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{{Short description|Magyar history (c. 800 BC–c. 895 AD)}} | |||
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{{for|the pre-conquest history and prehistory of Hungary|History of Hungary before the Hungarian Conquest}} | |||
{{Refimprove|date=February 2008}} | |||
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{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2020}} | |||
{{History of Hungary}} | |||
'''Hungarian prehistory''' ({{langx|hu|magyar őstörténet}}) spans the period of history of the Hungarian people, or ], which started with the separation of the ] from other ] or ] around {{nobr|800 BC}}, and ended with the ] around {{nobr|895 AD}}. Based on the earliest records of the Magyars in ], Western European, and Hungarian chronicles, scholars considered them for centuries to have been the descendants of the ancient ] and ]. This historiographical tradition disappeared from mainstream history after the realization of similarities between the Hungarian language and the ] in the late {{nobr|18th century}}. Thereafter, linguistics became the principal source of the study of the Hungarians' ]. In addition, chronicles written between the {{nobr|9th and 15th centuries}}, the results of ] and ] analogies provide information on the Magyars' early history. After the 2000s, archaeological research aimed at exploring the early history of the Hungarians resumed in the ] region. Today, these efforts are regularly supplemented with ] studies. In addition to linguistics, archaeology, and archaeogenetics, the re-evaluation of well-known written sources has also begun. Together, these fields of study may provide new information regarding the origins of the Hungarian people. | |||
] based on ] for certain trees{{spaced ndash}}including ] and ]{{spaced ndash}}in the ]s suggests the speakers of the ] lived in the wider region of the ], which were inhabited by scattered groups of ] ]s in the {{nobr|4th millennium BC}}. They spread over vast territories, which caused the development of a separate ] by the end of the millennium. Linguistic studies and archaeological research evidence that those who spoke this language lived in ]s and used decorated clay vessels. The expansion of marshlands after around {{nobr|2600 BC}} caused new migrations. No scholarly consensus on the '']'', or original homeland, of the ] exists: they lived either in the region of the ] or along the ] and the upper courses of the ] around {{nobr|2000 BC}}. They lived in settled communities, cultivated millet, wheat, and other crops, and bred animals{{spaced ndash}}especially horses, cattle, and pigs. ]s connected to ] from ] show that they had close contacts with their neighbors. The southernmost Ugric groups adopted a ]ic way of life by around {{nobr|1000 BC}}, because of the northward expansion of the ]. | |||
] | |||
"'''Hungarian prehistory'''" (Hungarian: Magyar őstörténet) refers to a specific slice of the history of the ]. It typically refers to the time starting from when the Magyars were considered a separate and identifiable unit of people up until their occupation and settlement of the ] around ] AD (the Honfoglalás). The events that occurred between the Honfoglalás and the coronation of ] are also included by some historians as part of Hungarian prehistory. The terms "proto-history", "ancient history", and "early history" are also used to describe this period of Hungarian history. | |||
The development of the Hungarian language started around {{nobr|800 BC}} with the withdrawal of the grasslands and the parallel southward migration of the nomadic Ugric groups. The history of the ancient Magyars during the next thousand years is uncertain; they lived in the steppes but the location of their ''Urheimat'' is subject to scholarly debates. According to one theory, they initially lived east of the Urals and migrated west to "]" by {{nobr|600 AD}} at the latest. Other scholars say Magna Hungaria was the Magyars' original homeland, from where they moved either to the region of the ] or towards the ] before the {{nobr|830s AD}}. Hundreds of loan words adopted from ] ] prove the Magyars were closely connected to ]. Byzantine and Muslim authors regarded them as a Turkic people in the {{nobr|9th and 10th centuries}}. | |||
{{seealso|Sources for Hungarian prehistory}} | |||
An alliance between the Magyars and the ] in the late 830s was the first historical event that was recorded with certainty in connection with the Magyars. According to the ] ], the Magyars lived in ] in the vicinity of the ] in the early {{nobr|9th century}} and supported the Khazars in their wars "for three years". The Magyars were ], each headed by their own "]s", or military leaders. After a ] invasion against Levedia, a group of Magyars crossed the ] and settled in the lands south of the mountains, but the majority of the people fled to the steppes north of the ]. From their new homeland, which was known as ], the Magyars controlled the lands between the ] and the Don River in the 870s. The confederation of their seven tribes was led by two supreme chiefs, the '']'' and the '']''. The ]{{spaced ndash}}a group of rebellious subjects of the Khazar turks{{spaced ndash}}joined the Magyars in Etelköz. The Magyars regularly invaded the neighboring ], forcing them to pay a tribute and seizing prisoners to be sold to the ]. Taking advantage of the wars between Bulgaria, ], and ], they invaded Central Europe at least four times between 861 and 894. A new Pecheneg invasion compelled the Magyars to leave Etelköz, cross the Carpathian Mountains, and settle in the ] around 895. | |||
==The formation of the Magyars as a separate people== | |||
The Hungarian ] (Hungarian: ''Magyar Őshaza'') is the theoretical original homeland of the Magyars. The term ''urheimat'' comes from linguistics and tends to be reserved for language origin, but it is also applied frequently to ethnic origin. Some believe that the Magyar Urheimat is the same as the Uralic language group's urheimat on the western side of the Urals. Others claim that the urheimat is the same area as ] to the east of the Urals, where the ] and ] live today. Another point of view is that the urheimat concept is outdated since the development of a people is continuous. <ref>"'Urheimats', then, should denote those major stages in the formation of a people which brought about significant change to the life of the members of the group... such changes may include a splinter group peeling off from the main community, the beginning of interaction with another people, the change of community life style, or a major migration." {{cite book| first=András | last=Róna-Tas |year=1999|title=Hungarians and Europe in the Early Middle Ages |pages=315}}</ref> Several urheimats can thus be identified depending upon which point in time is being spoken of. | |||
== Ethnonyms == | |||
The view of Magyar prehistory officially propagated in the 19th century by the Austro-Hungarian monarchy derives Hungarian origins as being ultimately from Yugra, although according to Russian documents the Ob-Ugrians fled to the east from the ] and the Russians in the 12th century. Yugra also tends to be identified as the Ob-Ugric language urheimat. The western side of the Urals in the vicinity of the ] is considered to be the Ugric language urheimat. One of the consensus views is that the Magyar urheimat is somewhere in the steppe zone south of the Ural mountains. It would have been in this region that Magyars would have become most known for the stockherding, equestrian type of nomadic existence. | |||
{{main|Name of the Hungarians}} | |||
The Hungarians were mentioned under various ethnic names in Arabic, Byzantine, Slavic, and Western European sources in the 9th and 10th centuries.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=13}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=57}} Arabic scholars referred to them as ''Magyars'', ''Bashkirs'', or ''Turks''; Byzantine authors mentioned them as ''Huns'', ''Ungrs'', ''Turks'', or ''Savards''; Slavic sources used the ethnonyms ''Ugr'' or ''Peon'', and Western European authors wrote of ''Hungrs'', ''Pannons'', ''Avars'', ''Huns'', ''Turks'', and ''Agaren''.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=57}} According to the linguist ], the multiple ethnonyms{{spaced ndash}}especially ''Ungr'', ''Savard'', and ''Turk''{{spaced ndash}}reflect that the Magyars had been integrated in various empires of the Eurasian steppes{{spaced ndash}}the tribal confederations of the Onogurs and of the ], and the ]{{spaced ndash}}before gaining their independence.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=59}} The designation ] likely comes from proximity to the Turkic-speaking Bashkirs, a group which still today remains in the southern Urals. | |||
István Kiszely and some other scholars looked for an earlier ethnic urheimat and traced the seed of the Magyars to today's Eastern ], specifically, the northern and western edges of the ], the ] Basin and the confines of the ]. | |||
] was the first to record a variant of the Hungarians' self-designation; ''(al-Madjghariyya)''.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=13}} According to a scholarly theory, the ethnonym "Magyar" is a composite word.{{sfn|Gulya|1997|p=92}} The first part of the word ''(magy-)'' is said to have been connected to several recorded or hypothetical words, including the Mansi's self-designation ''(māńśi)'' and a reconstructed ] word for man ''(*mańća)''.{{sfn|Gulya|1997|pp=89, 91}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=303}} The second part ''(-er'' or ''-ar)'' may have developed from a reconstructed Finno-Ugrian word for man or boy ''(*irkä)'' or from a Turkic word with a similar meaning ''(eri'' or ''iri)''.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=57}} Alan W. Ertl writes that the ethnonym was initially the name of a smaller group, the Megyer tribe; it developed into an ethnonym because Megyer was the most powerful tribe within the people.{{sfn|Ertl|2008|p=358}} Most scholars agree that the Hungarian exonym and its variants were derived from the Onogurs' name.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=13}} This form started spreading in Europe with Slavic mediation.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=286}} | |||
In this area, between the 9th and 8th centuries BC, was established the ] (]) empire. Among the members of this Xiongnu tribal confederation were Turkic, Altaic and Iranian groups, as well the ethnic group that later, under the name ], constituted the Hungarians' ancestors.{{Fact|date=February 2008}} The members of the Xiongnu tribal federation were stockherding equestrian nations. Chinese almanacs mention them as being from whom, in times of need, horses, sheep, and wheat, could be bought for silk, china, gold, silver, black ink and powder, and who engraved the contracts "with their own characters" on wooden plates and dog skins. | |||
== Formation of the Magyar people == | |||
The Xiongnu tribal federation split up in 91 AD, when the Western Huns, who had lived along the Chu river, seceded. Later, the Romans invited them in 361 AD into the Pannonian Plain, to keep the ] and ]s in check. Their king of a century later, ], was one of the most feared rulers in Europe in the first millennium. According to the Hungarian medieval tradition, some Huns fled to Chigle Field (''Mezőség'') in Transylvania during the struggle against ] after Attila's death. There they supposedly become the ].{{Fact|date=February 2008}} | |||
=== Before the separation of the Hungarian language (before {{circa}} 800 BC) === | |||
The migration of the Hungarians' ancestors from Central Asia started with the later Onogur nation seceding from the second Turkic federation to move west, and it continued until the conquest of ] in 895/96 (890?) AD. | |||
{{Further|Proto-Uralic homeland hypotheses|Shamanistic remnants in Hungarian folklore}} | |||
] in the ] in the ]]] | |||
==Migrations== | |||
]]] | |||
The place where the Magyars could first be identified as a distinct people was supposedly Central Asia in the end of the 3rd or beginning of 4th century AD.{{Fact|date=February 2008}} This area was the crossroads, resting place, and a kind of ethnic melting-pot of different nations. Trade routes of four worlds met here: the legendary ] from the east, the Byzantine Empire in the southwest, and the Iranian routes from the south converged here with those of the Northern equestrian nations. | |||
Hungarian has traditionally been classified as an Ugric language within the family of Uralic languages, but alternative views exist.{{sfn|Kontler|1999|p=34}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=173}}{{sfn|Molnár|2001|pp=4–5}} For instance, linguist ] rejects the existence of a ] language, saying Hungarian was a member of an "]" that also included ].<ref name="SalmTax">{{cite journal |last=Salminen |first=Tapani |year=2002 |title=Problems in the taxonomy of the Uralic languages in the light of modern comparative studies |url=http://www.helsinki.fi/~tasalmin/kuzn.html |journal=Лингвистический беспредел: сборник статей к 70-летию А. И. Кузнецовой |publisher=Издательство Московского университета |pages=44–55 |access-date=22 November 2014}}</ref> ] research suggests the speakers of the ] lived in a territory where four trees{{spaced ndash}}larch, silver fir, spruce, and elm{{spaced ndash}}grew together.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=93–94}}{{sfn|Klima|2004|p=20}} The ] shows these trees could be found on both sides of the Ural Mountains along the rivers ], ], and ] in the {{nobr|4th millennium BC}}.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=51}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=317}} The land between the Urals and the Kama was sparsely inhabited during this period.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=54}} From around {{nobr|3600 BC}}, the ] material culture of the wider region of the Urals spread over vast territories to the west and east.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=75}} Regional variants emerged, showing the appearance of groups of people who had no close contact with each other.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=75}} | |||
The ancient Magyars not only sojourned in the ], but stayed in its northern part for a while, in the neighborhood of ], ], Sogdia and Bactria. Tiny vestiges of the ancient Magyars here include the "tribe" called "Madiar", and the place name Majar Kislak.{{Fact|date=February 2008}} Much could be learned about the ancient Magyars from the writings of the Arabian geographers ] and Abu Rayhan ] from this area.{{dubious}}{{Fact|date=February 2008}} | |||
About 1000 basic words of the Hungarian language{{spaced ndash}}including the names of the seasons and natural phenomena, and the most frequently used verbs{{spaced ndash}}had cognates in other Finno-Ugric languages, suggesting the temporary existence of a ].{{sfn|Kontler|1999|p=36}} Between around 2600 and {{nobr|2100 BC}}, ] caused the spread of swamps on both sides of the Urals, forcing groups of inhabitants to leave their homelands.{{sfn|Veres|2004|p=34}} The Finno-Ugric linguistic unity disappeared and new languages emerged around {{nobr|2000 BC}}.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=318}}{{sfn|Csorba|1997|p=19}} Whether the groups speaking the language from which Hungarian emerged lived to the east or to the west of the Urals in this period is debated by historians.{{sfn|Kontler|1999|p=36}} | |||
The route of migration the ancient Magyars took towards the Carpathian Basin is much discussed and disputed among experts on the topic with no clear consensus. Different sources claim Magyar habitation in different locations in a mixed chronological order. These locations are discussed below. | |||
Further climate changes occurring between 1300 and {{nobr|1000 BC}} caused the northward expansion of the steppes by about {{convert|200|-|300|km}}, compelling the southernmost Ugric groups to adopt a nomadic lifestyle.{{sfn|Kontler|1999|p=36}}{{sfn|Csorba|1997|pp=23–24}}{{sfn|Veres|2004|p=35}} Around {{nobr|800 BC}}, the climate again changed with the beginning of a wetter period, forcing the nomadic Ugric groups to start a southward migration, following the grasslands.{{sfn|Kontler|1999|p=36}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=31}} Their movement separated them from the northern Ugric groups, which gave rise to the development of the language from which modern Hungarian emerged.{{sfn|Kontler|1999|pp=36–37}} According to historian László Kontler, the concept of the "]" and some other elements of Hungarian folklore seem to have been inherited from the period of the Finno-Ugric unity.{{sfn|Kontler|1999|p=37}} The melodies of the most common Hungarian funeral songs show similarities to tunes of ] epic songs.{{sfn|Csorba|1997|p=32}} | |||
===Dentumoger=== | |||
Anonymous' ] names a place called Dentumoger where the ancient Magyars lived before migrating to the Carpathian basin. The name is used synonymously with Scythia. {{Quote|So the Hungarians...traced their origin to the Scythian people, whom in their own language they call Dentumoger. And that land became overcrowded with the multitude of people born there...|Anonymous<ref>"de gente scithica, que per ydioma suum proprium dentumoger dicitur (,) duxit originem"<br />{{Citation|title=Gesta Hungarorum|url=http://la.wikisource.org/Gesta_Hungarorum#De_electione_almi_ducis|accessdate =2007-12-28}}</ref>}} | |||
Anonymous was unfamiliar with any migrations towards the south. According to the Gesta Hungarorum, the ancient Magyars migrated directly from Dentumoger to present-day Hungary following a path from the Middle Volga region to Susdal to Kiev, etc.<ref>"Anonymus describes the route that lead from Dentumoger to Hungary as follows: the Volga, Susdal, Kiev, Vladimir, Galizia. There is no question here of any migration towards the Kuban-region, or the Black Sea; quite plainly Anonymus makes the Hungarians come direct from the territory which later authors call Magna Hungaria or Bascardia."<br />{{Citation|first=Denis|last=Sinor|title=The Outlines of Hungarian Prehistory|url=http://www.kroraina.com/hungar/ds_ohp.html|accessdate=2007-12-28}}</ref> Dentumoger could be synonymous with Magna Hungaria, a term that came to be used later for roughly the same region. | |||
=== Original homeland ({{circa}} 800 BC{{spaced ndash}}before 600 AD) === | |||
Two Hungarian legends take place here: the dream of Emese (the "legend of ''turul''"), and the legend of the Wondrous Stag (the legend of ]). | |||
]' proposed '']s'' and their migrations]] | |||
The stag and the eagle, which are popular motifs of 10th-century Magyar art, have close analogies in ].{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=193–194}} The ], ], and other ] peoples dominated the Eurasian steppes between around {{nobr|800 BC}} and {{nobr|350 AD}}.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=195}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=180}} During this period, all ethnic groups in the steppes were nomads with almost identical material cultures, for which the certain identification of the Magyars is impossible.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=180}} Consequently, the exact location of their original homeland is subject to scholarly debates.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=32}} Róna-Tas says the development of Hungarian started in the region of the rivers Kama and Volga, west of the Urals.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=319}} Archaeologist ] writes that the original homeland lay to the east of the Urals.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=201}} He says that some features of the '']'' erected at ] in the {{nobr|4th century BC}}, including the northward orientation of the heads of the deceased and the geometric motifs on the clay vessels put in the graves, are similar to older burials that he attributes to Ugric peoples.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=180–181}} | |||
