iranian peoples, Turkic peoples (presumably Oghuric-speakers) and Slavs. The historical Magyars created an alliance of Steppe tribes, consisting of an Ugric/Magyar ruling class, Iranian but also Turkic/Oghuric and Slavic tribes, which conquered the Pannonian Steppe and surrounding regions, giving rise to modern Hungarians and Hungarian culture.[41]

"Hungarian pre-history", i.e. the history of the "ancient Hungarians" before their arrival in the Carpathian basin at the end of the 9th century, is thus a "tenuous construct", based on linguistics, analogies in folklore, archaeology and subsequent written evidence. In the 21st century, historians have argued that "Hungarians" did not exist as a discrete ethnic group or people for centuries before their settlement in the Carpathian basin. Instead, the formation of the people with its distinct identity was a process. According to this view, Hungarians as a people emerged by the 9th century, subsequently incorporating other, ethnically and linguistically divergent, peoples.[42]

Pre-4th century AD

 
Map of the presumptive Hungarian prehistory

During the 4th millennium BC, the Uralic-speaking peoples who were living in the central and southern regions of the Urals split up. Some dispersed towards the west and northwest and came into contact with Turkic and Iranian speakers who were spreading northwards.[43] From at least 2000 BC onwards, the Ugric-speakers became distinguished from the rest of the Uralic community, of which the ancestors of the Magyars, being located farther south, were the most numerous. Judging by evidence from burial mounds and settlement sites, they interacted with the Indo-Iranian Andronovo culture and Baikal-Altai Asian cultures.[44][41]

4th century to c. 830

In the 4th and 5th centuries AD, the Hungarians moved to the west of the Ural Mountains, to the area between the southern Ural Mountains and the Volga River, known as Bashkiria (Bashkortostan) and Perm Krai. In the early 8th century, some of the Hungarians moved to the Don River, to an area between the Volga, Don and the Seversky Donets rivers.[45] Meanwhile, the descendants of those Hungarians who stayed in Bashkiria remained there as late as 1241.

The Hungarians around the Don River were subordinates of the Khazar Khaganate. Their neighbours were the archaeological Saltov culture, i.e. Bulgars (Proto-Bulgarians, Onogurs) and the Alans, from whom they learned gardening, elements of cattle breeding and of agriculture. Tradition holds that the Hungarians were organized in a confederacy of seven tribes. The names of the seven tribes were: Jenő, Kér, Keszi, Kürt-Gyarmat, Megyer, Nyék, and Tarján.

c. 830 to c. 895

Around 830, a rebellion broke out in the Khazar khaganate. As a result, three Kabar tribes[46] of the Khazars joined the Hungarians and moved to what the Hungarians call the Etelköz, the territory between the Carpathians and the Dnieper River. The Hungarians faced their first attack by the Pechenegs around 854.[45] The new neighbours of the Hungarians were the Varangians and the eastern Slavs. From 862 onwards, the Hungarians (already referred to as the Ungri) along with their allies, the Kabars, started a series of looting raids from the Etelköz into the Carpathian Basin, mostly against the Eastern Frankish Empire (Germany) and Great Moravia, but also against the Balaton principality and Bulgaria.[47]

Entering the Carpathian Basin (c. 895)

In 895/896, under the leadership of Árpád, some Hungarians crossed the Carpathians and entered the Carpathian Basin. The tribe called Megyer was the leading tribe of the Hungarian alliance that conquered the centre of the basin. At the same time (c. 895), due to their involvement in the 894–896 Bulgaro-Byzantine war, Hungarians in Etelköz were attacked by Bulgaria and then by their old enemies the Pechenegs. The Bulgarians won the decisive battle of Southern Buh. It is uncertain whether or not those conflicts contributed to the Hungarian departure from Etelköz.

From the upper Tisza region of the Carpathian Basin, the Hungarians intensified their looting raids across continental Europe. In 900, they moved from the upper Tisza river to Transdanubia, which later became the core of the arising Hungarian state. By 902, the borders were pushed to the South-Moravian Carpathians and the Principality of Moravia collapsed.[48] At the time of the Hungarian migration, the land was inhabited only by a sparse population of Slavs, numbering about 200,000,[45] who were either assimilated or enslaved by the Hungarians.[45]

Archaeological findings (e.g. in the Polish city of Przemyśl) suggest that many Hungarians remained to the north of the Carpathians after 895/896.[49] There is also a consistent Hungarian population in Transylvania, the Székelys, who comprise 40% of the Hungarians in Romania.[50][51] The Székely people's origin, and in particular the time of their settlement in Transylvania, is a matter of historical controversy.

After 900

 
Hungarian raids in the 9–10th century

In 907, the Hungarians destroyed a Bavarian army in the Battle of Pressburg and laid the territories of present-day Germany, France, and Italy open to Hungarian raids, which were fast and devastating. The Hungarians defeated the Imperial Army of Louis the Child, son of Arnulf of Carinthia and last legitimate descendant of the German branch of the house of Charlemagne, near Augsburg in 910. From 917 to 925, Hungarians raided through Basle, Alsace, Burgundy, Saxony, and Provence.[52] Hungarian expansion was checked at the Battle of Lechfeld in 955, ending their raids against Western Europe, but raids on the Balkan Peninsula continued until 970.[53]

The Pope approved Hungarian settlement in the area when their leaders converted to Christianity, and Stephen I (Szent István, or Saint Stephen) was crowned King of Hungary in 1001. The century between the arrival of the Hungarians 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 (contemporary Spain and Portugal).[citation needed] After the acceptance of the nation into Christian Europe under Stephen I, Hungary served as a bulwark against further invasions from the east and south, especially by the Turks.

 
Population growth of Hungarians (900–1980)

At this time, the Hungarian nation numbered around 400,000 people.[45]

Early modern period

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 Hungarian and non-Hungarian (especially Slovak and Romanian) historians about the possible changes in the ethnic structure of the region throughout history. Some historians support the theory that the proportion of Hungarians in the Carpathian Basin was at an almost constant 80% during the Middle Ages.[54][55][56][57][58] Non-Hungarians numbered hardly more than 20% to 25% of the total population.[54] The Hungarian population began to decrease only at the time of the Ottoman conquest,[54][55][58] reaching as low as around 39% by the end of the 18th century. The decline of the Hungarians was due to the constant wars, Ottoman raids, famines, and plagues during the 150 years of Ottoman rule.[54][55][58] The main zones of war were the territories inhabited by the Hungarians, so the death toll depleted them at a much higher rate than among other nationalities.[54][58] In the 18th century, their proportion declined further because of the influx of new settlers from Europe, especially Slovaks, Serbs and Germans.[59] In 1715 (after the Ottoman occupation), the Southern Great Plain was nearly uninhabited but now has 1.3 million inhabitants, nearly all of them Hungarians. As a consequence, having also the Habsburg colonization policies, the country underwent a great change in ethnic composition as its population more than tripled to 8 million between 1720 and 1787, while only 39% of its people were Hungarians, who lived primarily in the centre of the country.[54][55][56][58]

 
Traditional Hungarian costumes, 1822

Other historians, particularly Slovaks and Romanians, argue that the drastic change in the ethnic structure hypothesized by Hungarian historians in fact did not occur. In particular, there is a fierce debate among Hungarians and Romanian historians about the ethnic composition of Transylvania through these times. For instance, Ioan-Aurel Pop argues that the Hungarian army of IX-X centuries, while it was eminently suitable for raids, was not at all fit to occupy territories already densely inhabited, especially in the hilly and mountainous areas.[60] He adds that Hungarians, outside of Alföld, region where they were seminomadic during this time, were not able to become colonizers, and that for this reason the regions of Transylvania, Upper Hungary and Croatia were integrated in the Hungarian Kingdom in a later stage, after the year 1000, after the sedentarization, Christianization and partial feudalization of the Hungarians.[60] Pop ignores that plenty Magyar artifacts and burial sites have been found in Transylvania from the 10th century.[61][62]

19th century to present

In the 19th century, the proportion of Hungarians in the Kingdom of Hungary rose gradually, reaching over 50% by 1900 due to higher natural growth and Magyarization. Between 1787 and 1910 the number of ethnic Hungarians rose from 2.3 million to 10.2 million, accompanied by the resettlement of the Great Hungarian Plain and Délvidék by mainly Roman Catholic Hungarian settlers from the northern and western counties of the Kingdom of Hungary.