===Magna Hungaria=== | |||
] | |||
Magna Hungaria (literally "Great Hungary") was an area settled by the proto-Magyars. In 1235, ] located this land directly east of the capital of ]. One theory states that the Magyars moved to this area from a northerly urheimat before migrating further to the southwest. "The Hungarian tribes joined with by the tribe ''Megyer'' – as readable by Istvan Fodor – presumably moved to the south, then west from the Bashkirian ''Magna Hungaria'', crossing the Volga, and dwelled in the area of the river Don." Alternatively, some of the Magyars moved north into Magna Hungaria together with the Volga Bulgarians while the others moved into Etelkoz, which was now vacated by the Bulgars. | |||
== Migrations == | |||
In Bashkiria, in the territory of the Kama river, Hungarian gravesites confirm the Hungarians' ancestors' dwelling here. A significant burial place used between 850 and 920 AD is Bolshie Tigani with 150 graves in the Volga-Kama territory. | |||
=== Early westward migrations (before 600 AD{{spaced ndash}}{{circa}} 750 or 830 AD) === | |||
===The Caucasian country=== | |||
{{See also|Eastern Hungarians|Magna Hungaria}} | |||
There is no name for this Caucasian area the early Magyars were to have lived in and the evidence for habitation appears tenuous<ref>"The arguments advanced in favour of this theory are few and not convincing. ... As most of the peoples whose names have been borne by the Hungarians lived ... in the Kuban-region, we are entitled to suppose that the Hungarians themselves lived in the same territory. ... The names in question are ... Ungroi, Sabartoi and Turkoi. Evidence is available that each of these three peoples occupied the Kuban-region. In the case of none of them it is necessary to suppose that contact with Hungarians took place in the Caucasian country."<br />{{Citation|first=Denis|last=Sinor|title=The Outlines of Hungarian Prehistory|url=http://www.kroraina.com/hungar/ds_ohp.html|accessdate=2007-12-29}}</ref>, but most scholars seem to agree that the Magyars lived there prior to Levedia<ref>"The question now arises, from where did the Hungarians migrate to Levedia? The answer given to this question is practically unanimous: the Hungarians migrated to Levedia from a country centred around the river Kuban, and bordered by the Caucasus, the Azov and Black seas and the Don."<br />{{Citation|first=Denis|last=Sinor|title=The Outlines of Hungarian Prehistory|url=http://www.kroraina.com/hungar/ds_ohp.html|accessdate=2007-12-29}}</ref>. It is generally referred to as the Don-Kuban area or the Caucasian homeland. Xenophon, Prokopios (490-562 AD), Agathias (536-582 AD), Protector Menandros (6th century), Joshua the Stylite (6th century), the Chronicle of Edessa, Joannes Ephesinus (6th century) and especially the Armenian authors Agathangelos, Phaustos Byzantios and Lazar of Farp, mention the Huns and Hungarians dwelling there. The Armenian ruler St. Gregory "the Illuminator" (Gregor Lusavoritch) mentions the Hungarians' ancestors there in his ecclesiastic works. | |||
]' '']'' and of their migrations, including their staying in the region of the ]]]In the 1230s, ] went to search for the Magyars' legendary homeland Magna Hungaria after reading about it and a group of Magyars who had remained there in a Hungarian chronicle.{{sfn|Macartney|1953|pp=85–86}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=197}} He met a Hungarian-speaking group "beside the great Etil river" (the Volga or the Kama) in the land of the ], in or in the wider region of present-day ] in Eastern Europe.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=198, 201}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=429}} Whether Magna Hungaria was the original homeland of the Magyars, or whether the Magyars' ancestors settled in Magna Hungaria after their migration to Europe from their ] original homeland is still subject to scholarly debates.{{sfn|Tóth|1998|p=15}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=201}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=87}} According to a third scholarly theory, Magna Hungaria was neither the Magyars' original homeland nor their first homeland in Europe. Instead, the ancestors of the Eastern Magyars whom Friar Julian met had moved to Magna Hungaria from the south.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=68}} | |||
According to a scholarly theory, the name of at least one Magyar tribe, Gyarmat, is connected to the name of a ] group, Yurmatï.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|pp=67–68}} Specific burial rites{{spaced ndash}}the use of ]s and the placing of parts of horses into the graves{{spaced ndash}}featuring a 9th- or 10th-century cemetery at the confluence of the Volga and Kama near present-day ] in ] are also evidenced among the Magyars who lived in the Carpathian Basin in the {{nobr|10th century}}.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=122–123}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=121, 429}} Most specialists say that the cemetery at Bolshie Tigany was used by Magyars who either remained in Magna Hungaria when other Magyar groups left the territory, or who moved there from other regions which were inhabited by the Magyars during their migrations.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=122–123}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=121, 429}}<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Szeifert |first=Bea |date=27 June 2022 |title=Tracing genetic connections of ancient Hungarians to the 6th–14th century populations of the Volga-Ural region |url=https://academic.oup.com/hmg/article/31/19/3266/6582494?searchresult=1 |journal= Human Molecular Genetics|volume=31 |issue=19 |pages=3–9 |doi=10.1093/hmg/ddac106 |pmid=35531973 |pmc=9523560 }}</ref> | |||
Kornél Bakay (1996) finds significance in the fact that "the old name Sabir of the Hungarians leads us into the Caucasus... the ancient Hungarians came into being from two ethnicities; the Hungarian speaking Sabir-Huns, and the Turkish speaking Onogur Turks" (it is now known that the language of the Huns was also Onogur Turkish). The group who broke away in the Caucasus are the Savard Hungarians, to whom the monk Julianus traveled, before nearing ]. (Their location here is Majar, where Samuel Turkoly attracted attention in 1825). | |||
If the Magyars' original homeland was situated in Western Siberia, instead of being identical with Magna Hungaria, their ancestors moved from Western Siberia to Eastern Europe.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=32}} This must have happened between {{nobr|500 BC}} and {{nobr|700 AD}}, because there were several major movements of peoples across the steppes during this period.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=202}} The "]" spread towards modern-day Bashkortostan around {{nobr|400 BC}}.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=202}} The westward migration of the Huns forced many groups of people of Western Siberia to depart for Europe between about 350 and {{nobr|400 AD}}.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=202}} The Avars' attack against the Sabirs in Siberia set in motion a number of migrations in the 460s.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=32}} Between around 550 and 600, the migration of the Avars towards Europe compelled many nomadic groups to move.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=203}} | |||
===Levedia=== | |||
'''Levédia''' was an area settled by the ] in the ]. It was located in the territory of present-day eastern ]. They moved to this area from ] situated on the western side of the ]. Under pressure from the ]-driven ], the Hungarians abandoned Levedia and moved further to the west, to the area known as ]. | |||
The arrival of the Huns ended the dominance of Iranian peoples in the Eurasian steppes.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=209}} Thereafter the Sabirs, Avars, Onoghurs, ], and other Turkic peoples controlled the grasslands of Eastern Europe for centuries.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=209–213, 230–231}} Gardizi described the Magyars as "a branch of the Turks"; Leo the Wise and Constantine Porphyrogenitus called them Turks.{{sfn|Engel|2001|p=10}} About 450 Hungarian words were borrowed from Turkic languages before around 900.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=105}} The oldest layer of Hungarian folk songs show similarities to ] songs.{{sfn|Csorba|1997|p=32}} These facts show the Magyars were closely connected to the Turks while they stayed in the Pontic steppes.{{sfn|Engel|2001|pp=9–10}} | |||
Byzantine emperor ], writing in '']'', names a place where the early Magyars lived. He called it "Levedia" after Magyar voivode ]. Constantine reports that this land has a river flowing through it called Chidmas or Chingilous, but scholars have been unsuccessful in identifying which river these names refer to. If the early Hungarians were in Levedia – in the neighborhood of ]ians and ] – it is possible that they lived there only "three years" altogether, as emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus wrote. The Hungarians at this time "hired" out twenty thousand mounted archers to the Khazar ruler -- indicative of their strong army and organisation. Certified Hungarian burial places from this territory have only now begun turning up. | |||
Gyula Németh, András Róna-Tas and other scholars write that for centuries, the Magyars lived around the ], to the north of the Caucasus Mountains.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=35}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=323}} They say it was there that the Magyars adopted the Turkic terminology of ], including ''bor'' ("wine") and ''seprő'' ("]"), and the Turkic names of ] ''(som)'', ] ''(szőlő)'' and some other fruits.<ref name="Sinor">{{cite journal |last=Sinor |first=Denis |year=1958 |title=The outlines of Hungarian prehistory |url=http://www.kroraina.com/hungar/ds_ohp.html |journal=Cahiers d'histoire mondiale |publisher=International Commission for a History of the Scientific and Cultural Development of Mankind |volume=4 |issue=3 |pages=513–540 |access-date=27 November 2014}}</ref>{{sfn|Kristó|1996|pp=49–50}} According to these scholars, the Hungarian words of ] origin{{spaced ndash}}including ''asszony'' ("lady", originally "noble or royal lady"){{spaced ndash}}were also borrowed in the same region.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=328}} | |||
Kornel Bakay has cast doubt on the Hungarians ever dwelling in Levedia, claiming "a mythic ancestor is seen in Levedias... Levedia cannot be a separate stage of the Hungarians' migration". András Róna-Tas also doesn't believe Levedia was a real place, instead seeing the story as an Árpádian legitimizing explanation for a regime change.{{Quote|"The appearance of a new dynasty always brought about a crisis of legitimacy. The new ruler ... needed to explain what happened to the previous clan... At that time, the legitimacy of power in the steppes meant being recognised by the Khazars. | |||
==={{anchor|Levedia}}Levedia ({{circa}} 750 or 830{{spaced ndash}}{{circa}} 850)=== | |||
The part , which relates Levedi facing up to his incompetence, and recommending Álmos or Arpád instead of himself, lacks even the smallest fragment of credibility."|András Róna-Tas<ref>{{Citation|last=Róna-Tas|first=András|title=Hungarians and Europe in the Early Middle Ages|pages=417-418}}</ref>}} | |||
{{Infobox former country | |||
| native_name = {{native name|hu|Levédia}} | |||
| conventional_long_name = Levedia | |||
| common_name = Gyula/Kende of the Hungarians | |||
| era = Middle Ages | |||
| status = ] | |||
| government_type = ]-] ] ]<br>] | |||
| life_span = {{circa|750}}–{{circa|850}} | |||
| event_start = | |||
| date_start = {{circa|750}} | |||
| event1 = ] | |||
| date_event1 = 811 | |||
| event2 = Hungarian – Khazar War | |||
| date_event2 = {{circa|830}} | |||
| event3 = Pechenegs attack | |||
| date_event3 = {{circa|850}} | |||
| event_end = Settled in ] | |||
| date_end = {{circa|850}} | |||
| p1 = Old Great Bulgaria | |||
| flag_p1 = | |||
| border_p1 = no | |||
| p2 = Khazars{{!}}Khazar Khaganate | |||
| image_p2 = | |||
| s1 = Etelköz | |||
| flag_s1 = | |||
| border_s1 = no | |||
| s2 = Pechenegs | |||
| s3 = Khazars{{!}}Khazar Khaganate | |||
| flag_s2 = | |||
| border_s2 = no | |||
| image_coat = Coat of Arms of Hungary (895-1000).svg | |||
| coa_size = 55px | |||
| symbol_type = ] | |||
| image_map = Khazar map1.PNG | |||
| image_map_caption = The ] and Magyars around 830 | |||
| religion = {{nowrap|]}}<br>{{nowrap|]}}<br>] | |||
| demonym = ] | |||
| footnotes = | |||
| title_deputy = {{nowrap|]}} | |||
| deputy1 = ] | |||
| year_deputy1 = {{circa|818}}–{{circa|850}} | |||
| today = | |||
}} | |||
The ] was the dominant power in the steppes between the rivers ] and ] after around 650.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=40}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=230}} Archaeological finds show that the Khagans controlled a multi-ethnic empire.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=125}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=41}} The "] culture", which flourished in the same region around 750 and 900, had at least seven variants.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=139–140}} In the Hungarian chronicles, the legend of the wondrous hind seems to have preserved the memory of the Magyars' "close symbiosis, intermarriages, and incipient fusion" with various ethnic groups{{spaced ndash}}], ], and ]{{spaced ndash}}of this large region.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=125}} | |||
Emperor ] wrote that the Magyars "had of old their dwelling next to Chazaria, in the place called Levedia,"<ref name="Porphyrogenitus_ch38_p171">''Constantine Porphyrogenitus: De Administrando Imperio'' (ch. 38), p. 171.</ref> adding that "a river Chidmas, also called Chingilous"<ref name="Porphyrogenitus_ch38_p171" /> ran through this territory.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=213}} The identification of the (one or two) rivers is uncertain.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=418}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=108}} Porphyrogenitus associated Levedia with the whole territory dominated by the Magyars, but most modern historians agree that he only described a smaller region situated on the ].{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=110}} The period when the Magyars settled in Levedia is also uncertain; this happened either before 750 (István Fodor) or around 830 (Gyula Kristó).{{sfn|Kristó|1996|pp=87, 132}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=210}} Porphyrogenitus said that the Magyars had been named "Sabartoi asphaloi",<ref name="Porphyrogenitus_ch38_p171" /> or "steadfast Savarts", while staying in Levedia.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=418}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=288}} Róna-Tas says the ethnonym is an invented term with no historical credibility.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=288}} Based on the same denomination, Károly Czeglédy, Dezső Dümmerth, ], and other historians associated the Magyars either with the late 6th-century Sabirs or with the Suvar tribe of the Volga Bulgars.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=288}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|pp=139–140}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=43}} | |||
Constantine is the only known source from which the name of Levedia comes from. Constantine reports that one part of the Magyars (including Lebedias) moved from Levedia into "places called Atelkouzou" after a Pecheneg/Kangar attack. | |||
Porphyrogenitus wrote that the Magyars "lived together with the Chazars for three years, and fought in alliance with the Chazars in all their wars",<ref name="Porphyrogenitus_ch38_p171" /> which suggests that the Magyars were subjugated to the Khazar ], according to a scholarly view.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=131}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=230, 417}} On the other hand, historian György Szabados says, the emperor's words prove the equal position of the Magyars and the Khazars, instead of the Magyars' subjugation to the Khagan.{{sfn|Szabados|2011|p=96}} Although the emperor said that the Magyars' cohabitation with the Khazars lasted only for three years, modern historians tend to propose a longer period (20, 30, 100, 150, 200 or even 300 years).{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=131}}{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=72}} | |||
===Etelköz=== | |||
'''Etelköz''' was an area settled by the ] from c. ] to circa ] CE, when they occupied the ], maybe driven west by the ] mercenaries of ]. | |||
According to a memorial stone erected in or before 831, a Bulgarian military commander named Okorsis drowned in the Dnieper during a military campaign.{{sfn|Curta|2006|pp=156–157}} ] says this inscription may be the {{" '}}first clue' to the upheaval on the steppes created by the migration of the Magyars into the lands between the Dnieper and the Danube".{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=157}} The earliest certainly identifiable events of the Magyars' history occurred in the 830s.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|pp=15–17}} The Bulgarians hired them to fight against their Byzantine prisoners, who rebelled and tried to return to ] in the late 830s, but the Byzantines routed them on the banks on the Lower Danube.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=15}} According to the ''Annals of St. Bertin'', ] envoys who visited ] in 839 could only return to their homeland through the ] because "the route by which they had reached Constantinople had taken them through primitive tribes that were very fierce and savage";<ref>''The Annals of St-Bertin'' (year 839), p. 44.</ref> Curta and Kristó identify those tribes with the Magyars.{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=123}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=86}} Ibn Rusta wrote that the Khazars "used to be protected from attack by the Magyars and other neighboring peoples" by a ditch.<ref name="Ibn_Rusta_p122">''Ibn Rusta on the Magyars'', p. 122.</ref>{{sfn|Brook|2006|p=31}} According to a scholarly theory, Ibn Rusta's report shows that the Khazar fort at ], which was built in the 830s, was one of the forts protecting the Khazars against the Magyars.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=16}}{{sfn|Brook|2006|p=31}} | |||
The exact location of Etelköz is disputed. "Etel" could stand for the river ] (''Etil'' means Volga in Old Turkic). According to Hungarian tradition, Etelköz was located between the river ] and the lower ]. Modern historians, however, usually name slightly different locations, such as around the ], etc. | |||
]'']] | |||
The ancient Magyars' final stop before entering the Carpathian Basin was the Eastern-Northeastern foreground of the Carpathian Basin, Etelköz (''Etelkuzu'') -- the territory of the rivers ], ], Bug and Seret.{{Fact|date=February 2008}} Hungarians ruled the territory between the Khazar Khaganate and the Carpathians at this time. Some believe that Levedia was in reality an eastern region of a larger Etelkoz. | |||
According to Porphyrogenitus, In Levedia, the Magyars "were seven clans, but they had never had over them a prince either native or foreign, but there were among them ']s{{' "}},<ref name="Porphyrogenitus_ch38_p171" /> or chiefs.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=116}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|pp=30–31}} Although the exact meaning of the term the emperor used ''(genea)'' cannot be exactly determined, scholars have traditionally considered the Magyar "clans" or "tribes" as ethnic and territorial units.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=105}} In the Hungarian chronicles, references to "seven leading persons"<ref name="Anonymus_Prologue_p3">''Anonymus, Notary of King Béla: The Deeds of the Hungarians'' (Prologue), p. 3.</ref> or "seven captains"<ref>''The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle'' (ch. 27), p. 98.</ref> denote the existence of seven Magyar tribes.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=117}} | |||
There was nothing changed in the Hungarians' way of living compared with previously; reports ]: "The land of Hungarians is rich in trees and waters, their land is wet. They have much tillages..." Many authors write about the Hungarians in Etelköz (Jayhani tradition, Gardezi, Hudud al-Alam, etc.). | |||
Porphyrogenitus said the tribes did not "obey their own particular , but a joint agreement to fight together with all earnestness and {{nobr|zeal ...}} wheresoever war breaks out",<ref name="Porphyrogenitus_ch40_p179">''Constantine Porphyrogenitus: De Administrando Imperio'' (ch. 40), p. 179.</ref> suggesting the tribal chiefs were military rather than political leaders.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|pp=105–106}} According to Kristó, the emperor's report also shows the tribal confederation was not a "solid political formation with strong cohesion" in the early 9th century.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=116}} The ''Gesta Hungarorum'' referred to the seven Magyar chiefs as "Hetumoger",<ref name="Anonymus_Prologue_p3" /> or "Seven Magyars".{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=117}}{{sfn|Engel|2001|p=19}} Similar ethnonyms{{spaced ndash}}including ] ("Nine Oghuzes") and Onogur ("Ten Ogurs"){{spaced ndash}}suggest the ''Gesta'' preserved the name of the confederation of the Magyar tribes.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=117}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=340}} According to Porphyrogenitus, Levedia was named after ], one of the Magyar voivodes.{{sfn|Brook|2006|p=142}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=107}} During Levedi's life, the ], a distinct group within the ]' tribal confederation whom the Khazars had expelled from their homeland, invaded Levedia and forced the Magyars to cede the territory.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=145}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|pp=42–43}} A ] fled across the Caucasus Mountains as far as ].{{sfn|Kristó|1996|pp=144, 147}} However, the masses departed for the West and settled in a region called ].{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=43}} Most historians agree the Magyars' forced exodus from Levedia occurred around 850.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=144}} | |||
In Etelköz when the chief Álmos died, a Central Asian-style blood covenant was contracted, "that is a definitive event before the settlement, forming the Hungarian tribes to one nation" (Gyula László). <!-- Constantine does not mention these names: The importance of the blood covenant is seen in that the names of the seven high men ("chiefs") (Árpád, Előd, Kend, Ond, Tas, Huba, Tétény) were even noted by emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus.--> Árpád was chosen as leader, then he deliberately reoccupied the ancient empire of Attila. "The nation of Árpád was not a ragged multitude of exiled hordes, but a deliberately and plannedly home changing rank, having great monarch Árpád in the lead, whose stem resulted excellent kings." (Kornél Bakay) | |||
{{Blockquote|he Pechenegs who were previously called "Kangar" (for this "Kangar" was a name signifiying nobility and valour among them), these, then, stirred up war against the and, being defeated, were forced to quit their own land and to settle in that of the . And when battle was joined between the and the Pechenegs who were at that time called "Kangar", the army of the was defeated and split into two parts. One part went eastwards and settled in the region of Persia, and they to this day are called by the ancient denomination of the "Sabartoi asphaloi"; but the other part, together with their voivode and chief , settled in the western regions, in places called {{nobr| ... .}}|]: '']''<ref name="Porphyrogenitus_ch38_p171173">''Constantine Porphyrogenitus: De Administrando Imperio'' (ch. 38), pp. 171–173.</ref>}} | |||
==The Conquest or Honfoglalás== | |||
Simon Kézai (1283) calls the moving in of Árpád's Magyars to the Carpathian Basin a "remigration" after the Huns. The Hungarians' ancestors stayed some 45 years in Etelköz, and the exact date of the settlement, as calculated from the Byzantine solar eclipse, was 895. (This statement came before the ''diet'' in 1892, but as the preparations of the millennial festivals were not ready, the Austro-Hungarian government appointed 1896 as the year of millennial festivals). | |||
==={{anchor|Etelköz}}Etelköz ({{circa}} 850{{spaced ndash}}{{circa}} 895)=== | |||
The Avar empire in the Carpathian Basin had broken up about a hundred years before the settlement; but some Avars lived strewn about the countryside, calm in their village life. Most of the basin was inhabited by the ]. The northern part belonged to ], weakened by a civil war. Transylvanian salt mines were guarded by ]. The ] in Transdanubia was occupied first by Great Moravia, then by the ]. | |||
{{See also|Magyar tribes|Blood oath (Hungarians)}} | |||
{{Infobox former country | |||
| native_name = {{native name|hu|Etelköz}} | |||
| conventional_long_name = Atelkouzou | |||
| common_name = Gyula/Kende of the Hungarians | |||
| era = Middle Ages | |||
| status = ] | |||
| government_type = ]-] ] ] (early)<br>] | |||
| life_span = {{circa|850}}–{{circa|895}}<br/>{{nowrap|{{nobold|]}}}} | |||
| event_start = | |||
| date_start = {{circa|850}} | |||
| event_end = ] | |||
| date_end = {{circa|895}} | |||
| event1 = ] | |||
| date_event1 = 839-970 | |||
| p1 = Levedia{{!}}Levédia | |||
| p2 = Old Great Bulgaria | |||
| p3 = Khazars{{!}}Khazar Khaganate | |||
| s1 = Pechenegs | |||
| s2 = Principality of Hungary | |||
| flag_s2 = | |||
| border_s2 = no | |||
| image_flag = Flag of Hungary (895-1000).svg | |||
| flag_border = no | |||
| flag_width = 120px | |||
| flag_type = Magyar banner of the ] | |||
| image_coat = Coat of Arms of Hungary (895-1000).svg | |||
| coa_size = 55px | |||
| symbol_type = ] | |||
| image_map = Magyars 814.svg | |||
| image_map_caption = Territory inhabited by the Hungarians {{Circa|814}} | |||
| religion = {{nowrap|]}}<br>{{nowrap|]}}<br>]<br>] | |||
| demonym = ] | |||
| footnotes = | |||
| title_deputy = {{nowrap|]}} | |||
| deputy1 = ] | |||
| year_deputy1 = {{circa|818}}–{{circa|850}} | |||
| deputy2 = ] | |||
| year_deputy2 = {{circa|850}}–{{circa|895}} | |||
| today = | |||
}} | |||
Constantine Porphyrogenitus identified '''Etelköz''' (actually Ἀτελκούζου from Ἐτὲλ and Κουζοῦ) with the lands where the rivers "Barouch", "Koubou", "Troullos", "Broutos", and "Seretos"<ref name="Porphyrogenitus_ch38_p175">''Constantine Porphyrogenitus: De Administrando Imperio'' (ch. 38), p. 175.</ref> run.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=44}} The identification of the last three rivers with the ], the ], and the ] is without debate, but the traditional identification of the Barouch with the Dnieper and the Koubou with the ] is disputed by Spinei.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=44}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=156}} ] wrote that the Magyars' territory was located between two rivers named ''"tl"'' and ''"dwb"'' in the 870s.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=157}} According to modern scholars, ''tl'' may refer to the Volga, the Don, or the Dnieper; ''dwb'' is identified as the Danube.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=328}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=157}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=248}} According to the ''Gesta Hungarorum'', the Magyars lived in "Scythia" or "]";<ref>''Anonymus, Notary of King Béla: The Deeds of the Hungarians'' (ch. 1), p. 5.</ref> the latter name, which refers to the ], suggests the Magyars inhabited the eastern regions of the Pontic steppes, according to Spinei.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|pp=52–53}} ] infers that ''Dentu'' (reconstructed as Dentü, {{IPA-hu|dɛnty}}) was the ] name of the river.{{Sfn|Erdélyi|1986|p=19}}] depicted in the '']'': he was the first ], according to the Hungarian chronicles|left|185x185px]] | |||
The Khazar Khagan sent his envoys to the Magyars shortly after they fled from Levedia and settled in Etelköz, according to Porphyrogenitus. The Khagan invited Levedi to a meeting, proposing to make Levedi the supreme head of the confederation of the Magyar tribes in exchange for the acceptance of his suzerainty.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=416}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=159}} Instead of accepting the offer, Levedi suggested the new rank should be offered to another voivode, Álmos, or the latter's son, ].{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=159}} The Khagan accepted Levedi's proposal and upon his demand the Magyar chiefs proclaimed Árpád their head.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=159}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=33}} According to Kristó and Spinei, Porphyrogenitus' report preserved the memory of the creation of a central office within the federation of the Magyar tribes.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=33}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|pp=164–165}} Róna-Tas says the story relates only a "change of dynasty"; the fall of Levedi's family and the emergence of the ].{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=417}} In contrast with Porphyrogenitus's story, the ''Gesta Hungarorum'' says it was not Árpád, but his father who was elected the first supreme prince of the Magyars.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=250}} | |||
The beginning of the Hungarian settlement was instigated by other factors: in 894 AD an extreme Muslim attack streamed into Eastern Europe; the Byzantines disappointed the Hungarians living in the Balkans; they were hit by a ] attack; and finally with ]'s death that year, Great Moravian power started to decline. The settlement itself supposedly took place in May 895, when the Hungarian tribes from their quarters in Etelköz took the closest routes (Verecke, Tömös, Ojtoz, Gyimes, Békás pass, Lower Duna, etc.) and occupied first the Upper Tisza area; then three groups calling themselves ''kabar'' ("rioter") split from the ] and invaded the Transylvanian salt mines guarded by Bulgarians, and with the claim of finality pushed into the Carpathian Basin. Transdanubia was entered by the Hungarians only after the death of Arnulf, the Frankish ruler, in 890 AD, completing the occupation; thus this year may be taken as the actual end year of the settlement. | |||
According to Muslim scholars, the Magyars had two supreme leaders, the '']'' and the '']'', the latter being their ruler in the 870s.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=236}} Their report implies the Khagan granted a Khazar title to the head of the federation of the Magyar tribes; ] recorded that the third Khazar dignitary was styled '']'' in the 920s.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=136}} The Muslim scholar's report also implies the Magyars adopted the Khazar system of "]", whereby supreme power was divided between a sacred ruler (the ''kende'') and a military leader (the ''gyula'').{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=33}}{{sfn|Engel|2001|p=18}}{{sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=55}} | |||
The real significance of the settlement is that a nation originating in Central Asia, evolved on the border of Europe and Asia, calling themselves ''Magyar''; getting the name "Turk" from the Byzantine Greeks, and "Ungar, Hungarus, Hun"" from other European nations, could create a firm state in the Carpathian Basin, one that was able to form a relatively peaceful symbiosis for the nations under the Holy Crown, and that today has a Constitution guaranteeing rights that is equal to any among the nations of Europe. | |||
{{Blockquote|Between the country of the and the country of the ], which belongs to the , lies the first of the Magyar {{nobr|frontiers. ...}} Their chief rides at the head of 20,000 horsemen. He is named ''kundah'', but the one who actually rules them is called ''jilah''. All the Magyars implicitly obey this ruler in wars of offence and {{nobr|defence. ...}} Their territory is vast, extending to the Black Sea, into which two rivers flow, one larger than the ]. Their campsites are located between these two rivers.|]: ''On the Magyars''<ref name="Ibn_Rusta_p122"/>}} | |||
At the end of May 895 at Ópusztaszer (or from 890 AD, after the Transdanube's occupation), the first Hungarian ''diet'' took place -- whence Hungarian prehistory ends, and history begins. | |||
Porphyrogenitus wrote that the ]{{spaced ndash}}a group of Khazars who rebelled against the Khagan{{spaced ndash}}joined the Magyars in Etelköz at an unspecified time,{{sfn|Engel|2001|p=22}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=148}} suggesting that the Magyars had got rid of the Khagan's suzerainty.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=51}} The Kabars were organized into three tribes, but a single chieftain commanded them.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|pp=152–153}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=51}} Porphyrogenitus also wrote that the Kabars "were promoted to be first" tribe, because they showed themselves "the strongest and most valorous"<ref name="Porphyrogenitus_ch39_p175">''Constantine Porphyrogenitus: De Administrando Imperio'' (ch. 39), p. 175.</ref> of the tribes.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=153}} Accordingly, the Kabars formed the Magyars' ], because nomadic peoples always placed the associated tribes in the most vulnerable position.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=153}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=51}} | |||
===Land conquest in two waves theory=== | |||
a theory reiterated in recent decades by Hungarian archeologist Gyula László. He has argued that the Magyars arrived in two separate waves, centuries apart, a notion which is still controversial. | |||
Ibn Rusta wrote that the Magyars subjected the neighboring ], imposing "a heavy tribute on them"<ref name="Ibn_Rusta_p122" /> and treating them as prisoners.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=251}} The Magyars also "made piratical raids on the Slavs"<ref name="Ibn_Rusta_p122" /> and sold those captured during these raids to the Byzantines in ] on the ].{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=43}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=251}} A band of Magyar warriors attacked the future ] "howling like wolves and wishing to kill him"<ref name="Life_of_Constantine_ch8_p45">''The Life of Constantine'' (ch.8), p. 45.</ref> in the steppes near the Crimea, according to the saint's legend.{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=123}} However, Cyril convinced them to "release him and his entire retinue in peace".<ref name="Life_of_Constantine_ch8_p45" />{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=123}} The inhabitants of the regions along the left bank of the Dniester{{spaced ndash}}whom the ''Russian Primary Chronicle'' identified as ]{{spaced ndash}}fortified their settlements in the second half of the 9th century, which seems to be connected to the Magyars' presence.{{sfn|Curta|2006|pp=124, 185}} | |||
Some evidence: The Primary Russian Chronicle, attributed by some to Nestor, recalls that the Magyars undertook two Conquests of Hungary, first under the name of "White Ugrians", during the time when the Avars occupied the country, and then a second during the reign of the Grand Duke Oleg. Archaeologists of the Rippl-Rónai Museum from Kaposvár (Hungary) have made a sensational discovery near Bodrog-Alsóbű - Temető-dűlő, Somogy County, in 1999. The research-workers dug up a pottery piece that was long-ago part of an ancient furnace bellows, having on its edge a Székely-Magyar type runic text of 4 letters in Hungarian language ("funák" = "they would blow", or maybe: "they were blowing"?). As scientist Gábor Vékony said, this writing monument may be dated as being made between 864 and 873 A.D., so less 23 years before the arrival of the Hungarians (Magyars) led by Árpád in the Carpathian basin. | |||
A plundering raid in East Francia in 862 was the Magyars' first recorded military expedition in Central Europe.{{sfn|Engel|2001|p=10}}{{sfn|Molnár|2001|p=11}} This raid may have been initiated by ], who was at war with ], according to Róna-Tas and Spinei.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=50}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=331}} The longer version of the '']'' said the Magyars returned to East Francia and ransacked the region of ] in 881.{{sfn|Engel|2001|p=10}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=50}} The same source separately mentioned the ''Cowari'', or Kabars, plundering the region of ] or ] in the same year, showing that the Kabars formed a distinct group.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=150}}{{sfn|Brook|2006|p=143}} In the early 880s, a "king" of the Magyars had an amicable meeting with ], ], who was returning from Constantinople to Moravia, according to Methodius' legend.{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=123}}{{sfn|László|1996|p=43}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|pp=175, 219}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=36}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=261}} | |||
==Historiography== | |||
The first major scholarly foray into Hungarian prehistory was made by Johann Eberhard Fisher (1697-1771) with his statement (1768), that "the language of Estonians, Finnish, Lapps, Permis, Vots, Cheremis, Mordvins, Chuvash and Hungarians is common". All these nations lived "in born wildness and crassness in the near past", to his mind. August Ludwig Schölzer (1735-1809) brought Fischer's work into notoriety in his work published in 1771 stating, that "only the Hungarians have no history of their own". The Hungarian theologian and astronomer ], after observing the passing of Venus before the sun on the island of Vardö, wrote a linguistic essay about the Hungarian-Lapp relationship. Then the jurist Antal Reguly collected folksongs from the land of Voguls. | |||