Spontaneous assimilation was an important factor, especially among the German and Jewish minorities and the citizens of the bigger towns. On the other hand, about 1.5 million people (about two-thirds non-Hungarian) left the Kingdom of Hungary between 1890–1910 to escape from poverty.[63]

 
Magyars (Hungarians) in Hungary, 1890 census
 
The Treaty of Trianon: Kingdom of Hungary lost 72% of its land and 3.3 million people of Hungarian ethnicity.

The years 1918 to 1920 were a turning point in the Hungarians' 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 Hungarians became minorities in the neighbouring countries.[64] During the remainder of the 20th century, the Hungarians population of Hungary grew from 7.1 million (1920) to around 10.4 million (1980), despite 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 tended to remain the same or slightly decreased, mostly due to assimilation (sometimes forced; see Slovakization and Romanianization)[65][66][67] and to emigration to Hungary (in the 1990s, especially from Transylvania and Vojvodina).

After the "baby boom" of the 1950s (Ratkó era), a serious demographic crisis began to develop in Hungary and its neighbours.[68] The Hungarian population reached its maximum in 1980, then began to decline.[68]

For historical reasons (see Treaty of Trianon), significant Hungarian minority populations can be found in the surrounding countries, most of them in Romania (in Transylvania), Slovakia, and Serbia (in Vojvodina). Sizable minorities live also in Ukraine (in Transcarpathia), Croatia (primarily Slavonia), and Austria (in Burgenland). Slovenia is also host to a number of ethnic Hungarians, and Hungarian language has an official status in parts of the Prekmurje region. Today more than two million ethnic Hungarians live in nearby countries.[69]

There was a referendum in Hungary in December 2004 on whether to grant Hungarian citizenship to Hungarians living outside Hungary's borders (i.e. without requiring a permanent residence in Hungary). The referendum failed due to insufficient voter turnout. On 26 May 2010, Hungary's Parliament passed a bill granting dual citizenship to ethnic Hungarians living outside of Hungary. Some neighboring countries with sizable Hungarian minorities expressed concerns over the legislation.[70]

Ethnic affiliations and genetic origins

 
The place of origin for the regional groups of Hungarians in the conquest period according to Kinga Éry

The Hungarian language belongs to the Uralic language family. Modern Hungarians are however genetically rather distant from their closest linguistic relatives (Mansi and Khanty), and more similar to the neighbouring non-Uralic neighbors. Modern Hungarians share a small but significant "Western Siberian" component with other Uralic-speaking populations maximized among modern Khanty. The historical Magyars had a higher "Western Siberian" component as well as strong links to the populations of the Baraba region, Inner Asia, Eastern Europe, Northern Europe and Central Asia. Modern Hungarians also display noteworthy affinity with historical Sintashta culture samples.[41]

Archeological mtDNA haplogroups show a similarity between Hungarians and Turkic-speaking Tatars and Bashkirs, while another study found a link between the Khanty and Bashkirs, suggesting that the Bashkirs are a mixture of Turkic, Ugric and Indo-European contributions. The homeland of ancient Hungarians is around the Ural Mountains, and the Hungarian affinities with the Karayakupovo culture is widely accepted among researchers.[71] A full genome study by Triska et al. 2017 found that the Bashkirs "were strongly influenced by Ancient North Eurasians, highlighting a mismatch of their cultural background and genetic ancestry and an intricacy of the historic interface between Turkic and Uralic populations".[72] The proto-Uralic peoples homeland may have been the Okunev culture, a forest culture in the Altai-Sayan region, characterized by high genetic affinity to the Botai culture in Northern Central Asia and the ancient Tarim mummies in modern day Xinjiang, as well as Western Siberian hunter-gatherers (WSHG). Their "eastern" genetic affinities may be explained by contact with proto-Turkic peoples. The arrival of the Indo-European Afanasievo culture may have caused the dispersal and expansion of proto-Uralic languages along the Seima-Turbino cultural area.[73]

According to Neparáczki: "From all recent and archaic populations tested the Volga Tatars show the smallest genetic distance to the entire Conqueror population" and "a direct genetic relation of the Conquerors to Onogur-Bulgar ancestors of these groups is very feasible."[74] Genetic data found that among "Western Turkic speakers, like Chuvash and Volga Tatar, the East Asian component was detected only in low amounts (~ 5%)", linking them to both Magyar conquerors and the historical Bolgars.[75]

Paternal haplogroups

According to a study by Pamjav, the area of Bodrogköz suggested to be a population isolate found an elevated frequency of Haplogroup N: R1a-M458 (20.4%), I2a1-P37 (19%), R1a-Z280 (14.3%), and E1b-M78 (10.2%). Various R1b-M343 subgroups accounted for 15% of the Bodrogköz population. Haplogroup N1c-Tat covered 6.2% of the lineages, but most of it belonged to the N1c-VL29 subgroup, which is more frequent among Balto-Slavic speaking than Finno-Ugric speaking peoples. Other haplogroups had frequencies of less than 5%.[76]

Among 100 Hungarian men, 90 of whom from the Great Hungarian Plain, the following haplogroups and frequencies are obtained: 30% R1a, 15% R1b, 13% I2a1, 13% J2, 9% E1b1b1a, 8% I1, 3% G2, 3% J1, 3% I*, 1% E*, 1% F*, 1% K*. The 97 Székelys belong to the following haplogroups: 20% R1b, 19% R1a, 17% I1, 11% J2, 10% J1, 8% E1b1b1a, 5% I2a1, 5% G2, 3% P*, 1% E*, 1% N.[77] It can be inferred that Szekelys have more significant German admixture. A study sampling 45 Palóc from Budapest and northern Hungary, found 60% R1a, 13% R1b, 11% I, 9% E, 2% G, 2% J2.[78] A study estimating possible Inner Asian admixture among nearly 500 Hungarians based on paternal lineages only, estimated it at 5.1% in Hungary, at 7.4 in Székelys and at 6.3% at Csángós.[79]

An analysis of Bashkir samples from the Burzyansky and Abzelilovsky districts of the Republic of Bashkortostan in the Volga-Ural region, revealed them to belong to the R1a subclade R1a-SUR51, which is shared in significant amounts with the historical Magyars and the royal Hungarian lineage, and representing the closest kin to the Hungarian Árpád dynasty. This subclade was also found among historical Scytho-Iranian samples in modern day Afghanistan.[80][81]

Autosomal DNA

Modern Hungarians show relative close affinity to surrounding populations, but harbour a small "Western Siberian" component maximized among the Ugric Khanty people, and associated with the historical Magyars. Modern Hungarians formed from several historical population groupings, including the historical Magyars, assimilated Slavic and Germanic groups, as well as Central Asian Steppe tribes (presumably Turkic and Iranian tribes). Genetic analyses link parts of the historical Magyars ancestors to West Siberian hunter-gatherers. These historical Western Siberian hunter-gatherers were characterized by high Ancient North Eurasian ancestry and less Eastern Siberian admixture, next to geneflow from Yamnaya Steppe pastoralists.[41][82][83]

Historical Magyar genome corresponds largely with the modern Bashkirs, and can be modeled as ~50% Mansi-like, ~35% Sarmatian-like, and ~15% Hun/Xiongnu-like. The admixture event is suggested to have taken place in the Southern Ural region at 643–431 BCE. Modern Hungarians were found to be admixed descendants of the historical Magyar conquerors with local Europeans, as 31 Hungarian samples could be modelled as two-way admixtures of "Conq_Asia_Core" and "EU_Core" in varying degrees. The historical Magyar component among modern Hungarians is estimated at an average frequency of 13%, which can be explained by the relative smaller population size of Magyar conquerors compared to local European groups.[41][82]