{{Blockquote|When the ] came to the lands of the Danube, Methodius wished to see him. And though some were assuming and saying: "He will not escape torment," Methodius went to . And as befits a sovereign, received with honor, solemnity, and joy. Having conversed with as befits such men to converse, dismissed with an embrace and many gifts. Kissing him, said: "O venerable Father, remember me always in your holy prayers."|''The Life of Methodius''<ref name="Life_of_Methodius_ch16_p125">''The Life of Methodius'' (ch.16), p. 125.</ref>}} | |||
On the basis of these early forays, in 1870 in Budapest the Finno-Ugric theory of ethnogenesis was established with the support of the Academy in Vienna and proclaimed as fact with only the barest of linguistic support as evidence. The biggest proponent of this theory in the 19th century was the Saxon from Szepes, Pal Hunfalvy (Hunsdorfer), making common cause with Joseph Budenz. | |||
===The Hungarian Conquest ({{circa}} 895{{spaced ndash}}907)=== | |||
Opposing Hunfalvy, for the cause of proving Hungarians' "Turkish" roots, stood Ármin Vámbery, among many others. He stressed that "the base, the core of the Hungarian language and nation is Turkish, and where a bit of Finno-ugrian sparses can be found are secondary, sojourner elements". | |||
{{Main|Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin}} | |||
]]] | |||
Gyula Laszlo criticized the "Finno-Ugric" concept of prehistory: "If linguistics wouldn't draw the attention of the explorers to the Ob-Ugrians, they would never search for the Hungarians' ancestors' relatives there by themselves... The language separates our human being, and our beliefs bind us..." | |||
]'s son, ], depicted in the '']'': he was the first ], according to the ] ]]] | |||
Many other theories have appeared beside "Finno-Ugrianism". Some of them don't even consider how different the Hungarians are compared with all other European nations, but concentrating on the indigenous natives, proclaim that "the Hungarians, getting the start of any others, dwelled in the Carpathian Basin" (Adorján Magyar, Lajos Marjalaki Kiss). | |||
The Magyars returned to Central Europe in July 892, when they invaded Moravia in alliance with ], ].{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=278}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=92}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=175}} Two years later, they stormed into the ].{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=278}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=51}} According to the ''Annals of Fulda'', they "killed men and old women outright, and carried out the young women along with them like cattle to satisfy their lusts".<ref>''The Annals of Fulda'' (year 894), p. 129.</ref>{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=178}} Although this source does not refer to an alliance between the Magyars and ], most historians agree the Moravian ruler persuaded them to invade East Francia.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=278}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=51}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=178}} During their raids in the Carpathian Basin, the Magyars had several opportunities to collect information on their future homeland.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=51}} | |||
The idea of the Egyptian origin of Hungarians, published in the 3 volume book of Tibor Barath (1973), appears written in newer phrasing: "Most of the Eastern nations, so the Hungarians arrived not from Mesopotamia, but from the closer Egyptian culture era to the lands of Europe". Geza Kun stood for the Etruscan-Hungarian relationship, and to the mind of Ferenc Zajti, "the ancient Scythian-Hun nation gave birth to the Hungarians". | |||
The Samanid emir, ], launched an expedition against the ] in 893, forcing them to invade the Pechenegs' lands between the Volga and Ural rivers.{{sfn|Brook|2006|p=143}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=280}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=53}} After being expelled from their homeland, the Pechenegs departed for the west in search of new pastures.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=53}} The Magyars had in the meantime invaded Bulgaria in alliance with the Byzantine Emperor Leo the Wise.{{sfn|Cartledge|2011|pp=5–6}} ] sent envoys to the Pechenegs and persuaded them to storm into Etelköz.{{sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=6}} The unexpected invasion destroyed the unguarded dwelling places of the Magyars, forcing them to leave the Pontic steppes and seek refuge over the Carpathian Mountains.{{sfn|Molnár|2001|p=13}} The Magyars occupied their new homeland in several phases,{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=188}} initially settling the lands east of the Danube{{sfn|Engel|2001|pp=12–13}} and only invading the March of Pannonia after Arnulf of East Francia died in 899.{{sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=8}} They destroyed Moravia before 906 and consolidated their control of the Carpathian Basin through their victory over a ] army in the ] in 907.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|pp=69–70}} | |||
The alleged Sumerian-Hungarian relationship has had numerous representatives and followers (Ida Bobula, Viktor Padányi, Ferenc Badiny Jós, Kalman Gosztonyi, Sandor Csőke, Andras Zakar, Mrs. Hary etc. <!-- who? -->). The origin of this assertion was explained by Ida Bobula this way: "When in the middle of the 19th century, under the debris of Mesopotamia the first written memories, the tile-table notched cuneiform and hieroglyphic text began to turn up, professionals recognized that those against the Assyrian-Babylonian texts were written in a non-Semitic structured language." The language proved to be agglutinatively structured. The pioneer orientalists ], Rawlinson, and ] spoke of the ancient Scythian and Turanian languages. The French scientist Lenormant declared that the language of these "artificers of writing" is closest to Hungarian. | |||
== Sources == | |||
==Speculations on mythic origins== | |||
] | |||
The Hungarian Chronicles say very little about the early history of the Magyars. The main references to that period are found in two accounts, one of which is the Legend of the White Stag which suggests the unification of the Magyars with certain tribes of ] and ]<ref>''The Hungarians: A Thousand Years of Victory in Defeat'' | |||
by Paul Lendvai - 2003 - p. 14</ref>. An early version of this story was found in a document taken from the Hungarian Royal Library when it was captured by the ] and re-published under the title ''"Tarihi Üngürüs"'' (History of the Hungarians), now in the ] of ]. | |||
=== Archaeology === | |||
The second account has been related to Biblical genealogy. The document starts with Tana, perhaps the same as the Sumerian ] of the city of ] son of "Arwium", son of "Mashda", according to a very few authors such as F. Hamori and T. R. Michels. The ] Scythians also had an ancestor called Kush-Tana. In the Sumerian account, Etana of Kish was the first king who 'stabilised all the nations'. Some feel that Etana of Kish corresponds to the Biblical ], father of ].{{Fact|date=February 2008}} In the Hungarian account, Tana's son is called Menrot, whose twin sons, ''Magor'' and ''Hunor'' dwelled by the Sea of Azov in the years following the flood, and took wives from the ]<ref>''Five Eleventh Century Hungarian Kings: Their Policies and Their Relations'' p. ix, x, by Z. J. Kosztolnyik - 1981</ref><ref> | |||
''Magyar mythologia'' p. 146, by Arnold Ipolyi - 1854</ref><ref></ref>. | |||
], Ukraine; the finding belongs to the "Subotcy horizon", attributed to the pre-conquest Hungarians]] | |||
Another version of this legend found in the '']'' makes Magor and Hunor the sons of ] rather than of Nimrod, equating Magor with ]. | |||
Since the 1830s, archaeology has played an important role in the study of the Magyar prehistory.{{sfn|Langó|2005|p=175}} Archaeologists have applied two methods; the so-called "linear method" attempts to determine the route of the migrating Magyars from their original homeland to the ], while the "retrospective method" tries to discover the antecedents of 10th-century ] from the Carpathian Basin in the ].{{sfn|Langó|2005|p=296}}{{sfn|Türk|2012|pp=2–3}} However, only twelve cemeteries in the steppes have yielded finds that show similarities to assemblages unearthed in the Carpathian Basin.{{sfn|Langó|2005|p=299}} The dating of those cemeteries is also controversial.{{sfn|Langó|2005|p=299}}{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=124}} | |||
Nimrod the hunter, founder of Erech, is more plausibly identified by ] with ], founder of ] (Sum. ''kar''=hunter). | |||
Both the scarcity of published archaeological material and the misdating of some sites may have contributed to the low number of archaeological sites that can be attributed to the Hungarians in the steppes, according to archaeologist László Kovács.{{sfn|Kovács|2005|p=354}} Kovács also says that the Hungarians' migration from the steppes and their settlement in the Carpathian Basin may have caused the development of a new material culture, rendering the identification of pre-conquest Hungarians difficult.{{sfn|Kovács|2005|p=354}} Archaeological research has demonstrated that the material culture of the Avars and other steppe peoples who settled in the Carpathian Basin before the Hungarians experienced a similarly significant change after they left the steppes and settled in their new homeland.{{sfn|Kovács|2005|p=353}} | |||
The mother of the twin sons in the Hungarian version is Eneth, Enech or Eneh, who is the wife of either Menrot (Nimrod) or of Japheth. If she is to be equated with the Sumerian goddess ]<ref></ref>, she may have originally been the wife of both men, and a great many others beside. The Sumerian legends of "Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta" describe vividly how the powerful Inanna, something of a kingmaker in her time, abandoned the king of Aratta, who is called '''Ensuhkeshdanna''', and awarded the kingship of Erech to Enmerkar. | |||
] | |||
Another argument sometimes used to link the Sumerians (who called their language ''Emegir'') with the Magyars, involves the hereditary caste among the ] and later Persians known as "Magi"<ref>e.g. , a typical synopsis of such speculations.</ref>. | |||
Buckles, belt mounts, and other objects of the so-called "Subotcy horizon", which were unearthed at ], ], and other sites along the middle course of the Dniester show similarities with archaeological finds from the 10th-century Carpathian Basin.{{sfn|Türk|2012|p=3}} These objects were ] to the late {{nobr|9th century}}.{{sfn|Türk|2012|p=3}} The same archaeological sites also yielded vessels similar to the pottery of the neighboring Slavic territories.{{sfn|Türk|2012|p=3}} | |||
=== Linguistics === | |||
Following these legendary ancestors, there is a short list of patriarchs who can be associated with early Scythian ones as recorded by ]. This period then is followed by the better documented historic Avar and Hun rulers, concluding with the early Hungarian leaders before and after the settlement in the Danubian basin. They presume the strong dynastic bonds with the Huns. | |||
{{Main|History of the Hungarian language}} | |||
The study of the ] is one of the main sources of the research on the ] of the Hungarian people because a language shows the circumstances of its own development and its contacts with other idioms.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=32, 92}}{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=63}} According to a scholarly theory, the oldest layers of Hungarian vocabulary show features of the territory in which the language emerged.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=33–34, 93–94}} The study of loan words from other languages is instrumental in determining direct contacts between the ancient speakers of the Hungarian language and other peoples.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=93–95}}{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=64}} Loan words also reflect changes in the way of life of the Magyars.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=109–112}} | |||
=== Written sources === | |||
According to the Hungarian legend of the ''Turúl'' Hawk (a mythical bird which corresponds to the Sumerian "Dugud"), Ügyek, the descendant of king Magog and a royal leader of the land of Scythia, married the daughter of Ened-Belia, whose name was Emeshe (a word that means "priestess" in Sumerian language{{Fact|date=February 2008}}). From her was born their first son Álmos. Álmos, who was Árpád's father, is said to be a descendant of Attila the Hun.{{Fact|date=February 2008}} | |||
]'', the earliest extant Hungarian chronicle]] | |||
Written sources on the prehistoric Hungarians may begin with ], who wrote of the ], a people of equestrian hunters who lived next to the ].{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=7}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=45}}{{sfn|Harmatta|1997|pp=120, 123}} Based on the location of the homeland of the Iyrcae and their ], ], ], and other scholars identify them as Hungarians; their view has not been universally accepted.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=7}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=45}}{{sfn|Harmatta|1997|pp=122–123}}{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=61}} The 6th-century ] historian ] referred to a ] tribal leader called ], who ruled around {{nobr|527 AD}}.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=8}} Moravcsik, ], and other historians connect Muageris's name to the Hungarians' ] (Magyar); they say Malalas's report proves the presence of ] in the region of the ] in the early {{nobr|6th century AD}}. This identification is accepted by most scholars.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=61}}{{sfn|Kristó|1996|pp=7–8}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=297–298}}<ref>{{Cite web |date=2012 |title=Timeline : Hungary |url=https://www.oxfordreference.com/display/10.1093/acref/9780191736483.timeline.0001 |website=Timeline: Hungary}}</ref> | |||
==Notes== | |||
<references/> | |||
], which was written in the middle of the {{nobr|10th century}}, recorded the first historical event – an alliance between the Magyars and the ] in the late 830s – that can without doubt be connected to the Magyars.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=15}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=54}}{{sfn|Tóth|2005|p=47}} The ] ]'s '']'', a book written around 904, contained a detailed description of their military strategies and way of life.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=53}} Emperor ]'s '']'' ("On Governing the Empire"), which was completed between 948 and 952, preserves most information on the Magyars' early history.{{sfn|Tóth|1998|p=10}} ], the minister of ], ruler of the ], collected the reports of merchants who had traveled in the western regions of the Eurasian steppes in the 870s and 880s.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=103}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=69}}{{sfn|Zimonyi|2005|p=88}} Although Al-Jayhani's work was lost, later Muslim scholars ], ], Abu Tahir Marwazi, and ] used his book, preserving important facts about the late 9th-century Magyars.{{sfn|Zimonyi|2005|p=88}}{{sfn|Tóth|2005|p=49}} However, their works also contain interpolations from later periods.{{sfn|Zimonyi|2005|p=88}} Among the sources written in Western Europe, the longer version of the '']'', ]'s ''Chronicon'', the '']'', and ]'s ''Antapodosis'' ("Retribution"), provide contemporaneous or near-contemporaneous information of the 9th-century Magyars.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=57}} There are also references to the Magyars dwelling in the ] in the legends of ] and other early Slavic saints.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=60–61}} According to historian ], information preserved in the '']'', which was completed in the 1110s, has to be "treated with extreme caution".{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=62}} | |||
==References== | |||
*Bakay Kornél (1997, 1998): Őstörténetünk régészeti forrásai. I. P. 302; II. P. 336. Miskolci Bölcsész Egyesület. Miskolc. | |||
The ] were written in the late 11th or early {{nobr|12th centuries}} but their texts were preserved in manuscripts compiled in the 13th to 15th centuries.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=489}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=58}} Most extant chronicles show that the earliest works contained no information on the history of the Hungarians before ].{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=489}} The only exception is the '']'', which is the earliest extant Hungarian chronicle, whose principal subject is the Magyars' pagan past.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=490}} However, the reliability of this work, which was written by a former royal notary now known as ], is suspect.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=59}} In his monograph of medieval Hungarian historians, ] describes it as "the most famous, the most obscure, the most exasperating and most misleading of all the early Hungarian texts".{{sfn|Macartney|1953|p=59}} | |||
*Bakay Kornél (2000): Az Árpádok országa. Kőszeg. P. 512. | |||
*Encyclopaedia Hungarica (1992, 1994, 1996) I-III. Főszerkesztő: Bagossy László. Hungarian Ethnic Lexicon Foundation. Calgary. P. 778, 786, 888. | |||
== Historiography == | |||
*Kiszely István (1979): Rassengeschichte von Ungarn. In: Schwidetzky, Ilse ed.: Rassengeschichte der Menschheit. R. Oldenburg Verlag. München-Wien. Pp. 1-50. | |||
*Kiszely István (1992): Honnan jöttünk? Elméletek a magyarság őshazájáról. Új Mandátum Könyvkiadó. Budapest. P. 460. | |||
=== Medieval theories === | |||
*Kiszely István (1996): A magyarság őstörténete. Mit adott a magyarság a világnak. Püski Kiadó, Budapest. I-II. P. 860. | |||
] as the first ] king (], 1358)]] | |||
*Kiszely István (2000, 2002, 2004): A magyarok eredete és ősi kultúrája. Püski Kiadó. Budapest. I-II. P. 1500. | |||
According to the '']'', the Magyars who invaded ] in 862{{sfn|Engel|2001|p=10}} were enemies "hitherto unknown"<ref>''The Annals of St-Bertin'' (year 862), p. 102</ref> to the local population.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=78}} Likewise, Regino of Prüm wrote that the Magyars had been "unheard of in the previous centuries because they were not named".<ref name="Prüm_y889_p202">''The'' Chronicle ''of Regino of Prüm'' (year 889), p. 202.</ref> in the sources.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=78}} Both remarks evince that late 9th-century authors had no knowledge of the Magyars' origins.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=78}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=36–37}} However, the ] reminded the Western European and Byzantine scholars of earlier historians' descriptions of the ] or Huns, which gave rise to their identification with those peoples.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=78}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=37–38}} For instance, Leo the Wise listed the Hungarians among the "Scythian nations".<ref>''The Taktika of Leo VI'' (18.41), p. 453.</ref>{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=79}} The similarity between the Latin ethnonyms ''Huni'' and ''Hungari'' strengthened the identification of the two peoples, which became commonplace in Western Europe in the 11th century.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=79}} The '']'' was the first source that clearly stated that the Huns and the Hungarians were the same people.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=79}} | |||
*Kiszely István (2004): A magyar ember. Püski Kiadó. Budapest. I-II. P. 980. | |||
*László Gyula (1999): Múltunkról utódainknak. I. A magyar föld és a magyar nép őstörténete. P. 573; II. Magyarok honfoglalása – Árpád népe Pp. 574-1036. Püski Kiadó. Budapest. | |||
The earliest Hungarian chronicles adopted the idea that the Huns and Hungarians were closely related.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=37}} Anonymus did not mention the Huns, but he referred to ] as a ruler "from whose line Prince ]",<ref name="Anonymus_5_17">''Anonymus, Notary of King Béla: The Deeds of the Hungarians'' (ch. 5), p. 17.</ref> the ], descended.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=81}} However, Simon of Kéza explicitly identified the Huns and the Hungarians in the 1280.{{sfn|Engel|2001|p=121}}{{sfn|Kontler|1999|pp=100–101}} He started his chronicle with a book of the history of the Huns, thus presenting the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin as the reoccupation of a land inherited from their ancestors.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=490}} Thereafter the identification of the two peoples was the basic theory of the origins of the Hungarians for centuries.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=37–38}} | |||
*{{cite book|first=Ándras|last=Róna-Tas|title=Hungarians and Europe in the Early Middle Ages: An Introduction to Early Hungarian History|date=1996|year=1999|publisher=CEU Press|isbn=9639116483}} | |||
{{Blockquote|''In the 401st year of Our Lord’s birth, in the 28th year since the arrival of the Hungarians in Pannonia, according to the custom of the Romans, the Huns, namely the Hungarians exalted Attila as king above themselves, the son of Bendegúz, who was before among the captains. And he made his brother Buda a prince and a judge from the River Tisza to the River Don. Calling himself the King of the Hungarians, the Fear of the World, the Scourge of God: Attila, King of the Huns, Medes, Goths and Danes…''|]: ''Chronicon Pictum''<ref>''Mark of Kalt: Chronicon Pictum'' https://mek.oszk.hu/10600/10642/10642.htm</ref>}} | |||
==== Legend of the Wondrous Hind ==== | |||
]" depicted in the '']'']] | |||
Most historians agree that the ] preserved the Hungarians' own myth of their origins.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=119}} The late 13th-century chronicler Simon of Kéza was the first to record it.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=119}} The legend says two brothers, Hunor and Magor, were the forefathers of the Huns and Hungarians.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=119}} They were the sons of ] and his wife, Eneth.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=119}} While chasing a ], they reached as far as the ], where they abducted the wives of Belar's sons and two daughters of Dula, the prince of the ].{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=119}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=328}} According to historian ], Eneth's name derived from the Hungarian word for hind ''(ünő)'', showing that the Magyars regarded this animal as their ]istic ancestor.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|pp=119–120}} Kristó also says the four personal names mentioned in the legend personify four peoples: the Hungarians (Magor), the ] (Hunor), the ] (Belar) and the Dula{{spaced ndash}}kindred of the Alans or Bulgars (Dulo).{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=120}} The hunt for a beast, ending with the arrival in a new homeland, was a popular legend among the peoples of the Eurasian steppes, including the Huns and the ].{{sfn|Kristó|1996|p=120}} The myth that a people were descended from two brothers was also widespread.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|pp=120–121}} Consequently, it is possible that Simon of Kéza did not record a genuine Hungarian legend, but borrowed it from foreign sources.{{sfn|Macartney|1953|p=100}} | |||
{{Blockquote|After the ] the ] entered the land of ], which is now called Persia, and there he begot two sons, Hunor and Mogor, by his wife Eneth. It was from them that the Huns, or Hungarians, took their {{nobr|origins. ...}} s Hunor and Mogor were Ménrót's first born, they journeyed separately from their father in tents. Now it happened one day when they had gone out hunting in the Meotis marshes that they encountered a hind in the wilderness. As they went in pursuit of it, it fled before them. Then it disappeared from their sight altogether, and they could not find it no matter how long they searched. But as they were wandering through these marshes, they saw that the land was well suited for grazing cattle. They then returned to their father, and after obtaining his permission they took all their possessions and went to live in the Meotis {{nobr|marshes. ...}} So they entered the Meotis marshes and remained there for five years without leaving. Then in the sixth year they went out, and when by chance they discovered that the wives and children of the sons of Belar were camped in tents in a lonely place without their menfolk, they carried them off with all their belongings as fast as they could into the Meotis marshes. Two daughters of Dula, prince of the Alans, happened to be among the children who were seized. Hunor took one of them in marriage and Mogor the other, and to these women all the Huns owe their origin.|]: '']''<ref>''Simon of Kéza: The Deeds of the Hungarians'' (ch. 1.4–5), pp. 13–17.</ref>}} | |||
=== Modern scholarship === | |||
]'s ''Demonstratio'', the first systematic study of the comparison of the Hungarian and ] languages]] | |||
Scholarly attempts in the early 18th century to prove a relationship between the Finns and the Huns led to the realization of the similarities between the ] and Hungarian languages.{{sfn|Szíj|2005|p=118}} ]'s ''Demonstratio'', the first systematic comparative study of Hungarian and the ], was published in 1770.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=38}}{{sfn|Szíj|2005|p=119}} Three decades later, ] demonstrated similarities between a larger group of languages that are now known as ].{{sfn|Szíj|2005|p=119}} However, the majority of Hungarian scholars only gradually adopted Sajnovics's and Gyarmathi's views.{{sfn|Tóth|2005|p=54}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=39}} In the 1830s, ] still wrote that Hungarian had an intermediate position between the Finnish and ], but later accepted that Hungarian is closely related to the ] and ] languages.{{sfn|Tóth|2005|p=54}} Hereafter linguistics played a pre-eminent role in the research of the Magyars' prehistory because it was always the dominant linguistic theory that determined the interpretation of historical and archaeological evidence.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=39}} Consequently, as historian ] writes, Hungarian prehistory is "a tenuous construct based on linguistics, folklore analogies, archaeology, and later written evidence", because there are no certain records of the Magyars before the {{nobr|9th century}} and the identification of archaeological cultures with peoples is highly debatable.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=62}} Historian ] identifies "the history of Hungarian origins" as "the history of a community whose genetic composition and cultural character has been changing, but which has assuredly spoken Hungarian or its predecessor language".{{sfn|Kontler|1999|p=34}} | |||
According to mainstream scholarly consensus, the Hungarians are not the autochthonous population of the Carpathian Basin.{{sfn|Szíj|2005|p=150}} Their ancestors arrived there through a series of westward migrations across the Eurasian steppes around 894, centuries after their departure from their original homeland located somewhere in the East.{{sfn|Szíj|2005|p=150}} Many details of the Magyars' prehistory{{spaced ndash}}the location of their original homeland, the ancient Magyars' connections with the Turkic peoples and the ], their lifestyle and political organization, and the background of their conquest of the Carpathian Basin{{spaced ndash}}are still subject to scholarly debates.{{sfn|Tóth|2005|pp=77–79}} With regard to the connections between the Magyars and the Turkic tribes, archaeologist ] mooted an alternative theory in the 1960s.{{sfn|Tóth|2005|p=77}} According to his theory of the "double conquest", a large group of people who spoke a ] arrived in the Carpathian Basin in 670, and a Turkic-speaking people conquered the same territory in the late 9th century.{{sfn|Tóth|2005|p=77}} László's theory has never been widely accepted.{{sfn|Tóth|2005|p=78}} | |||
== Way of life == | |||
=== Economy === | |||
] fishing equipment]] | |||
<!-- ] drawings on rocks in the Urals depict scenes of hunting for reindeer and moose.{{sfn|Kontler|1999|p=34}} -->Most Neolithic settlements were situated on the banks of rivers and lakes in the proposed original homeland of the Uralic peoples, but no houses have been excavated there.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=61}} The local inhabitants primarily used tools made of stone{{spaced ndash}}especially ] from the southern Urals{{spaced ndash}}, bone and wood, but baked clay vessels decorated with broken or wavy lines were also found.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=62–65}} Their economy was based on fishing, hunting, and gathering.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=66–71}} The basic Hungarian words connected to these activities{{spaced ndash}}''háló'' (net), ''íj'' (bow), ''nyíl'' (arrow), ''ideg'' (bowstring), and ''mony'' (egg){{spaced ndash}}are inherited from the Proto-Uralic period.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=66–69}}{{sfn|Kontler|1999|pp=34–36}} The Hungarian words for house ''(ház)'', dwelling ''(lak)'', door ''(ajtó)'', and bed ''(ágy)'' are of Proto-Finno-Ugric origin.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=78}} Houses built in the presumed Finno-Ugric homeland in the wider region of the Urals in the {{nobr|3rd millennium BC}} show regional differences; in the valley of the ], square ]s were dug deep into the ground; along the Kama River, rectangular semi-pit houses were built.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=76–77}} The local people were hunter-gatherers.{{sfn|Kontler|1999|p=36}} They used egg-shaped, baked clay vessels that were decorated with rhombuses, triangles, and other geometrical forms.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=80}} They buried their dead in shallow graves and showered the bodies with ].{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=80–81}} They also placed objects including tools, jewels made of pierced boar tusks, and small pendants in the form of animal heads into the graves.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=81}} Copper objects found in the graves, which were manufactured in the ], indicate that the inhabitants of the lands on both sides of the Ural Mountains had trading contacts with faraway territories around {{nobr|2000 BC}}.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=92}} Words from the Proto-Ugric period{{spaced ndash}}''ló'' ("horse"), ''nyereg'' ("saddle"), ''fék'' ("bridle"), and ''szekér'' ("wagon"){{spaced ndash}}show that those who spoke this language rode horses.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=99}} Animal husbandry spread on both sides of the Urals from around {{nobr|1500 BC}}.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=103–105, 121, 126}} The bones of domestic animals{{spaced ndash}}cattle, goats, sheep, pigs, and horses{{spaced ndash}}comprised 90% of all animal bones excavated in many settlements.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=105}} Loan words from ] suggest the Ugric-speaking populations adopted animal husbandry from neighboring peoples.{{sfn|Kontler|1999|p=36}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=104}} For instance, the Hungarian words for cow ''(tehén)'' and milk ''(tej)'' are of Proto-Iranian origin.{{sfn|Kontler|1999|p=36}} Archaeological finds{{spaced ndash}}including seeds of millet, wheat, and barley, and tools including sickles, hoes, and spade handles{{spaced ndash}}prove the local population also cultivated arable lands.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=106, 126}} | |||
]]] | |||
The Magyars' ancestors gave up their settled way of life because of the northward expansion of the steppes during the last centuries of the {{nobr|2nd millennium BC}}.{{sfn|Kontler|1999|p=36}}{{sfn|Veres|2004|p=35}} Ethnographic studies of modern nomadic populations suggest cyclic migrations{{spaced ndash}}a year-by-year movement between their winter and summer camps{{spaced ndash}}featured in their way of life, but they also cultivated arable lands around their winter camps.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=184}} Most historians agree the Magyars had a mixed nomadic or semi-nomadic economy, characterized by both the raising of cattle and the cultivation of arable lands.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=63}} Turkic loanwords in the Hungarian language show the Magyars adopted many practices of animal husbandry and agriculture from Turkic peoples between the {{nobr|5th and 9th centuries}}.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=110}} For instance, the Hungarian words for hen (tyúk), pig ''(disznó)'', castrated hog ''(ártány)'', bull (''bika''), ox ''(ökör)'', calf (''borjú''), steer (''tinó),'' female cow ''(ünő), goat (kecske),'' camel (''teve''), ram (''kos''), buttermilk (író), shepherd's cloak (''köpönyeg''), badger (''borz''), fruit (''gyümölcs''), apple (''alma''), pear (''körte''), grape (''szőlő''), dogwood (''som''), sloe (''kökény),'' wheat (''búza''), barley ''(árpa)'', pea (''borsó),'' hemp ''(kender),'' pepper (''borz''), nettle (''csalán),'' garden ''(kert)'', plough ''(eke)'', ax (''balta''), scutcher (''tiló''), oakum (''csepű),'' weed ''(gyom)'', refuse of grain ''(ocsú)'', fallow land ''(tarló)'', and sickle ''(sarló)'' are of Turkic origin.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=110}} Most loanwords were borrowed from ] or other ] Turkic language, but the place and the time of the borrowings are uncertain.{{sfn|Kristó|1996|pp=44, 46}} The Magyars' connections with the people of the Saltovo-Mayaki culture may have contributed to the development of their agriculture, according to Spinei.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=22}} | |||
According to Ibn Rusta, the late 9th-century Magyars "dwell in tents and move from place to place in search of pasturage",<ref name="Ibn_Rusta_p122"/> but during the winters they settled along the nearest river, where they lived by fishing.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=19}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=249}} He also said their "land is well watered and harvests abundant",<ref name="Ibn_Rusta_p122"/> showing they had arable lands, although it is unclear whether those lands were cultivated by the Magyars themselves or by their prisoners.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=22}} Taxes collected from the neighboring peoples, a slave trade, and plundering raids made the Magyars a wealthy people.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=261–262}} Gardezi wrote that they were "a handsome people and of good appearance and their clothes are of silk brocade and their weapons are of silver and are encrusted with pearls",{{sfn|László|1996|p=195}} proving their growing wealth.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=261}} However, 9th-century Byzantine and Muslim coins have rarely been found in the Pontic steppes.{{sfn|Kovács|2005|p=355}} | |||
Archaeological finds from the Carpathian Basin provide evidence of the crafts practiced by the Magyars.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=24}} 10th-century warriors' graves yielding sabres, arrow-heads, spear-heads, ]s, and ]s made of iron show that blacksmiths had a pre-eminent role in the militarized Magyar society.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=298–299}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=24}} Engraved or gilded sabres and ] plates{{spaced ndash}}often decorated with precious stones{{spaced ndash}}and golden or silver pectoral disks evidence the high levels of skills of Magyar ] and ]s.{{sfn|Fodor|1975|pp=299–308}}{{sfn|László|1996|pp=110–111}} Cemeteries in the Carpathian Basin also yielded scraps of canvas made of flax or hemp.{{sfn|László|1996|p=117}} The positioning of metal buttons in the graves shows the Magyars wore clothes that either opened down the front or were fastened at the neck.{{sfn|László|1996|p=118}} Ear-rings were the only accessories worn above the belt by Magyar warriors; jewelry on their upper bodies would have hindered them from firing arrows.{{sfn|László|1996|p=122}} In contrast, Magyar women wore head jewelry decorated with leaf-like pendants, ear-rings, decorated pectoral disks, and rings with gemstones.{{sfn|László|1996|pp=123–124}} | |||
A man seeking a bride was expected to pay a ] to her father before the marriage took place, according to Gardizi's description of the late 9th-century Magyars.{{sfn|László|1996|pp=135–136}} The Hungarian word for bridegroom{{spaced ndash}}''vőlegény'' from ''vevő legény'' ("purchasing lad"){{spaced ndash}} and the expression ''eladó lány'' (verbatim, "bride for sale") confirm the reliability of the Muslim author's report.{{sfn|László|1996|p=135}}{{sfn|Csorba|1997|p=46}} A decree of ] prohibiting the abduction of a girl without her parents' consent implies that pretended abduction of the bride by her future husband was an integral part of ancient Magyar matrimonial ceremonies.{{sfn|László|1996|p=135}}{{sfn|Csorba|1997|p=46}} | |||
=== Military === | |||
] | |||
The Magyars' military tactics were similar to those of the Huns, ], Pechenegs, ], and other nomadic peoples.{{sfn|László|1996|p=127}}{{sfn|Engel|2001|p=15}} According to Emperor Leo the Wise, the main components of Magyar warfare were long-distance arrow-fire, surprise attack, and ].{{sfn|Engel|2001|p=16}}{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=263}} However, the contemporaneous Regino of Prüm said the Magyars knew "nothing {{nobr|about ...}} taking besieged cities".<ref name="Prüm_y889_p205">''The'' Chronicle ''of Regino of Prüm'' (year 889), p. 205.</ref>{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=19}} Archaeological research confirms Leo the Wise's report of the use of sabres, bows, and arrows.{{sfn|László|1996|pp=128–129}} However, in contrast with the emperor's report, spears have rarely been found in Magyar warriors' tombs.{{sfn|László|1996|p=129}} Their most important weapons were bone-reinforced ]s,{{sfn|Fodor|1975|p=299}} with which they could shoot at a specific target within {{convert|60|-|70|m}}.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=127}} | |||