Other influences

Origin of word roots in Hungarian[84]
Uncertain
30%
Uralic
21%
Slavic
20%
Germanic
11%
Turkic
9.5%
Latin and Greek
6%
Romance
2.5%
Other known
1%

Besides the various peoples mentioned above, the Magyars later were influenced by other populations in the Carpathian Basin. Among these are the Cumans, Pechenegs, Jazones, West Slavs, Germans, and Vlachs (Romanians). Ottomans, who occupied the central part of Hungary from c. 1526 until c. 1699, inevitably exerted an influence, as did the various nations (Germans, Slovaks, Serbs, Croats, and others) that resettled the depopulated central and southern territories of the kingdom (roughly present-day South Hungary, Vojvodina in Serbia and Banat in Romania) after their departure. Similar to other European countries, Jewish, Armenian, and Roma (Gypsy) ethnic minorities have been living in Hungary since the Middle Ages.

Diaspora

 
Hungarian diaspora in the world (includes people with Hungarian ancestry or citizenship).
  Hungary
  + 1,000,000
  + 100,000
  + 10,000
  + 1,000

Hungarian diaspora (Magyar diaspora) is a term that encompasses the total ethnic Hungarian population located outside of current-day Hungary.

Maps

Culture

The culture of Hungary shows distinctive elements, incorporating local European elements and minor Central Asian/Steppe derived traditions, such as Horse culture and Shamanistic remnants in Hungarian folklore.

Traditional costumes (18th and 19th century)

Folklore and communities

See also

Notes

  1. ^ This number is a lower estimate, as 405,261 people (7.5% of the total population) did not specify their ethnicity at the 2011 Slovak Census.

References

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  2. ^ (in Romanian) "Comunicat de presă privind rezultatele definitive ale Recensământului Populaţiei şi Locuinţelor – 2011" 17 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine, at the 2011 Romanian census site; accessed 11 July 2013
  3. ^ 2001 Slovakian Census
  4. ^ "Almost 300,000 Hungarians in Germany".
  5. ^ 2011 Serbian Census
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 February 2007.
  7. ^ "PeopleGroups.org – Hungarians of France". peoplegroups.org.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "It has been officially recognized: far more Hungarians live in the United Kingdom than previously thought". portfolio.hu. 16 February 2020. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  9. ^ . State Statistics Committee of Ukraine. 2003. Archived from the original on 31 October 2004.
  10. ^ Befolkning efter födelseland och ursprungsland 31 December 2018
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Immigrant and Emigrant Populations by Country of Origin and Destination". migrationpolicy.org. 10 February 2014.
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  13. ^ a b c d e f "A diaszpóra tudományos megközelítése". Kőrösi Csoma Sándor program. 3 July 2015.
  14. ^ "World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples – Croatia : Overview (2001 census data)". United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. July 2008. Retrieved 16 March 2009.
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  16. ^ "Magyar diaszpórapolitikastratégiai irányok" (PDF). kulhonimagyarok.hu (in Hungarian). 22 November 2016. p. 29.
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  18. ^ Ludność. Stan i struktura demograficzno-społeczna. Narodowy Spis Ludności i Mieszkań 2011 (National Census of Population and Housing 2011). GUS. 2013. p. 264.
  19. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (25 October 2017). "Ethnic Origin (279), Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses (3), Generation Status (4), Age (12) and Sex (3) for the Population in Private Households of Canada, Provinces and Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2016 Census – 25% Sample Data". www12.statcan.gc.ca.
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  27. ^ OED, s. v. "Ugrian": "Ugri, the name given by early Russian writers to a Finno-Ugric people dwelling east of the Ural Mountains".
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  30. ^ György Balázs, Károly Szelényi, The Magyars: the birth of a European nation, Corvina, 1989, p. 8
  31. ^ Alan W. Ertl, Toward an Understanding of Europe: A Political Economic Précis of Continental Integration, Universal-Publishers, 2008, p. 358
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Sources

External links

  • Origins of the Hungarians from the Enciklopédia Humana (with many maps and pictures)
  • Facts about Hungary 22 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • Hungarians outside Hungary – Map

Genetic studies

  • MtDNA and Y chromosome polymorphisms in Hungary: inferences from the Palaeolithic, Neolithic and Uralic influences on the modern Hungarian gene pool
  • Guglielmino, CR; De Silvestri, A; Beres, J (March 2000). "Probable ancestors of Hungarian ethnic groups: an admixture analysis". Annals of Human Genetics. 64 (Pt 2): 145–59. doi:10.1017/S0003480000008010. PMID 11246468.
  • Human Chromosomal Polymorphism in a Hungarian Sample
  • Hungarian genetics researches 2008–2009 (in Hungarian)