{{Blockquote|In battle do not line up as do the in three divisions, but in several units of irregular size, linking the divisions close to one another although separated by short distances, so that they give the impression of one ]. Apart from their battle line, they maintain an additional force that they send out to ambush careless adversaries of theirs or hold in reserve to support a hard-pressed {{nobr|section. ...}} Frequently they tie the extra horses together to the rear, that is, behind their battle line, as protection for it. They make the depth of the files, that is, the rows, of their battle line irregular because they consider it more important that the line should be thick than deep, and they make their front even and dense. They prefer battles fought at long range, ambushes, encircling their adversaries, simulated withdrawals and wheeling about, and scattered formations.|]: '']''<ref>''The Taktika of Leo VI'' (18.53–56), p. 457.</ref>}} | |||
=== Religion === | |||
{{See also|History of Christianity in Hungary}} | |||
Modern scholarly theories of the Magyars' pagan religious beliefs and practices are primarily based on reports by biased medieval authors and prohibitions enacted during the reigns of Christian kings.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=133}} Both Christian and Muslim sources say the Magyars worshipped forces of nature.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=133}} They gave offering to trees, fountains, and stones, and made sacrifices at wells; these are evidenced by the prohibition of such practices during the reign of ] in the late {{nobr|11th century}}.{{sfn|Engel|2001|p=47}} In accordance with the custom of the peoples of the Eurasian steppes, the pagan Magyars swore oaths on dogs, which were bisected to warn potential oathbrakers of their fate.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=133}} Simon of Kéza also wrote about the sacrifice of horses.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=35}} According to the ''Gesta Hungarorum'', the seven Magyar chiefs confirmed their treaty "in pagan manner with their own blood spilled in a single vessel".<ref name="Anonymus_5_17"/>{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=35}} | |||
Scholars studying the Magyars' religion also take into account ethnographic analogies, folklore, linguistic evidence, and archaeological research.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|pp=132–133}} Artifacts depicting a bird of prey or a ] imply both symbols were important elements of the Magyar religion.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=35}} ]{{spaced ndash}}the real or symbolic wounding of the ]{{spaced ndash}}was widely practiced by 10th-century Magyars.{{sfn|László|1996|p=148}} Gyula László writes that real trepanations{{spaced ndash}}the opening of the skull with a chiesel and the closing of the wound with a sheet of silver{{spaced ndash}}were actually surgical operations similarly to those already practiced by Arab physicians, whereas symbolic trepanations{{spaced ndash}}the marking of the skull with an incised circle{{spaced ndash}}were aimed at the disposal of a protective talisman on the head.{{sfn|László|1996|pp=147–148}} According to Róna-Tas, a Hungarian word for cunning, ''(agyafúrt)''{{spaced ndash}}verbatim "with a drilled brain"{{spaced ndash}}may reflect these ancient practices.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=366}} | |||
The Magyars buried their dead, laying the deceased on their backs with the arms resting along their bodies or upon their pelvises.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=37}}{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=368}} A deceased warrior's tomb always contained material connected with his horse.{{sfn|Spinei|2003|pp=37–39}} These are most frequently its skin, skull, and the lower legs; these were put into its master's grave, but occasionally only the harness was buried together with the warrior, or the horse's skin was stuffed with hay.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|p=368}}{{sfn|Spinei|2003|p=39}} The Magyars rolled the corpses in textiles or mats and placed silver plates on the eyes and the mouth.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=134}} | |||
Scholarly theories note the similarities between the '']'' of Hungarian folklore and Siberian ]s, but the existence of shamans among the ancient Magyars cannot be proven.{{sfn|Berend|Urbańczyk|Wiszewski|2013|p=133}}{{sfn|László|1996|pp=140–141}} Many elements of the Hungarian religious vocabulary, including ''boszorkány'' ("witch"), ''elbűvöl'' ("to charm"), and the ancient Hungarian word for holy (''igy'' or ''egy''), are of Turkic origin.{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=364, 366}} Many of these loanwords were adopted into their Christian vocabulary: ''búcsú'' (indulgence), ''bűn'' (sin), ''gyón'' (confess), ''isten'' (god), and ''ördög'' (devil).{{sfn|Róna-Tas|1999|pp=366–367}}{{sfn|Engel|2001|p=47}} According to Gyula László, a Hungarian children's verse that refers to a ], a drum, and a reed violin preserves the memory of a pagan ritual for expelling harmful spirits by raising great noise.{{sfn|László|1996|pp=133–134}} The refrain of another children's verse, which mentions three days of the week in reverse order, may have preserved an ancient belief in the existence of an afterlife world where everything is upside-down.{{sfn|László|1996|p=134}} | |||
{{Blockquote|Stork, oh stork, oh little stork,<br />What has made your leg bleed so?<br />A Turkish child made the cut,<br />A Magyar child will cure it<br />With fife and drum and a reed violin.|A Hungarian children's song.{{sfn|László|1996|p=134}}}} | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
{{portal|Hungary}} | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==Notes== | |||
{{Reflist|25em}} | |||
==Sources== | |||
===Primary sources=== | |||
{{Refbegin|40em}} | |||
* ''Anonymus, Notary of King Béla: The Deeds of the Hungarians'' (Edited, Translated and Annotated by Martyn Rady and László Veszprémy) (2010). In: Rady, Martyn; Veszprémy, László; Bak, János M. (2010); ''Anonymus and Master Roger''; CEU Press; {{ISBN|978-963-9776-95-1}}. | |||
* ''Constantine Porphyrogenitus: De Administrando Imperio'' (Greek text edited by Gyula Moravcsik, English translation by Romillyi J. H. Jenkins) (1967). Dumbarton Oaks Center for Byzantine Studies. {{ISBN|0-88402-021-5}}. | |||
* "Ibn Rusta on the Magyars 903–913" (2012). In: ''Ibn Fadlān: Ibn Fadlān on the Land of Darkness: Arab Travellers in the Far North'' (Translated with an Introduction by Paul Lunde and Caroline Stone) (2012); Penguin Books; {{ISBN|978-0-140-45507-6}}. | |||
* ''Simon of Kéza: The Deeds of the Hungarians'' (Edited and translated by László Veszprémy and Frank Schaer with a study by Jenő Szűcs) (1999). CEU Press. {{ISBN|963-9116-31-9}}. | |||
* ''The Annals of Fulda (Ninth-Century Histories, Volume II)'' (Translated and annotated by Timothy Reuter) (1992). Manchester University Press. {{ISBN|0-7190-3458-2}}. | |||
* ''The Annals of St-Bertin (Ninth-Century Histories, Volume I)'' (Translated and annotated by Janet L. Nelson) (1991). Manchester University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-7190-3426-8}}. | |||
* "The ''Chronicle'' of Regino of Prüm" (2009). In: ''History and Politics in Late Carolingian and Ottonian Europe: The Chronicle of Regino of Prüm and Adalbert of Magdeburg'' (Translated and annotated by Simon MacLean); Manchester University Press; {{ISBN|978-0-7190-7135-5}}. | |||
* ''The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle:'' Chronica de Gestis Hungarorum (Edited by Dezső Dercsényi) (1970). Corvina, Taplinger Publishing. {{ISBN|0-8008-4015-1}}. | |||
* ''The Taktika of Leo VI'' (Text, translation, and commentary by George T. Dennis) (2010). Dumbarton Oaks. {{ISBN|978-0-88402-359-3}}. | |||
* "The Life of Constantine"; "The Life of Methodius" (1983). In: Kantor, Marvin (1983); ''Medieval Slavic Lives of Saints and Princes''; pp. 23–161. University of Michigan; {{ISBN|0-930042-44-1}}. | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
===Secondary sources=== | |||
{{Refbegin|40em}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Erdélyi |first1=István |editor1-last=Moharos |editor1-first=Éva |title=A magyar honfoglalás és előzményei |publisher=Kossuth Könyvkiadó |year=1986 |isbn=963-09-3019-6 |location=] |language=hu |issn=0324-7953}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Berend |first1=Nora |last2=Urbańczyk |first2=Przemysław |last3=Wiszewski |first3=Przemysław |year=2013 |title=Central Europe in the High Middle Ages: Bohemia, Hungary and Poland, c. 900-c. 1300 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-78156-5}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Brook |first=Kevin Alan |year=2006 |title=The Jews of Khazaria |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-0-7425-4982-1}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Cartledge |first=Bryan |year=2011 |title=The Will to Survive: A History of Hungary |publisher=C. Hurst & Co. |isbn=978-1-84904-112-6}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Csorba |first=Csaba |year=1997 |title=Árpád népe '''' |publisher=Kulturtrade |language=hu |isbn=963-9069-20-5}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Curta |first=Florin |year=2006 |title=Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500–1250 |url=https://archive.org/details/southeasterneuro0000curt |url-access=registration |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-89452-4}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Engel |first=Pál |year=2001 |title=The Realm of St Stephen: A History of Medieval Hungary, 895–1526 |publisher=I.B. Tauris Publishers |isbn=1-86064-061-3}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Ertl |first=Alan W. |year=2008 |title=Toward an Understanding of Europe: A Political Economic Précis of Continental Integration |publisher=Universal-Publishers |isbn=9781599429830}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Fodor |first=István |year=1975 |title=In Search of a New Homeland: The Prehistory of the Hungarian People and the Conquest |publisher=Corvina Kiadó |isbn=963-13-1126-0}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Gulya |first=János |editor1-last=Kovács |editor1-first=László |editor2-last=Veszprémy |editor2-first=László |title=Honfoglalás és nyelvészet '''' |publisher=Balassi Kiadó |year=1997 |pages=85–97 |chapter=A magyarok önelnevezésének eredete |isbn=963-506-108-0}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Harmatta |first=János |editor1-last=Kovács |editor1-first=László |editor2-last=Veszprémy |editor2-first=László |title=Honfoglalás és nyelvészet '''' |publisher=Balassi Kiadó |year=1997 |pages=119–140 |chapter=A magyarok nevei görög nyelvű forrásokban |isbn=963-506-108-0}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Klima |first=László |editor-last=Nanovfszky |editor-first=György |title=The Finno-Ugric World |publisher=Teleki László Foundation |year=2004 |pages=15–24 |chapter=The history of research on the ancestral Uralic homeland |isbn=963-7081-01-1}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Kontler |first=László |year=1999 |title=Millennium in Central Europe: A History of Hungary |publisher=Atlantisz Publishing House |isbn=963-9165-37-9}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Kovács |first=László |editor-last=Mende |editor-first=Balázs Gusztáv |title=Research on the Prehistory of the Hungarians: Review: Papers Presented at the Meetings of the Institute of Archaeology of the HAS, 2003–2004 |publisher=Archaeological Institute of the HAS |year=2005 |pages=351–368 |chapter=Remarks on the archaeological remains of the 9th–10th century Hungarians |isbn=963-7391-87-8}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Kristó |first=Gyula |author-link=Gyula Kristó |year=1996 |title=Hungarian History in the Ninth Century |publisher=Szegedi Középkorász Muhely |isbn=963-482-113-8}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Langó |first=Péter |editor-last=Mende |editor-first=Balázs Gusztáv |title=Research on the Prehistory of the Hungarians: Review: Papers Presented at the Meetings of the Institute of Archaeology of the HAS, 2003–2004 |publisher=Archaeological Institute of the HAS |year=2005 |pages=175–340 |chapter=Archaeological research on the conquering Hungarians: a review |isbn=963-7391-87-8}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=László |first=Gyula |year=1996 |title=The Magyars: Their Life and Civilisation |publisher=Corvina |isbn=963-13-4226-3}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Macartney |first=C. A. |year=1953 |title=The Medieval Hungarian Historians: A Critical & Analytical Guide |url=https://archive.org/details/medievalhungaria0000maca |url-access=registration |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-08051-4}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Molnár |first=Miklós |year=2001 |title=A Concise History of Hungary |url=https://archive.org/details/concisehistoryof00moln |url-access=registration |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-66736-4}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Róna-Tas |first=András |year=1999 |title=Hungarians and Europe in the Early Middle Ages: An Introduction to Early Hungarian History (Translated by Nicholas Bodoczky) |publisher=CEU Press |isbn=978-963-9116-48-1}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Spinei |first=Victor |year=2003 |title=The Great Migrations in the East and South East of Europe from the Ninth to the Thirteenth Century (Translated by Dana Badulescu) |publisher=Romanian Cultural Institute |isbn=973-85894-5-2}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Szabados |first=György |year=2011 |title=Magyar államalapítások a IX-X. században '''' |publisher=Szegedi Középkorász Műhely |language=hu |isbn=978-963-08-2083-7}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Szíj |first=Enikő |editor-last=Mende |editor-first=Balázs Gusztáv |title=Research on the Prehistory of the Hungarians: Review: Papers Presented at the Meetings of the Institute of Archaeology of the HAS, 2003–2004 |publisher=Archaeological Institute of the HAS |year=2005 |pages=115–156 |chapter=The past and present of the research on the prehistory of the Hungarians:Historiography |isbn=963-7391-87-8}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Tóth |first=Sándor László |year=1998 |title=Levédiától a Kárpát-medencéig '''' |publisher=Szegedi Középkorász Műhely |language=hu |isbn=963-482-175-8}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Tóth |first=Sándor László |editor-last=Mende |editor-first=Balázs Gusztáv |title=Research on the Prehistory of the Hungarians: Review: Papers Presented at the Meetings of the Institute of Archaeology of the HAS, 2003–2004 |publisher=Archaeological Institute of the HAS |year=2005 |pages=45–86 |chapter=The past and present of the research on the prehistory of the Hungarians:Historiography |isbn=963-7391-87-8}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Türk |first=Attila |title=The new archaeological research design for early Hungarian history |journal=Hungarian Archaeology |publisher=hungarianarchaeology.hu |date=Summer 2012 |url=http://www.hungarianarchaeology.hu/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/eng_turk_12Ny_0827.pdf |access-date=9 December 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304035019/http://www.hungarianarchaeology.hu/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/eng_turk_12Ny_0827.pdf |archive-date=4 March 2016 |url-status=dead}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Veres |first=Péter |editor-last=Nanovfszky |editor-first=György |title=The Finno-Ugric World |publisher=Teleki László Foundation |year=2004 |pages=31–36 |chapter=The Uralic and Hungarian ancestral homeland: the state of current research |isbn=963-7081-01-1}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Zimonyi |first=István |editor-last=Mende |editor-first=Balázs Gusztáv |title=Research on the Prehistory of the Hungarians: Review: Papers Presented at the Meetings of the Institute of Archaeology of the HAS, 2003–2004 |publisher=Archaeological Institute of the HAS |year=2005 |pages=87–102 |chapter=The state of the research on the prehistory of the Hungarians: Historiography (Oriental sources, history of the Steppe) |isbn=963-7391-87-8}} | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
{{Refbegin}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Bowlus |first=Charles R. |year=1994 |title=Franks, Moravians and Magyars: The Struggle for the Middle Danube, 788–907 |publisher= University of Pennsylvania Press |isbn=0-8122-3276-3}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Makkai |first=László |editor1-last=Sugar |editor1-first=Peter F. |editor2-last=Hanák |editor2-first=Péter |editor3-last=Frank |editor3-first=Tibor |title=A History of Hungary |url=https://archive.org/details/historyofhungary00suga |url-access=registration |publisher=Indiana University Press |year=1994 |pages= |chapter=The Hungarians' prehistory, their conquest of Hungary and their raids to the West to 955 |isbn=0-253-35578-8}} | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
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* | |||
* {{cite web |last=Hofer |first=Tamás |title=Ethnography and Hungarian Prehistory (Edited version of a lecture held at the conference "Ethnography and Prehistory," organized by the Hungarian Prehistoric Committee of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences on December 5, 1995) |work=Budapesti Könyvszemle – BUKSZ |date=Fall 1996 |url=http://www.c3.hu/scripta/books/96/03/02hofer.htm |access-date=9 December 2014}} | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
{{commons category}} | |||
{{Hungary topics}} | |||
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Hungarian Prehistory}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 23:15, 3 December 2024
Magyar history (c. 800 BC–c. 895 AD) For the pre-conquest history and prehistory of Hungary, see History of Hungary before the Hungarian Conquest.
Hungarian prehistory (Hungarian: magyar őstörténet) spans the period of history of the Hungarian people, or Magyars, which started with the separation of the Hungarian language from other Finno-Ugric or Ugric languages around 800 BC, and ended with the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin around 895 AD. Based on the earliest records of the Magyars in Byzantine, Western European, and Hungarian chronicles, scholars considered them for centuries to have been the descendants of the ancient Scythians and Huns. This historiographical tradition disappeared from mainstream history after the realization of similarities between the Hungarian language and the Uralic languages in the late 18th century. Thereafter, linguistics became the principal source of the study of the Hungarians' ethnogenesis. In addition, chronicles written between the 9th and 15th centuries, the results of archaeological research and folklore analogies provide information on the Magyars' early history. After the 2000s, archaeological research aimed at exploring the early history of the Hungarians resumed in the Ural Mountains region. Today, these efforts are regularly supplemented with archaeogenetic studies. In addition to linguistics, archaeology, and archaeogenetics, the re-evaluation of well-known written sources has also begun. Together, these fields of study may provide new information regarding the origins of the Hungarian people.
Study of pollen in fossils based on cognate words for certain trees – including larch and elm – in the daughter languages suggests the speakers of the Proto-Uralic language lived in the wider region of the Ural Mountains, which were inhabited by scattered groups of Neolithic hunter-gatherers in the 4th millennium BC. They spread over vast territories, which caused the development of a separate Proto-Finno-Ugric language by the end of the millennium. Linguistic studies and archaeological research evidence that those who spoke this language lived in pit-houses and used decorated clay vessels. The expansion of marshlands after around 2600 BC caused new migrations. No scholarly consensus on the Urheimat, or original homeland, of the Ugric peoples exists: they lived either in the region of the Tobol River or along the Kama River and the upper courses of the Volga River around 2000 BC. They lived in settled communities, cultivated millet, wheat, and other crops, and bred animals – especially horses, cattle, and pigs. Loan words connected to animal husbandry from Proto-Iranian show that they had close contacts with their neighbors. The southernmost Ugric groups adopted a nomadic way of life by around 1000 BC, because of the northward expansion of the steppes.
The development of the Hungarian language started around 800 BC with the withdrawal of the grasslands and the parallel southward migration of the nomadic Ugric groups. The history of the ancient Magyars during the next thousand years is uncertain; they lived in the steppes but the location of their Urheimat is subject to scholarly debates. According to one theory, they initially lived east of the Urals and migrated west to "Magna Hungaria" by 600 AD at the latest. Other scholars say Magna Hungaria was the Magyars' original homeland, from where they moved either to the region of the Don River or towards the Kuban River before the 830s AD. Hundreds of loan words adopted from Oghuric Turkic languages prove the Magyars were closely connected to Turkic peoples. Byzantine and Muslim authors regarded them as a Turkic people in the 9th and 10th centuries.
An alliance between the Magyars and the Bulgarians in the late 830s was the first historical event that was recorded with certainty in connection with the Magyars. According to the Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus, the Magyars lived in Levedia in the vicinity of the Khazar Khaganate in the early 9th century and supported the Khazars in their wars "for three years". The Magyars were organized into tribes, each headed by their own "voivodes", or military leaders. After a Pecheneg invasion against Levedia, a group of Magyars crossed the Caucasus Mountains and settled in the lands south of the mountains, but the majority of the people fled to the steppes north of the Black Sea. From their new homeland, which was known as Etelköz, the Magyars controlled the lands between the Lower Danube and the Don River in the 870s. The confederation of their seven tribes was led by two supreme chiefs, the kende and the gyula. The Kabars – a group of rebellious subjects of the Khazar turks – joined the Magyars in Etelköz. The Magyars regularly invaded the neighboring Slavic tribes, forcing them to pay a tribute and seizing prisoners to be sold to the Byzantines. Taking advantage of the wars between Bulgaria, East Francia, and Moravia, they invaded Central Europe at least four times between 861 and 894. A new Pecheneg invasion compelled the Magyars to leave Etelköz, cross the Carpathian Mountains, and settle in the Carpathian Basin around 895.
Ethnonyms
Main article: Name of the HungariansThe Hungarians were mentioned under various ethnic names in Arabic, Byzantine, Slavic, and Western European sources in the 9th and 10th centuries. Arabic scholars referred to them as Magyars, Bashkirs, or Turks; Byzantine authors mentioned them as Huns, Ungrs, Turks, or Savards; Slavic sources used the ethnonyms Ugr or Peon, and Western European authors wrote of Hungrs, Pannons, Avars, Huns, Turks, and Agaren. According to the linguist Gyula Németh, the multiple ethnonyms – especially Ungr, Savard, and Turk – reflect that the Magyars had been integrated in various empires of the Eurasian steppes – the tribal confederations of the Onogurs and of the Sabirs, and the Göktürks – before gaining their independence. The designation Bashkirs likely comes from proximity to the Turkic-speaking Bashkirs, a group which still today remains in the southern Urals.
Ibn Rusta was the first to record a variant of the Hungarians' self-designation; (al-Madjghariyya). According to a scholarly theory, the ethnonym "Magyar" is a composite word. The first part of the word (magy-) is said to have been connected to several recorded or hypothetical words, including the Mansi's self-designation (māńśi) and a reconstructed Ugric word for man (*mańća). The second part (-er or -ar) may have developed from a reconstructed Finno-Ugrian word for man or boy (*irkä) or from a Turkic word with a similar meaning (eri or iri). Alan W. Ertl writes that the ethnonym was initially the name of a smaller group, the Megyer tribe; it developed into an ethnonym because Megyer was the most powerful tribe within the people. Most scholars agree that the Hungarian exonym and its variants were derived from the Onogurs' name. This form started spreading in Europe with Slavic mediation.
Formation of the Magyar people
Before the separation of the Hungarian language (before c. 800 BC)
Further information: Proto-Uralic homeland hypotheses and Shamanistic remnants in Hungarian folkloreHungarian has traditionally been classified as an Ugric language within the family of Uralic languages, but alternative views exist. For instance, linguist Tapani Salminen rejects the existence of a Proto-Ugric language, saying Hungarian was a member of an "areal genetic unit" that also included Permic languages. Paleolinguistic research suggests the speakers of the Proto-Uralic language lived in a territory where four trees – larch, silver fir, spruce, and elm – grew together. The study of pollen in fossils shows these trees could be found on both sides of the Ural Mountains along the rivers Ob, Pechora, and Kama in the 4th millennium BC. The land between the Urals and the Kama was sparsely inhabited during this period. From around 3600 BC, the Neolithic material culture of the wider region of the Urals spread over vast territories to the west and east. Regional variants emerged, showing the appearance of groups of people who had no close contact with each other.
About 1000 basic words of the Hungarian language – including the names of the seasons and natural phenomena, and the most frequently used verbs – had cognates in other Finno-Ugric languages, suggesting the temporary existence of a Proto-Finno-Ugric language. Between around 2600 and 2100 BC, climatic changes caused the spread of swamps on both sides of the Urals, forcing groups of inhabitants to leave their homelands. The Finno-Ugric linguistic unity disappeared and new languages emerged around 2000 BC. Whether the groups speaking the language from which Hungarian emerged lived to the east or to the west of the Urals in this period is debated by historians.
Further climate changes occurring between 1300 and 1000 BC caused the northward expansion of the steppes by about 200–300 kilometres (120–190 mi), compelling the southernmost Ugric groups to adopt a nomadic lifestyle. Around 800 BC, the climate again changed with the beginning of a wetter period, forcing the nomadic Ugric groups to start a southward migration, following the grasslands. Their movement separated them from the northern Ugric groups, which gave rise to the development of the language from which modern Hungarian emerged. According to historian László Kontler, the concept of the "sky-high tree" and some other elements of Hungarian folklore seem to have been inherited from the period of the Finno-Ugric unity. The melodies of the most common Hungarian funeral songs show similarities to tunes of Khanty epic songs.
Original homeland (c. 800 BC – before 600 AD)
The stag and the eagle, which are popular motifs of 10th-century Magyar art, have close analogies in Scythian art. The Scythians, Sarmatians, and other Indo-Iranian speaking peoples dominated the Eurasian steppes between around 800 BC and 350 AD. During this period, all ethnic groups in the steppes were nomads with almost identical material cultures, for which the certain identification of the Magyars is impossible. Consequently, the exact location of their original homeland is subject to scholarly debates. Róna-Tas says the development of Hungarian started in the region of the rivers Kama and Volga, west of the Urals. Archaeologist István Fodor writes that the original homeland lay to the east of the Urals. He says that some features of the tumuli erected at Chelyabinsk in the 4th century BC, including the northward orientation of the heads of the deceased and the geometric motifs on the clay vessels put in the graves, are similar to older burials that he attributes to Ugric peoples.
Migrations
Early westward migrations (before 600 AD – c. 750 or 830 AD)
See also: Eastern Hungarians and Magna HungariaIn the 1230s, Friar Julian went to search for the Magyars' legendary homeland Magna Hungaria after reading about it and a group of Magyars who had remained there in a Hungarian chronicle. He met a Hungarian-speaking group "beside the great Etil river" (the Volga or the Kama) in the land of the Volga Bulgars, in or in the wider region of present-day Bashkortostan in Eastern Europe. Whether Magna Hungaria was the original homeland of the Magyars, or whether the Magyars' ancestors settled in Magna Hungaria after their migration to Europe from their Western Siberian original homeland is still subject to scholarly debates. According to a third scholarly theory, Magna Hungaria was neither the Magyars' original homeland nor their first homeland in Europe. Instead, the ancestors of the Eastern Magyars whom Friar Julian met had moved to Magna Hungaria from the south.
According to a scholarly theory, the name of at least one Magyar tribe, Gyarmat, is connected to the name of a Bashkir group, Yurmatï. Specific burial rites – the use of death masks and the placing of parts of horses into the graves – featuring a 9th- or 10th-century cemetery at the confluence of the Volga and Kama near present-day Bolshie Tigany in Tatarstan are also evidenced among the Magyars who lived in the Carpathian Basin in the 10th century. Most specialists say that the cemetery at Bolshie Tigany was used by Magyars who either remained in Magna Hungaria when other Magyar groups left the territory, or who moved there from other regions which were inhabited by the Magyars during their migrations.
If the Magyars' original homeland was situated in Western Siberia, instead of being identical with Magna Hungaria, their ancestors moved from Western Siberia to Eastern Europe. This must have happened between 500 BC and 700 AD, because there were several major movements of peoples across the steppes during this period. The "Prohorovo culture" spread towards modern-day Bashkortostan around 400 BC. The westward migration of the Huns forced many groups of people of Western Siberia to depart for Europe between about 350 and 400 AD. The Avars' attack against the Sabirs in Siberia set in motion a number of migrations in the 460s. Between around 550 and 600, the migration of the Avars towards Europe compelled many nomadic groups to move.
The arrival of the Huns ended the dominance of Iranian peoples in the Eurasian steppes. Thereafter the Sabirs, Avars, Onoghurs, Khazars, and other Turkic peoples controlled the grasslands of Eastern Europe for centuries. Gardizi described the Magyars as "a branch of the Turks"; Leo the Wise and Constantine Porphyrogenitus called them Turks. About 450 Hungarian words were borrowed from Turkic languages before around 900. The oldest layer of Hungarian folk songs show similarities to Chuvash songs. These facts show the Magyars were closely connected to the Turks while they stayed in the Pontic steppes.
Gyula Németh, András Róna-Tas and other scholars write that for centuries, the Magyars lived around the Kuban River, to the north of the Caucasus Mountains. They say it was there that the Magyars adopted the Turkic terminology of viticulture, including bor ("wine") and seprő ("dregs"), and the Turkic names of cornel (som), grapes (szőlő) and some other fruits. According to these scholars, the Hungarian words of Alanic origin – including asszony ("lady", originally "noble or royal lady") – were also borrowed in the same region.
Levedia (c. 750 or 830 – c. 850)
LevediaLevédia (Hungarian) | |||||||||||||||
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c. 750–c. 850 | |||||||||||||||
Attributed arms from the Chronicon Pictum (c. 1370) | |||||||||||||||
The Khazar Khaganate and Magyars around 830 | |||||||||||||||
Status | Principality | ||||||||||||||
Religion | Hungarian paganism Hungarian shamanism Tengrism | ||||||||||||||
Demonym(s) | Hungarian | ||||||||||||||
Government | Gyula-Kende sacred diarchy Tribal confederation | ||||||||||||||
Grand Prince | |||||||||||||||
• c. 818–c. 850 | Levedi | ||||||||||||||
Historical era | Middle Ages | ||||||||||||||
• Established | c. 750 | ||||||||||||||
• Battle of Pliska | 811 | ||||||||||||||
• Hungarian – Khazar War | c. 830 | ||||||||||||||
• Pechenegs attack | c. 850 | ||||||||||||||
• Settled in Etelköz | c. 850 | ||||||||||||||
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The Khazar Khaganate was the dominant power in the steppes between the rivers Dnieper and Volga after around 650. Archaeological finds show that the Khagans controlled a multi-ethnic empire. The "Saltovo-Mayaki culture", which flourished in the same region around 750 and 900, had at least seven variants. In the Hungarian chronicles, the legend of the wondrous hind seems to have preserved the memory of the Magyars' "close symbiosis, intermarriages, and incipient fusion" with various ethnic groups – Alans, Bulgars, and Onogurs – of this large region.
Emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus wrote that the Magyars "had of old their dwelling next to Chazaria, in the place called Levedia," adding that "a river Chidmas, also called Chingilous" ran through this territory. The identification of the (one or two) rivers is uncertain. Porphyrogenitus associated Levedia with the whole territory dominated by the Magyars, but most modern historians agree that he only described a smaller region situated on the Don River. The period when the Magyars settled in Levedia is also uncertain; this happened either before 750 (István Fodor) or around 830 (Gyula Kristó). Porphyrogenitus said that the Magyars had been named "Sabartoi asphaloi", or "steadfast Savarts", while staying in Levedia. Róna-Tas says the ethnonym is an invented term with no historical credibility. Based on the same denomination, Károly Czeglédy, Dezső Dümmerth, Victor Spinei, and other historians associated the Magyars either with the late 6th-century Sabirs or with the Suvar tribe of the Volga Bulgars.
Porphyrogenitus wrote that the Magyars "lived together with the Chazars for three years, and fought in alliance with the Chazars in all their wars", which suggests that the Magyars were subjugated to the Khazar Khagan, according to a scholarly view. On the other hand, historian György Szabados says, the emperor's words prove the equal position of the Magyars and the Khazars, instead of the Magyars' subjugation to the Khagan. Although the emperor said that the Magyars' cohabitation with the Khazars lasted only for three years, modern historians tend to propose a longer period (20, 30, 100, 150, 200 or even 300 years).
According to a memorial stone erected in or before 831, a Bulgarian military commander named Okorsis drowned in the Dnieper during a military campaign. Florin Curta says this inscription may be the "'first clue' to the upheaval on the steppes created by the migration of the Magyars into the lands between the Dnieper and the Danube". The earliest certainly identifiable events of the Magyars' history occurred in the 830s. The Bulgarians hired them to fight against their Byzantine prisoners, who rebelled and tried to return to Macedonia in the late 830s, but the Byzantines routed them on the banks on the Lower Danube. According to the Annals of St. Bertin, Rus' envoys who visited Constantinople in 839 could only return to their homeland through the Carolingian Empire because "the route by which they had reached Constantinople had taken them through primitive tribes that were very fierce and savage"; Curta and Kristó identify those tribes with the Magyars. Ibn Rusta wrote that the Khazars "used to be protected from attack by the Magyars and other neighboring peoples" by a ditch. According to a scholarly theory, Ibn Rusta's report shows that the Khazar fort at Sarkel, which was built in the 830s, was one of the forts protecting the Khazars against the Magyars.
According to Porphyrogenitus, In Levedia, the Magyars "were seven clans, but they had never had over them a prince either native or foreign, but there were among them 'voivodes'", or chiefs. Although the exact meaning of the term the emperor used (genea) cannot be exactly determined, scholars have traditionally considered the Magyar "clans" or "tribes" as ethnic and territorial units. In the Hungarian chronicles, references to "seven leading persons" or "seven captains" denote the existence of seven Magyar tribes.
Porphyrogenitus said the tribes did not "obey their own particular , but a joint agreement to fight together with all earnestness and zeal ... wheresoever war breaks out", suggesting the tribal chiefs were military rather than political leaders. According to Kristó, the emperor's report also shows the tribal confederation was not a "solid political formation with strong cohesion" in the early 9th century. The Gesta Hungarorum referred to the seven Magyar chiefs as "Hetumoger", or "Seven Magyars". Similar ethnonyms – including Toquz Oghuz ("Nine Oghuzes") and Onogur ("Ten Ogurs") – suggest the Gesta preserved the name of the confederation of the Magyar tribes. According to Porphyrogenitus, Levedia was named after Levedi, one of the Magyar voivodes. During Levedi's life, the Kangars, a distinct group within the Pechenegs' tribal confederation whom the Khazars had expelled from their homeland, invaded Levedia and forced the Magyars to cede the territory. A Magyar group fled across the Caucasus Mountains as far as Persia. However, the masses departed for the West and settled in a region called Etelköz. Most historians agree the Magyars' forced exodus from Levedia occurred around 850.
he Pechenegs who were previously called "Kangar" (for this "Kangar" was a name signifiying nobility and valour among them), these, then, stirred up war against the and, being defeated, were forced to quit their own land and to settle in that of the . And when battle was joined between the and the Pechenegs who were at that time called "Kangar", the army of the was defeated and split into two parts. One part went eastwards and settled in the region of Persia, and they to this day are called by the ancient denomination of the "Sabartoi asphaloi"; but the other part, together with their voivode and chief , settled in the western regions, in places called ... .