hungarians, also, known, magyars, ɑː, yarz, hungarian, magyarok, ˈmɒɟɒrok, nation, ethnic, group, native, hungary, hungarian, magyarország, historical, hungarian, lands, share, common, culture, history, ancestry, language, hungarian, language, belongs, uralic,. Hungarians also known as Magyars ˈ m ae ɡ j ɑː r z MAG yarz 26 Hungarian magyarok ˈmɒɟɒrok are a nation and ethnic group native to Hungary Hungarian Magyarorszag and historical Hungarian lands who share a common culture history ancestry and language The Hungarian language belongs to the Uralic language family There are an estimated 15 million ethnic Hungarians and their descendants worldwide of whom 9 6 million live in today s Hungary 1 About 2 3 million Hungarians live in areas that were part of the Kingdom of Hungary before the Treaty of Trianon in 1920 and are now parts of Hungary s seven neighbouring countries Slovakia Ukraine Romania Serbia Croatia Slovenia and Austria Significant groups of people with Hungarian ancestry live in various other parts of the world most of them in the United States Canada Germany France the United Kingdom Chile Brazil Australia and Argentina HungariansMagyarokThe arriving at the Carpathian Basin Detail from Arpad Feszty s cyclorama titled the Arrival of the Hungarians Total populationc 15 millionRegions with significant populationsHungary 9 632 744 1 Other countriesEurope Romania1 227 623 2 Slovakia note 1 458 467 3 Germany296 000 4 Serbia253 899 5 France200 000 250 000 6 7 United Kingdom200 000 220 000 8 Ukraine156 566 9 Austria73 411 citation needed Russia55 500 10 Switzerland27 000 11 Netherlands26 172 12 Czech Republic20 000 13 Belgium15 000 13 Croatia14 048 14 Sweden13 000 11 Slovenia10 500 15 Spain10 000 11 Ireland9 000 11 Norway8 316 16 Denmark6 000 11 Bosnia and Herzegovina4 000 17 Finland3 000 11 Greece2 000 11 Luxembourg2 000 11 Poland1 728 18 North and Central America United States1 437 694 citation needed Canada348 085 19 Mexico3 500 citation needed South America Brazil80 000 20 Chile50 000 21 Argentina40 000 to 50 000 22 Venezuela4 000 13 Uruguay3 000 13 Rest of the world Israel200 000 citation needed China86 600 23 Australia69 167 24 New Zealand7 000 13 Turkey6 800 citation needed South Africa4 000 13 Jordan1 000 11 LanguagesHungarianReligionMajority Christianity Roman Catholicism 25 Protestantism chiefly Calvinism Unitarianism and Lutheranism Greek Catholicism Minority Judaism Islam irreligiousHungarians can be divided into several subgroups according to local linguistic and cultural characteristics subgroups with distinct identities include the Szekelys in eastern Transylvania the Csangos in Western Moldavia the Paloc and the Matyo Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Origin 2 2 Pre 4th century AD 2 3 4th century to c 830 2 4 c 830 to c 895 2 5 Entering the Carpathian Basin c 895 2 6 After 900 2 7 Early modern period 2 8 19th century to present 3 Ethnic affiliations and genetic origins 3 1 Paternal haplogroups 3 2 Autosomal DNA 3 3 Other influences 4 Diaspora 5 Maps 6 Culture 7 Traditional costumes 18th and 19th century 8 Folklore and communities 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Sources 13 External linksName EditFurther information Name of Hungary The Hungarians own ethnonym to denote themselves in the Early Middle Ages is uncertain The exonym Hungarian is thought to be derived from Oghur Turkic On Ogur literally Ten Arrows or Ten Tribes Another possible explanation comes from the Old East Slavic Yugra Yugra It may refer to the Hungarians during a time when they dwelt east of the Ural Mountains along the natural borders of Europe and Asia before their conquest of the Carpathian Basin 27 Prior to the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin in 895 6 and while they lived on the steppes of Eastern Europe east of the Carpathian Mountains written sources called the Magyars Hungarians specifically Ungri by Georgius Monachus in 837 Ungri by Annales Bertiniani in 862 and Ungari by the Annales ex Annalibus Iuvavensibus in 881 The Magyars Hungarians probably belonged to the Onogur tribal alliance and it is possible that they became its ethnic majority 28 In the Early Middle Ages the Hungarians had many names including Wegrzy Polish Ungherese Italian Ungar German and Hungarus 29 The H prefix is a later addition of Medieval Latin The Hungarian people refer to themselves by the demonym Magyar rather than Hungarian 28 Magyar possibly derived from the name of the most prominent Hungarian tribe the Megyer The tribal name Megyer became Magyar in reference to the Hungarian people as a whole 30 31 32 The Greek cognate of Tourkia Greek Toyrkia was used by the scholar and Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus in his De Administrando Imperio of c AD 950 33 34 though in his use Turks always referred to Magyars 35 This was a misnomer as while the Magyars do have some Turkic genetic and cultural influence including their historical social structure being of Turkic origin 36 they still are not widely considered as part of the Turkic people 37 The obscure name kerel or keral found in the 13th century work the Secret History of the Mongols possibly referred to Hungarians and derived from the Hungarian title kiraly king 38 The historical Latin phrase Natio Hungarica Hungarian nation had a wider and political meaning because it once referred to all nobles of the Kingdom of Hungary regardless of their ethnicity or mother tongue 39 History EditOrigin Edit Main article Magna Hungaria The origin of Hungarians the place and time of their ethnogenesis has been a matter of debate The Hungarian language is classified as an Ugric language and Hungarians are commonly considered an Ugric people that originated from the Ural Mountains Western Siberia or the Middle Volga region The relatedness of Hungarians with other Ugric peoples is confirmed by linguistic and genetic data but modern Hungarians have substantial admixture from local European populations 40 The consensus among linguists is that the Hungarian language is a member of the Uralic family and that it diverged from its Ugric relatives in the first half of the 1st millennium BC in western Siberia east of the southern Urals and arrived into Central Europe by the historical Magyar or Hungarian conquerors The historical Magyars were found to show significant affinity to modern Mansi and Khanty people and stood also in contact with Iranian peoples Turkic peoples presumably Oghuric speakers and Slavs The historical Magyars created an alliance of Steppe tribes consisting of an Ugric Magyar ruling class Iranian but also Turkic Oghuric and Slavic tribes which conquered the Pannonian Steppe and surrounding regions giving rise to modern Hungarians and Hungarian culture 41 Hungarian pre history i e the history of the ancient Hungarians before their arrival in the Carpathian basin at the end of the 9th century is thus a tenuous construct based on linguistics analogies in folklore archaeology and subsequent written evidence In the 21st century historians have argued that Hungarians did not exist as a discrete ethnic group or people for centuries before their settlement in the Carpathian basin Instead the formation of the people with its distinct identity was a process According to this view Hungarians as a people emerged by the 9th century subsequently incorporating other ethnically and linguistically divergent peoples 42 Pre 4th century AD Edit Map of the presumptive Hungarian prehistory Main article Hungarian prehistory During the 4th millennium BC the Uralic speaking peoples who were living in the central and southern regions of the Urals split up Some dispersed towards the west and northwest and came into contact with Turkic and Iranian speakers who were spreading northwards 43 From at least 2000 BC onwards the Ugric speakers became distinguished from the rest of the Uralic community of which the ancestors of the Magyars being located farther south were the most numerous Judging by evidence from burial mounds and settlement sites they interacted with the Indo Iranian Andronovo culture and Baikal Altai Asian cultures 44 41 4th century to c 830 Edit In the 4th and 5th centuries AD the Hungarians moved to the west of the Ural Mountains to the area between the southern Ural Mountains and the Volga River known as Bashkiria Bashkortostan and Perm Krai In the early 8th century some of the Hungarians moved to the Don River to an area between the Volga Don and the Seversky Donets rivers 45 Meanwhile the descendants of those Hungarians who stayed in Bashkiria remained there as late as 1241 The Hungarians around the Don River were subordinates of the Khazar Khaganate Their neighbours were the archaeological Saltov culture i e Bulgars Proto Bulgarians Onogurs and the Alans from whom they learned gardening elements of cattle breeding and of agriculture Tradition holds that the Hungarians were organized in a confederacy of seven tribes The names of the seven tribes were Jeno Ker Keszi Kurt Gyarmat Megyer Nyek and Tarjan c 830 to c 895 Edit Around 830 a rebellion broke out in the Khazar khaganate As a result three Kabar tribes 46 of the Khazars joined the Hungarians and moved to what the Hungarians call the Etelkoz the territory between the Carpathians and the Dnieper River The Hungarians faced their first attack by the Pechenegs around 854 45 The new neighbours of the Hungarians were the Varangians and the eastern Slavs From 862 onwards the Hungarians already referred to as the Ungri along with their allies the Kabars started a series of looting raids from the Etelkoz into the Carpathian Basin mostly against the Eastern Frankish Empire Germany and Great Moravia but also against the Balaton principality and Bulgaria 47 Entering the Carpathian Basin c 895 Edit Main articles Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin and Pannonian basin before Hungary Hungarian Conquest of the Carpathian Basin from the Chronicon Pictum 1360 In 895 896 under the leadership of Arpad some Hungarians crossed the Carpathians and entered the Carpathian Basin The tribe called Megyer was the leading tribe of the Hungarian alliance that conquered the centre of the basin At the same time c 895 due to their involvement in the 894 896 Bulgaro Byzantine war Hungarians in Etelkoz were attacked by Bulgaria and then by their old enemies the Pechenegs The Bulgarians won the decisive battle of Southern Buh It is uncertain whether or not those conflicts contributed to the Hungarian departure from Etelkoz From the upper Tisza region of the Carpathian Basin the Hungarians intensified their looting raids across continental Europe In 900 they moved from the upper Tisza river to Transdanubia which later became the core of the arising Hungarian state By 902 the borders were pushed to the South Moravian Carpathians and the Principality of Moravia collapsed 48 At the time of the Hungarian migration the land was inhabited only by a sparse population of Slavs numbering about 200 000 45 who were either assimilated or enslaved by the Hungarians 45 Archaeological findings e g in the Polish city of Przemysl suggest that many Hungarians remained to the north of the Carpathians after 895 896 49 There is also a consistent Hungarian population in Transylvania the Szekelys who comprise 40 of the Hungarians in Romania 50 51 The Szekely people s origin and in particular the time of their settlement in Transylvania is a matter of historical controversy After 900 Edit Main article Hungarian invasions of Europe Hungarian raids in the 9 10th century In 907 the Hungarians destroyed a Bavarian army in the Battle of Pressburg and laid the territories of present day Germany France and Italy open to Hungarian raids which were fast and devastating The Hungarians defeated the Imperial Army of Louis the Child son of Arnulf of Carinthia and last legitimate descendant of the German branch of the house of Charlemagne near Augsburg in 910 From 917 to 925 Hungarians raided through Basle Alsace Burgundy Saxony and Provence 52 Hungarian expansion was checked at the Battle of Lechfeld in 955 ending their raids against Western Europe but raids on the Balkan Peninsula continued until 970 53 The Pope approved Hungarian settlement in the area when their leaders converted to Christianity and Stephen I Szent Istvan or Saint Stephen was crowned King of Hungary in 1001 The century between the arrival of the Hungarians 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 contemporary Spain and Portugal citation needed After the acceptance of the nation into Christian Europe under Stephen I Hungary served as a bulwark against further invasions from the east and south especially by the Turks Population growth of Hungarians 900 1980 At this time the Hungarian nation numbered around 400 000 people 45 Early modern period Edit 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 Hungarian and non Hungarian especially Slovak and Romanian historians about the possible changes in the ethnic structure of the region throughout history Some historians support the theory that the proportion of Hungarians in the Carpathian Basin was at an almost constant 80 during the Middle Ages 54 55 56 57 58 Non Hungarians numbered hardly more than 20 to 25 of the total population 54 The Hungarian population began to decrease only at the time of the Ottoman conquest 54 55 58 reaching as low as around 39 by the end of the 18th century The decline of the Hungarians was due to the constant wars Ottoman raids famines and plagues during the 150 years of Ottoman rule 54 55 58 The main zones of war were the territories inhabited by the Hungarians so the death toll depleted them at a much higher rate than among other nationalities 54 58 In the 18th century their proportion declined further because of the influx of new settlers from Europe especially Slovaks Serbs and Germans 59 In 1715 after the Ottoman occupation the Southern Great Plain was nearly uninhabited but now has 1 3 million inhabitants nearly all of them Hungarians As a consequence having also the Habsburg colonization policies the country underwent a great change in ethnic composition as its population more than tripled to 8 million between 1720 and 1787 while only 39 of its people were Hungarians who lived primarily in the centre of the country 54 55 56 58 Traditional Hungarian costumes 1822 Other historians particularly Slovaks and Romanians argue that the drastic change in the ethnic structure hypothesized by Hungarian historians in fact did not occur In particular there is a fierce debate among Hungarians and Romanian historians about the ethnic composition of Transylvania through these times For instance Ioan Aurel Pop argues that the Hungarian army of IX X centuries while it was eminently suitable for raids was not at all fit to occupy territories already densely inhabited especially in the hilly and mountainous areas 60 He adds that Hungarians outside of Alfold region where they were seminomadic during this time were not able to become colonizers and that for this reason the regions of Transylvania Upper Hungary and Croatia were integrated in the Hungarian Kingdom in a later stage after the year 1000 after the sedentarization Christianization and partial feudalization of the Hungarians 60 Pop ignores that plenty Magyar artifacts and burial sites have been found in Transylvania from the 10th century 61 62 19th century to present Edit In the 19th century the proportion of Hungarians in the Kingdom of Hungary rose gradually reaching over 50 by 1900 due to higher natural growth and Magyarization Between 1787 and 1910 the number of ethnic Hungarians rose from 2 3 million to 10 2 million accompanied by the resettlement of the Great Hungarian Plain and Delvidek by mainly Roman Catholic Hungarian settlers from the northern and western counties of the Kingdom of Hungary Spontaneous assimilation was an important factor especially among the German and Jewish minorities and the citizens of the bigger towns On the other hand about 1 5 million people about two thirds non Hungarian left the Kingdom of Hungary between 1890 1910 to escape from poverty 63 Magyars Hungarians in Hungary 1890 census The Treaty of Trianon Kingdom of Hungary lost 72 of its land and 3 3 million people of Hungarian ethnicity The years 1918 to 1920 were a turning point in the Hungarians 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 Hungarians became minorities in the neighbouring countries 64 During the remainder of the 20th century the Hungarians population of Hungary grew from 7 1 million 1920 to around 10 4 million 1980 despite 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 tended to remain the same or slightly decreased mostly due to assimilation sometimes forced see Slovakization and Romanianization 65 66 67 and to emigration to Hungary in the 1990s especially from Transylvania and Vojvodina After the baby boom of the 1950s Ratko era a serious demographic crisis began to develop in Hungary and its neighbours 68 The Hungarian population reached its maximum in 1980 then began to decline 68 For historical reasons see Treaty of Trianon significant Hungarian minority populations can be found in the surrounding countries most of them in Romania in Transylvania Slovakia and Serbia in Vojvodina Sizable minorities live also in Ukraine in Transcarpathia Croatia primarily Slavonia and Austria in Burgenland Slovenia is also host to a number of ethnic Hungarians and Hungarian language has an official status in parts of the Prekmurje region Today more than two million ethnic Hungarians live in nearby countries 69 There was a referendum in Hungary in December 2004 on whether to grant Hungarian citizenship to Hungarians living outside Hungary s borders i e without requiring a permanent residence in Hungary The referendum failed due to insufficient voter turnout On 26 May 2010 Hungary s Parliament passed a bill granting dual citizenship to ethnic Hungarians living outside of Hungary Some neighboring countries with sizable Hungarian minorities expressed concerns over the legislation 70 Ethnic affiliations and genetic origins EditSee also Genetic history of Europe The place of origin for the regional groups of Hungarians in the conquest period according to Kinga Ery The Hungarian language belongs to the Uralic language family Modern Hungarians are however genetically rather distant from their closest linguistic relatives Mansi and Khanty and more similar to the neighbouring non Uralic neighbors Modern Hungarians share a small but significant Western Siberian component with other Uralic speaking populations maximized among modern Khanty The historical Magyars had a higher Western Siberian component as well as strong links to the populations of the Baraba region Inner Asia Eastern Europe Northern Europe and Central Asia Modern Hungarians also display noteworthy affinity with historical Sintashta culture samples 41 Archeological mtDNA haplogroups show a similarity between Hungarians and Turkic speaking Tatars and Bashkirs while another study found a link between the Khanty and Bashkirs suggesting that the Bashkirs are a mixture of Turkic Ugric and Indo European contributions The homeland of ancient Hungarians is around the Ural Mountains and the Hungarian affinities with the Karayakupovo culture is widely accepted among researchers 71 A full genome study by Triska et al 2017 found that the Bashkirs were strongly influenced by Ancient North Eurasians highlighting a mismatch of their cultural background and genetic ancestry and an intricacy of the historic interface between Turkic and Uralic populations 72 The proto Uralic peoples homeland may have been the Okunev culture a forest culture in the Altai Sayan region characterized by high genetic affinity to the Botai culture in Northern Central Asia and the ancient Tarim mummies in modern day Xinjiang as well as Western Siberian hunter gatherers WSHG Their eastern genetic affinities may be explained by contact with proto Turkic peoples The arrival of the Indo European Afanasievo culture may have caused the dispersal and expansion of proto Uralic languages along the Seima Turbino cultural area 73 According to Neparaczki From all recent and archaic populations tested the Volga Tatars show the smallest genetic distance to the entire Conqueror population and a direct genetic relation of the Conquerors to Onogur Bulgar ancestors of these groups is very feasible 74 Genetic data found that among Western Turkic speakers like Chuvash and Volga Tatar the East Asian component was detected only in low amounts 5 linking them to both Magyar conquerors and the historical Bolgars 75 Paternal haplogroups Edit According to a study by Pamjav the area of Bodrogkoz suggested to be a population isolate found an elevated frequency of Haplogroup N R1a M458 20 4 I2a1 P37 19 R1a Z280 14 3 and E1b M78 10 2 Various R1b M343 subgroups accounted for 15 of the Bodrogkoz population Haplogroup N1c Tat covered 6 2 of the lineages but most of it belonged to the N1c VL29 subgroup which is more frequent among Balto Slavic speaking than Finno Ugric speaking peoples Other haplogroups had frequencies of less than 5 76 Among 100 Hungarian men 90 of whom from the Great Hungarian Plain the following haplogroups and frequencies are obtained 30 R1a 15 R1b 13 I2a1 13 J2 9 E1b1b1a 8 I1 3 G2 3 J1 3 I 1 E 1 F 1 K The 97 Szekelys belong to the following haplogroups 20 R1b 19 R1a 17 I1 11 J2 10 J1 8 E1b1b1a 5 I2a1 5 G2 3 P 1 E 1 N 77 It can be inferred that Szekelys have more significant German admixture A study sampling 45 Paloc from Budapest and northern Hungary found 60 R1a 13 R1b 11 I 9 E 2 G 2 J2 78 A study estimating possible Inner Asian admixture among nearly 500 Hungarians based on paternal lineages only estimated it at 5 1 in Hungary at 7 4 in Szekelys and at 6 3 at Csangos 79 An analysis of Bashkir samples from the Burzyansky and Abzelilovsky districts of the Republic of Bashkortostan in the Volga Ural region revealed them to belong to the R1a subclade R1a SUR51 which is shared in significant amounts with the historical Magyars and the royal Hungarian lineage and representing the closest kin to the Hungarian Arpad dynasty This subclade was also found among historical Scytho Iranian samples in modern day Afghanistan 80 81 Autosomal DNA Edit Modern Hungarians show relative close affinity to surrounding populations but harbour a small Western Siberian component maximized among the Ugric Khanty people and associated with the historical Magyars Modern Hungarians formed from several historical population groupings including the historical Magyars assimilated Slavic and Germanic groups as well as Central Asian Steppe tribes presumably Turkic and Iranian tribes Genetic analyses link parts of the historical Magyars ancestors to West Siberian hunter gatherers These historical Western Siberian hunter gatherers were characterized by high Ancient North Eurasian ancestry and less Eastern Siberian admixture next to geneflow from Yamnaya Steppe pastoralists 41 82 83 Historical Magyar genome corresponds largely with the modern Bashkirs and can be modeled as 50 Mansi like 35 Sarmatian like and 15 Hun Xiongnu like The admixture event is suggested to have taken place in the Southern Ural region at 643 431 BCE Modern Hungarians were found to be admixed descendants of the historical Magyar conquerors with local Europeans as 31 Hungarian samples could be modelled as two way admixtures of Conq Asia Core and EU Core in varying degrees The historical Magyar component among modern Hungarians is estimated at an average frequency of 13 which can be explained by the relative smaller population size of Magyar conquerors compared to local European groups 41 82 Other influences Edit Origin of word roots in Hungarian 84 Uncertain 30 Uralic 21 Slavic 20 Germanic 11 Turkic 9 5 Latin and Greek 6 Romance 2 5 Other known 1 Besides the various peoples mentioned above the Magyars later were influenced by other populations in the Carpathian Basin Among these are the Cumans Pechenegs Jazones West Slavs Germans and Vlachs Romanians Ottomans who occupied the central part of Hungary from c 1526 until c 1699 inevitably exerted an influence as did the various nations Germans Slovaks Serbs Croats and others that resettled the depopulated central and southern territories of the kingdom roughly present day South Hungary Vojvodina in Serbia and Banat in Romania after their departure Similar to other European countries Jewish Armenian and Roma Gypsy ethnic minorities have been living in Hungary since the Middle Ages Diaspora EditMain article Hungarian diaspora Hungarian diaspora in the world includes people with Hungarian ancestry or citizenship Hungary 1 000 000 100 000 10 000 1 000 Hungarian diaspora Magyar diaspora is a term that encompasses the total ethnic Hungarian population located outside of current day Hungary Maps of the Hungarian diaspora Hungarians in Romania according to the 2011 census Hungarians in Vojvodina Serbia according to the 2002 census Hungarians in Slovakia according to the 2011 census Hungarians in Ukraine according to the 2001 census Hungarians in the United States according to the 2018 census Hungarians of Croatia according to the 2011 census Hungarians in Germany according to the 2021 census Maps Edit Kniezsa s 1938 view on the ethnic map of the Kingdom of Hungary in the 11th century based on toponyms Kniezsa s view has been criticized by many scholars because of its non compliance with later archaeological and onomastics research but his map is still regularly cited in modern reliable sources One of the most prominent critics of this map was Emil Petrovici 85 The Red Map 86 based on the 1910 census Regions with population density below 20 persons km2 51 8 persons sq mi 87 are left blank and the corresponding population is represented in the nearest region with population density above that limit Red color to mark Hungarians and light purple color to mark Walachians Regions where Hungarian is used as the main language to communicate relevant Culture EditMain article Culture of Hungary The culture of Hungary shows distinctive elements incorporating local European elements and minor Central Asian Steppe derived traditions such as Horse culture and Shamanistic remnants in Hungarian folklore Traditional costumes 18th and 19th century Edit Folklore and communities Edit Hungarians dressed in folk costumes in Southern Transdanubia Hungary Vojvodina Hungarians women s national costume Kalotaszeg folk Costume in Transylvania Romania The Hungarian Puszta The Turul the mythical bird of Hungary Welcome sign in Latin and in Old Hungarian script for the town of Vonyarcvashegy Hungary Csardas folk dance in Skorenovac Szekelykeve Vojvodina SerbiaSee also Edit Hungary portalCentral Europe Demographics of Hungary List of Hungarians List of people of Hungarian origin Ugric languages Khanty people Mansi people Eastern Magyars Magyarab people Jasz people Szekelys of Bukovina Kunsag Pole Hungarian two good friends Hungarian mythology Hunor and Magor Shamanistic remnants in Hungarian folklore List of domesticated animals from Hungary Hungarian Americans Hungarian cuisine Hungarian culture Romani people in HungaryNotes Edit This number is a lower estimate as 405 261 people 7 5 of the total population did not specify their ethnicity at the 2011 Slovak Census References Edit a b Vukovich Gabriella 2018 Mikrocenzus 2016 12 Nemzetisegi adatok 2016 microcensus 12 Ethnic data PDF Hungarian Central Statistical Office in Hungarian Budapest ISBN 978 963 235 542 9 Retrieved 9 January 2019 in Romanian Comunicat de presă privind rezultatele definitive ale Recensămantului Populaţiei si Locuinţelor 2011 Archived 17 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine at the 2011 Romanian census site accessed 11 July 2013 2001 Slovakian Census Almost 300 000 Hungarians in Germany 2011 Serbian Census Hungarians in France Archived from the original on 4 February 2007 PeopleGroups org Hungarians of France peoplegroups org permanent dead link It has been officially recognized far more Hungarians live in the United Kingdom than previously thought portfolio hu 16 February 2020 Retrieved 1 March 2021 About number and composition population of UKRAINE by data All Ukrainian census of the population 2001 State Statistics Committee of Ukraine 2003 Archived from the original on 31 October 2004 Befolkning efter fodelseland och ursprungsland 31 December 2018 a b c d e f g h i Immigrant and Emigrant Populations by Country of Origin and Destination migrationpolicy org 10 February 2014 Bevolking geslacht leeftijd generatie en migratieachtergrond 1 januari CBS StatLine Retrieved 14 March 2021 a b c d e f A diaszpora tudomanyos megkozelitese Korosi Csoma Sandor program 3 July 2015 World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples Croatia Overview 2001 census data United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees July 2008 Retrieved 16 March 2009 PeopleGroups org Hungarians of Slovenia peoplegroups org permanent dead link Magyar diaszporapolitikastrategiai iranyok PDF kulhonimagyarok hu in Hungarian 22 November 2016 p 29 Project Joshua Hungarian in Bosnia Herzegovina joshuaproject net Ludnosc Stan i struktura demograficzno spoleczna Narodowy Spis Ludnosci i Mieszkan 2011 National Census of Population and Housing 2011 GUS 2013 p 264 Government of Canada Statistics Canada 25 October 2017 Ethnic Origin 279 Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses 3 Generation Status 4 Age 12 and Sex 3 for the Population in Private Households of Canada Provinces and Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2016 Census 25 Sample Data www12 statcan gc ca Hungarians in Brazil Archived from the original on 22 September 2007 Los obreros hungaros emigrados en America Latina entre las dos guerras mundiales Ilona Varga PDF webcache googleusercontent com Thursday Top Ten Top Ten Countries With The Largest Hungarian Diaspora In The World 1 December 2016 Bevolkerung zu Jahresbeginn nach Bundesland und detaillierter Staatsangehorigkeit 2002 bis 2022 Population at the beginning of the year 2002 2022 by detailed nationality ods Statistics Austria in German 31 May 2022 Retrieved 19 July 2022 Hungary About 19 November 2019 Prime Minister Viktor Orban s address at the 9th meeting of the Hungarian Diaspora Council Prime Minister Viktor Orban s address at the 9th meeting of the Hungarian Diaspora Council Discrimination in the EU in 2012 PDF Special Eurobarometer Report 383 European Commission November 2012 p 233 Archived from the original PDF on 2 December 2012 Retrieved 14 August 2013 The question asked was Do you consider yourself to be With a card showing Catholic Orthodox Protestant Other Christian Jewish Muslim Sikh Buddhist Hindu Atheist and Non believer Agnostic Space was given for Other SPONTANEOUS and DK Jewish Sikh Buddhist Hindu did not reach the 1 threshold Magyar Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Online Retrieved 5 October 2022 OED s v Ugrian Ugri the name given by early Russian writers to a Finno Ugric people dwelling east of the Ural Mountains a b Peter F Sugar ed 22 November 1990 A History of Hungary Indiana University Press p 9 ISBN 978 0 253 20867 5 Retrieved 6 July 2011 Edward Luttwak The grand strategy of the Byzantine Empire Harvard University Press 2009 p 156 Gyorgy Balazs Karoly Szelenyi The Magyars the birth of a European nation Corvina 1989 p 8 Alan W Ertl Toward an Understanding of Europe A Political Economic Precis of Continental Integration Universal Publishers 2008 p 358 Z J Kosztolnyik Hungary under the early Arpads 890s to 1063 Eastern European Monographs 2002 p 3 Jenkins Romilly James Heald 1967 De Administrando Imperio by Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus Corpus fontium historiae Byzantinae New revised ed Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks Center for Byzantine Studies p 65 ISBN 978 0 88402 021 9 Retrieved 28 August 2013 According to Constantine Porphyrogenitus writing in his De Administrando Imperio c AD 950 Patzinakia the Pecheneg realm stretches west as far as the Siret River or even the Eastern Carpathian Mountains and is four days distant from Tourkia i e Hungary Gunter Prinzing Maciej Salamon 1999 Byzanz und Ostmitteleuropa 950 1453 Beitrage zu einer table ronde des XIX International Congress of Byzantine Studies Copenhagen 1996 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 46 ISBN 978 3 447 04146 1 Retrieved 9 February 2013 Henry Hoyle Howorth 2008 History of the Mongols from the 9th to the 19th Century The So called Tartars of Russia and Central Asia Cosimo Inc p 3 ISBN 978 1 60520 134 4 Retrieved 15 June 2013 Kopeczi Bela Makkai Laszlo Mocsy Andras Kiraly Bela K Kovrig Bennett Szasz Zoltan Barta Gabor 2001 Transylvania in the medieval Hungarian kingdom 896 1526 Volume 1 of History of Transylvania ed New York Social Science Monographs University of Michigan Columbia University Press East European Monographs pp 415 416 ISBN 0880334797 A MAGYAROK TURK MEGNEVEZESE BIBORBANSZULETETT KONSTANTINOS DE ADMINISTRANDOIMPERIO CIMU MUNKAJABAN Takacs Zoltan Balint SAVARIAA VAS MEGYEI MUZEUMOK ERTESITOJE28 SZOMBATHELY 2004 pp 317 333 1 Rona Tas Andras 1999 Hungarians and Europe in the Early Middle Ages p 273 Transylvania The Roots of Ethnic Conflict www hungarianhistory com Obrusanszky Borbala 2018 Angela Marcantonio ed Are the Hungarians Ugric PDF The state of the art of Uralic studies tradition vs innovation Sapienza Universita Editrice pp 87 106 at p 87 88 a b c d e Fothi Erzsebet Gonzalez Angela Feher Tibor Gugora Ariana Fothi Abel Biro Orsolya Keyser Christine 14 January 2020 Genetic analysis of male Hungarian Conquerors European and Asian paternal lineages of the conquering Hungarian tribes Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 12 1 31 doi 10 1007 s12520 019 00996 0 ISSN 1866 9565 S2CID 210168662 Nora Berend Przemyslaw Urbanczyk Przemyslaw Wiszewski 2013 Hungarian pre history or ethnogenesis Central Europe in the High Middle Ages Bohemia Hungary and Poland c 900 c 1300 Cambridge University Press p 62 Rona Tas Andras 1999 Hungarians and Europe in the Early Middle Ages p 96 Blench Roger Matthew Briggs 1999 Archaeology and Language Routledge p 210 ISBN 978 0 415 11761 6 Retrieved 21 May 2008 a b c d e Early History A Country Study Hungary Federal Research Division Library of Congress Archived from the original on 29 October 2004 Retrieved 6 March 2009 Peter F Sugar Peter Hanak Tibor Frank A History of Hungary Indiana University Press 1994 page 11 Google Books Magyars Thenagain info Retrieved 22 August 2013 Csorba Csaba 1997 Arpad nepe The people of Arpad in Hungarian Budapest Kulturtrade kiado ISBN 978 963 9069 20 6 ISSN 1417 6114 Koperski A Przemysl Lengyelorszag In A honfoglalo magyarsag Kiallitasi katalogus Bp 1996 pp 439 448 Piotr Eberhardt 2003 Ethnic Groups and Population Changes in Twentieth century Central Eastern Europe M E Sharpe Armonk NY and London England 2003 ISBN 978 0 7656 0665 5 Szekler people Encyclopaedia Britannica Stephen Wyley The Hungarians of Hungary Archived from the original on 27 October 2009 Retrieved 22 August 2013 History of Hungary 895 970 Zum de Retrieved 22 August 2013 a b c d e f Hungary 2009 In Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 11 May 2009 from Encyclopaedia Britannica Online a b c d A Country Study Hungary Federal Research Division Library of Congress Retrieved 6 March 2009 a b International Boundary Study No 47 April 15 1965 Hungary Romania Rumania Boundary PDF US Bureau of Intelligence and Research Archived from the original PDF on 1 October 2015 Historical World Atlas With the commendation of the Royal Geographical Society Carthographia Budapest Hungary 2005 ISBN 978 963 352 002 4 CM a b c d e Steven W Sowards Twenty Five Lectures on Modern Balkan History The Balkans in the Age of Nationalism Lecture 4 Hungary and the limits of Habsburg authority Michigan State University Libraries Retrieved 11 May 2009 Macartney Carlile Aylmer 1962 5 The Eighteenth Century Hungary A short history University Press retrieved 3 August 2016 a b Pop Ioan Aurel 2010 Testimonies on the ethno confessional structure of medieval Transylvania and Hungary 9th 14th centuries PDF Transylvanian review vol 19 nr supplement 1 p 12 Retrieved 15 November 2021 Madgearu Alexandru 2001 Romanii in opera Notarului Anonim Cluj Napoca Centrul de Studii Transilvane Fundația Culturală Romană ISBN 973 577 249 3 Bona Istvan Translation by Peter Szaffko 2001 The Settlement of Transylvania in the 10th and 11th Centuries Columbia University Press New York ISBN 0 88033 479 7 Lee Jonathan Robert Siemborski Peaks waves of immigration bergen org Archived from the original on 16 June 1997 Kocsis Karoly 1998 Introduction Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin Simon Publications LLC ISBN 978 1 931313 75 9 Retrieved 21 May 2008 Bugajski Janusz 1995 Ethnic Politics in Eastern Europe A Guide to Nationality Policies Organizations and Parties M E Sharpe Washington D C ISBN 978 1 56324 283 0 Kovrig Bennett 2000 Partitioned nation Hungarian minorities in Central Europe in Michael Mandelbaum ed The new European Diasporas National Minorities and Conflict in Eastern Europe New York City Council on Foreign Relations Press pp 19 80 Raffay Erno A vajdasagoktol a birodalomig Az ujkori Romania tortenete From voivodeships to the empire The modern history of Romania Publishing house JATE Kiado Szeged 1989 pp 155 156 a b Nyolcmillio lehet a magyar nepesseg 2050 re origo Retrieved 19 April 2009 Hungary Transit Country Between East and West Migration Information Source November 2003 Veronika Gulyas 26 May 2010 Hungary Citizenship Bill Irks Neighbor The Wall Street Journal Post Helen Nemeth Endre Klima Laszlo Flores Rodrigo Feher Tibor Turk Attila Szekely Gabor Sahakyan Hovhannes Mondal Mayukh Montinaro Francesco Karmin Monika 24 May 2019 Y chromosomal connection between Hungarians and geographically distant populations of the Ural Mountain region and West Siberia Scientific Reports 9 1 7786 Bibcode 2019NatSR 9 7786P doi 10 1038 s41598 019 44272 6 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 6534673 PMID 31127140 Triska Petr Chekanov Nikolay Stepanov Vadim Khusnutdinova Elza K Kumar Ganesh Prasad Arun Akhmetova Vita Babalyan Konstantin Boulygina Eugenia Kharkov Vladimir Gubina Marina Khidiyatova Irina Khitrinskaya Irina Khrameeva Ekaterina E Khusainova Rita Konovalova Natalia 28 December 2017 Between Lake Baikal and the Baltic Sea genomic history of the gateway to Europe BMC Genetics 18 1 110 doi 10 1186 s12863 017 0578 3 ISSN 1471 2156 PMC 5751809 PMID 29297395 Bjorn Rasmus G 2022 Indo European loanwords and exchange in Bronze Age Central and East Asia Six new perspectives on prehistoric exchange in the Eastern Steppe Zone Evolutionary Human Sciences 4 e23 doi 10 1017 ehs 2022 16 ISSN 2513 843X Neparaczki Endre Maroti Zoltan Kalmar Tibor Kocsy Klaudia Maar Kitti Bihari Peter Nagy Istvan Fothi Erzsebet Pap Ildiko Kustar Agnes Palfi Gyorgy Rasko Istvan Zink Albert Torok Tibor 18 October 2018 Caramelli David ed Mitogenomic data indicate admixture components of Central Inner Asian and Srubnaya origin in the conquering Hungarians PLOS ONE Public Library of Science PLoS 13 10 e0205920 Bibcode 2018PLoSO 1305920N bioRxiv 10 1101 250688 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0205920 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 6193700 PMID 30335830 S2CID 90886641 Wong Emily H M 2015 Reconstructing genetic history of Siberian and Northeastern European populations Genome Research 27 1 1 14 doi 10 1101 gr 202945 115 PMC 5204334 PMID 27965293 Pamjav Horolma Fothi A Feher T Fothi Erzsebet 1 August 2017 A study of the Bodrogkoz population in north eastern Hungary by Y chromosomal haplotypes and haplogroups Molecular Genetics and Genomics 292 4 883 894 doi 10 1007 s00438 017 1319 z PMID 28409264 S2CID 10107799 Csanyi B Bogacsi Szabo E Tomory Gy Czibula A Priskin K Csosz A Mende B Lango P Csete K Zsolnai A Conant E K Downes C S Rasko I July 2008 Y Chromosome Analysis of Ancient Hungarian and Two Modern Hungarian Speaking Populations from the Carpathian Basin Annals of Human Genetics 72 4 519 534 doi 10 1111 j 1469 1809 2008 00440 x PMID 18373723 S2CID 13217908 Semino 2000 et al full citation needed Biro Andras Feher Tibor Barany Gusztav Pamjav Horolma March 2015 Testing Central and Inner Asian admixture among contemporary Hungarians Forensic Science International Genetics 15 121 126 doi 10 1016 j fsigen 2014 11 007 PMID 25468443 Nagy P L Olasz J Neparaczki E et al 2020 Determination of the phylogenetic origins of the Arpad Dynasty based on Y chromosome sequencing of Bela the Third European Journal of Human Genetics 29 1 164 172 doi 10 1038 s41431 020 0683 z PMC 7809292 PMID 32636469 R SUR51 Y DNA Haplogroup YFull a b Maroti Zoltan Neparaczki Endre Schutz Oszkar Maar Kitti Varga Gergely I B Kovacs Bence Kalmar Tibor Nyerki Emil Nagy Istvan Latinovics Dora Tihanyi Balazs 20 January 2022 Whole genome analysis sheds light on the genetic origin of Huns Avars and conquering Hungarians bioRxiv 2022 01 19 476915 doi 10 1101 2022 01 19 476915 S2CID 246191357 Triska Petr Chekanov Nikolay Stepanov Vadim Khusnutdinova Elza K Kumar Ganesh Prasad Arun Akhmetova Vita Babalyan Konstantin Boulygina Eugenia Kharkov Vladimir Gubina Marina Khidiyatova Irina Khitrinskaya Irina Khrameeva Ekaterina E Khusainova Rita Konovalova Natalia 28 December 2017 Between Lake Baikal and the Baltic Sea genomic history of the gateway to Europe BMC Genetics 18 1 110 doi 10 1186 s12863 017 0578 3 ISSN 1471 2156 PMC 5751809 PMID 29297395 A nyelv es a nyelvek Language and languages edited by Istvan Kenesei Akademiai Kiado Budapest 2004 ISBN 963 05 7959 6 p 134 Ethnic Continuity in the Carpatho Danubian Area Elemer Illyes Browse Hungary s detailed ethnographic map made for the Treaty of Trianon online dailynewshungary com 9 May 2017 Spatiul istoric si etnic romanesc Editura Militara Bucuresti 1992Sources EditMolnar Miklos 2001 A Concise History of Hungary Cambridge Concise Histories Fifth printing 2008 ed Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 66736 4 Korai Magyar Torteneti Lexicon 9 14 szazad Encyclopedia of the Early Hungarian History 9th 14th Centuries Budapest Akademiai Kiado 753 ISBN 963 05 6722 9 Karoly Kocsis DSc University of Miskolc Zsolt Bottlik PhD Budapest University Patrik Tatrai Etnikai terfolyamatok a Karpat medence hataron tuli regioiban CD for detailed data Magyar Tudomanyos Akademia Hungarian Academy of Sciences Foldrajtudomanyi Kutatointezet Academy of Geographical Studies Budapest 2006 ISBN 963 9545 10 4External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hungarians Origins of the Hungarians from the Enciklopedia Humana with many maps and pictures Hungarians in the Carpathian Basin Hungary and the Council of Europe Facts about Hungary Archived 22 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine Hungarians outside Hungary MapGenetic studies MtDNA and Y chromosome polymorphisms in Hungary inferences from the Palaeolithic Neolithic and Uralic influences on the modern Hungarian gene pool Guglielmino CR De Silvestri A Beres J March 2000 Probable ancestors of Hungarian ethnic groups an admixture analysis Annals of Human Genetics 64 Pt 2 145 59 doi 10 1017 S0003480000008010 PMID 11246468 Human Chromosomal Polymorphism in a Hungarian Sample Hungarian genetics researches 2008 2009 in Hungarian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hungarians amp oldid 1130869239, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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