— Constantine Porphyrogenitus: De Administrando Imperio
Etelköz (c. 850 – c. 895)
See also: Magyar tribes and Blood oath (Hungarians)AtelkouzouEtelköz (Hungarian) | |||||||||||||||
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c. 850–c. 895 Árpád dynasty | |||||||||||||||
Magyar banner of the Conquest Era Attributed arms from the Chronicon Pictum (c. 1370) | |||||||||||||||
Territory inhabited by the Hungarians c. 814 | |||||||||||||||
Status | Principality | ||||||||||||||
Religion | Hungarian paganism Hungarian shamanism Tengrism Hungarian Christianity | ||||||||||||||
Demonym(s) | Hungarian | ||||||||||||||
Government | Gyula-Kende sacred diarchy (early) Tribal confederation | ||||||||||||||
Grand Prince | |||||||||||||||
• c. 818–c. 850 | Levedi | ||||||||||||||
• c. 850–c. 895 | Álmos | ||||||||||||||
Historical era | Middle Ages | ||||||||||||||
• Established | c. 850 | ||||||||||||||
• Hungarian invasions of Europe | 839-970 | ||||||||||||||
• Hungarian conquest | c. 895 | ||||||||||||||
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Constantine Porphyrogenitus identified Etelköz (actually Ἀτελκούζου from Ἐτὲλ and Κουζοῦ) with the lands where the rivers "Barouch", "Koubou", "Troullos", "Broutos", and "Seretos" run. The identification of the last three rivers with the Dniester, the Prut, and the Siret is without debate, but the traditional identification of the Barouch with the Dnieper and the Koubou with the Southern Bug is disputed by Spinei. Al-Jayyani wrote that the Magyars' territory was located between two rivers named "tl" and "dwb" in the 870s. According to modern scholars, tl may refer to the Volga, the Don, or the Dnieper; dwb is identified as the Danube. According to the Gesta Hungarorum, the Magyars lived in "Scythia" or "Dentumoger"; the latter name, which refers to the Don River, suggests the Magyars inhabited the eastern regions of the Pontic steppes, according to Spinei. János Harmatta infers that Dentu (reconstructed as Dentü, Hungarian pronunciation: [dɛnty]) was the Proto-Hungarian name of the river.
The Khazar Khagan sent his envoys to the Magyars shortly after they fled from Levedia and settled in Etelköz, according to Porphyrogenitus. The Khagan invited Levedi to a meeting, proposing to make Levedi the supreme head of the confederation of the Magyar tribes in exchange for the acceptance of his suzerainty. Instead of accepting the offer, Levedi suggested the new rank should be offered to another voivode, Álmos, or the latter's son, Árpád. The Khagan accepted Levedi's proposal and upon his demand the Magyar chiefs proclaimed Árpád their head. According to Kristó and Spinei, Porphyrogenitus' report preserved the memory of the creation of a central office within the federation of the Magyar tribes. Róna-Tas says the story relates only a "change of dynasty"; the fall of Levedi's family and the emergence of the Árpád dynasty. In contrast with Porphyrogenitus's story, the Gesta Hungarorum says it was not Árpád, but his father who was elected the first supreme prince of the Magyars.
According to Muslim scholars, the Magyars had two supreme leaders, the kende and the gyula, the latter being their ruler in the 870s. Their report implies the Khagan granted a Khazar title to the head of the federation of the Magyar tribes; Ibn Fadlan recorded that the third Khazar dignitary was styled kündür in the 920s. The Muslim scholar's report also implies the Magyars adopted the Khazar system of "dual kingship", whereby supreme power was divided between a sacred ruler (the kende) and a military leader (the gyula).
Between the country of the and the country of the Iskil, which belongs to the , lies the first of the Magyar frontiers. ... Their chief rides at the head of 20,000 horsemen. He is named kundah, but the one who actually rules them is called jilah. All the Magyars implicitly obey this ruler in wars of offence and defence. ... Their territory is vast, extending to the Black Sea, into which two rivers flow, one larger than the Oxus. Their campsites are located between these two rivers.
— Ibn Rusta: On the Magyars
Porphyrogenitus wrote that the Kabars – a group of Khazars who rebelled against the Khagan – joined the Magyars in Etelköz at an unspecified time, suggesting that the Magyars had got rid of the Khagan's suzerainty. The Kabars were organized into three tribes, but a single chieftain commanded them. Porphyrogenitus also wrote that the Kabars "were promoted to be first" tribe, because they showed themselves "the strongest and most valorous" of the tribes. Accordingly, the Kabars formed the Magyars' vanguard, because nomadic peoples always placed the associated tribes in the most vulnerable position.
Ibn Rusta wrote that the Magyars subjected the neighboring Slavic peoples, imposing "a heavy tribute on them" and treating them as prisoners. The Magyars also "made piratical raids on the Slavs" and sold those captured during these raids to the Byzantines in Kerch on the Crimean peninsula. A band of Magyar warriors attacked the future Saint Cyril the Philosopher "howling like wolves and wishing to kill him" in the steppes near the Crimea, according to the saint's legend. However, Cyril convinced them to "release him and his entire retinue in peace". The inhabitants of the regions along the left bank of the Dniester – whom the Russian Primary Chronicle identified as Tivertsi – fortified their settlements in the second half of the 9th century, which seems to be connected to the Magyars' presence.
A plundering raid in East Francia in 862 was the Magyars' first recorded military expedition in Central Europe. This raid may have been initiated by Rastislav of Moravia, who was at war with Louis the German, according to Róna-Tas and Spinei. The longer version of the Annals of Salzburg said the Magyars returned to East Francia and ransacked the region of Vienna in 881. The same source separately mentioned the Cowari, or Kabars, plundering the region of Kulmberg or Kollmitz in the same year, showing that the Kabars formed a distinct group. In the early 880s, a "king" of the Magyars had an amicable meeting with Methodius, Archbishop of Moravia, who was returning from Constantinople to Moravia, according to Methodius' legend.
When the King of Hungary came to the lands of the Danube, Methodius wished to see him. And though some were assuming and saying: "He will not escape torment," Methodius went to . And as befits a sovereign, received with honor, solemnity, and joy. Having conversed with as befits such men to converse, dismissed with an embrace and many gifts. Kissing him, said: "O venerable Father, remember me always in your holy prayers."
— The Life of Methodius
The Hungarian Conquest (c. 895 – 907)
Main article: Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian BasinThe Magyars returned to Central Europe in July 892, when they invaded Moravia in alliance with Arnulf, king of East Francia. Two years later, they stormed into the March of Pannonia. According to the Annals of Fulda, they "killed men and old women outright, and carried out the young women along with them like cattle to satisfy their lusts". Although this source does not refer to an alliance between the Magyars and Svatopluk I of Moravia, most historians agree the Moravian ruler persuaded them to invade East Francia. During their raids in the Carpathian Basin, the Magyars had several opportunities to collect information on their future homeland.
The Samanid emir, Isma'il ibn Ahmad, launched an expedition against the Oghuz Turks in 893, forcing them to invade the Pechenegs' lands between the Volga and Ural rivers. After being expelled from their homeland, the Pechenegs departed for the west in search of new pastures. The Magyars had in the meantime invaded Bulgaria in alliance with the Byzantine Emperor Leo the Wise. Simeon I of Bulgaria sent envoys to the Pechenegs and persuaded them to storm into Etelköz. The unexpected invasion destroyed the unguarded dwelling places of the Magyars, forcing them to leave the Pontic steppes and seek refuge over the Carpathian Mountains. The Magyars occupied their new homeland in several phases, initially settling the lands east of the Danube and only invading the March of Pannonia after Arnulf of East Francia died in 899. They destroyed Moravia before 906 and consolidated their control of the Carpathian Basin through their victory over a Bavarian army in the Battle of Brezalauspurc in 907.
Sources
Archaeology
Since the 1830s, archaeology has played an important role in the study of the Magyar prehistory. Archaeologists have applied two methods; the so-called "linear method" attempts to determine the route of the migrating Magyars from their original homeland to the Carpathian Basin, while the "retrospective method" tries to discover the antecedents of 10th-century assemblages from the Carpathian Basin in the Eurasian steppes. However, only twelve cemeteries in the steppes have yielded finds that show similarities to assemblages unearthed in the Carpathian Basin. The dating of those cemeteries is also controversial.
Both the scarcity of published archaeological material and the misdating of some sites may have contributed to the low number of archaeological sites that can be attributed to the Hungarians in the steppes, according to archaeologist László Kovács. Kovács also says that the Hungarians' migration from the steppes and their settlement in the Carpathian Basin may have caused the development of a new material culture, rendering the identification of pre-conquest Hungarians difficult. Archaeological research has demonstrated that the material culture of the Avars and other steppe peoples who settled in the Carpathian Basin before the Hungarians experienced a similarly significant change after they left the steppes and settled in their new homeland.
Buckles, belt mounts, and other objects of the so-called "Subotcy horizon", which were unearthed at Caterinovca, Slobozia, and other sites along the middle course of the Dniester show similarities with archaeological finds from the 10th-century Carpathian Basin. These objects were carbon dated to the late 9th century. The same archaeological sites also yielded vessels similar to the pottery of the neighboring Slavic territories.
Linguistics
Main article: History of the Hungarian languageThe study of the Hungarian language is one of the main sources of the research on the ethnogenesis of the Hungarian people because a language shows the circumstances of its own development and its contacts with other idioms. According to a scholarly theory, the oldest layers of Hungarian vocabulary show features of the territory in which the language emerged. The study of loan words from other languages is instrumental in determining direct contacts between the ancient speakers of the Hungarian language and other peoples. Loan words also reflect changes in the way of life of the Magyars.
Written sources
Written sources on the prehistoric Hungarians may begin with Herodotus, who wrote of the Iyrcae, a people of equestrian hunters who lived next to the Thyssagetae. Based on the location of the homeland of the Iyrcae and their ethnonym, Gyula Moravcsik, János Harmatta, and other scholars identify them as Hungarians; their view has not been universally accepted. The 6th-century Byzantine historian John Malalas referred to a Hunnic tribal leader called Muageris, who ruled around 527 AD. Moravcsik, Dezső Pais, and other historians connect Muageris's name to the Hungarians' endonym (Magyar); they say Malalas's report proves the presence of Magyar tribes in the region of the Sea of Azov in the early 6th century AD. This identification is accepted by most scholars.
The Continuation of the Chronicle by George the Monk, which was written in the middle of the 10th century, recorded the first historical event – an alliance between the Magyars and the Bulgarians in the late 830s – that can without doubt be connected to the Magyars. The Byzantine Emperor Leo the Wise's Tactics, a book written around 904, contained a detailed description of their military strategies and way of life. Emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus's De administrando imperio ("On Governing the Empire"), which was completed between 948 and 952, preserves most information on the Magyars' early history. Abu Abdallah al-Jayhani, the minister of Nasr II, ruler of the Samanid Empire, collected the reports of merchants who had traveled in the western regions of the Eurasian steppes in the 870s and 880s. Although Al-Jayhani's work was lost, later Muslim scholars Ibn Rusta, Gardizi, Abu Tahir Marwazi, and Al-Bakri used his book, preserving important facts about the late 9th-century Magyars. However, their works also contain interpolations from later periods. Among the sources written in Western Europe, the longer version of the Annals of Salzburg, Regino of Prüm's Chronicon, the Annals of Fulda, and Liutprand of Cremona's Antapodosis ("Retribution"), provide contemporaneous or near-contemporaneous information of the 9th-century Magyars. There are also references to the Magyars dwelling in the Pontic steppes in the legends of Cyril, Methodius and other early Slavic saints. According to historian András Róna-Tas, information preserved in the Russian Primary Chronicle, which was completed in the 1110s, has to be "treated with extreme caution".
The first Hungarian chronicles were written in the late 11th or early 12th centuries but their texts were preserved in manuscripts compiled in the 13th to 15th centuries. Most extant chronicles show that the earliest works contained no information on the history of the Hungarians before their conversion to Christianity in the 11th century. The only exception is the Gesta Hungarorum, which is the earliest extant Hungarian chronicle, whose principal subject is the Magyars' pagan past. However, the reliability of this work, which was written by a former royal notary now known as Anonymus, is suspect. In his monograph of medieval Hungarian historians, Carlile Aylmer Macartney describes it as "the most famous, the most obscure, the most exasperating and most misleading of all the early Hungarian texts".
Historiography
Medieval theories
According to the Annals of St. Bertin, the Magyars who invaded East Francia in 862 were enemies "hitherto unknown" to the local population. Likewise, Regino of Prüm wrote that the Magyars had been "unheard of in the previous centuries because they were not named". in the sources. Both remarks evince that late 9th-century authors had no knowledge of the Magyars' origins. However, the Magyar raids reminded the Western European and Byzantine scholars of earlier historians' descriptions of the Scythians or Huns, which gave rise to their identification with those peoples. For instance, Leo the Wise listed the Hungarians among the "Scythian nations". The similarity between the Latin ethnonyms Huni and Hungari strengthened the identification of the two peoples, which became commonplace in Western Europe in the 11th century. The Chronicon Eberspergense was the first source that clearly stated that the Huns and the Hungarians were the same people.
The earliest Hungarian chronicles adopted the idea that the Huns and Hungarians were closely related. Anonymus did not mention the Huns, but he referred to Attila the Hun as a ruler "from whose line Prince Álmos", the supreme head of the Magyar tribes, descended. However, Simon of Kéza explicitly identified the Huns and the Hungarians in the 1280. He started his chronicle with a book of the history of the Huns, thus presenting the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin as the reoccupation of a land inherited from their ancestors. Thereafter the identification of the two peoples was the basic theory of the origins of the Hungarians for centuries.
In the 401st year of Our Lord’s birth, in the 28th year since the arrival of the Hungarians in Pannonia, according to the custom of the Romans, the Huns, namely the Hungarians exalted Attila as king above themselves, the son of Bendegúz, who was before among the captains. And he made his brother Buda a prince and a judge from the River Tisza to the River Don. Calling himself the King of the Hungarians, the Fear of the World, the Scourge of God: Attila, King of the Huns, Medes, Goths and Danes…
— Mark of Kalt: Chronicon Pictum
Legend of the Wondrous Hind
Most historians agree that the legend of the wondrous hind preserved the Hungarians' own myth of their origins. The late 13th-century chronicler Simon of Kéza was the first to record it. The legend says two brothers, Hunor and Magor, were the forefathers of the Huns and Hungarians. They were the sons of Ménrót and his wife, Eneth. While chasing a hind, they reached as far as the marches of the Sea of Azov, where they abducted the wives of Belar's sons and two daughters of Dula, the prince of the Alans. According to historian Gyula Kristó, Eneth's name derived from the Hungarian word for hind (ünő), showing that the Magyars regarded this animal as their totemistic ancestor. Kristó also says the four personal names mentioned in the legend personify four peoples: the Hungarians (Magor), the Onogurs (Hunor), the Bulgars (Belar) and the Dula – kindred of the Alans or Bulgars (Dulo). The hunt for a beast, ending with the arrival in a new homeland, was a popular legend among the peoples of the Eurasian steppes, including the Huns and the Mansi. The myth that a people were descended from two brothers was also widespread. Consequently, it is possible that Simon of Kéza did not record a genuine Hungarian legend, but borrowed it from foreign sources.
After the confusion of tongues the giant entered the land of Havilah, which is now called Persia, and there he begot two sons, Hunor and Mogor, by his wife Eneth. It was from them that the Huns, or Hungarians, took their origins. ... s Hunor and Mogor were Ménrót's first born, they journeyed separately from their father in tents. Now it happened one day when they had gone out hunting in the Meotis marshes that they encountered a hind in the wilderness. As they went in pursuit of it, it fled before them. Then it disappeared from their sight altogether, and they could not find it no matter how long they searched. But as they were wandering through these marshes, they saw that the land was well suited for grazing cattle. They then returned to their father, and after obtaining his permission they took all their possessions and went to live in the Meotis marshes. ... So they entered the Meotis marshes and remained there for five years without leaving. Then in the sixth year they went out, and when by chance they discovered that the wives and children of the sons of Belar were camped in tents in a lonely place without their menfolk, they carried them off with all their belongings as fast as they could into the Meotis marshes. Two daughters of Dula, prince of the Alans, happened to be among the children who were seized. Hunor took one of them in marriage and Mogor the other, and to these women all the Huns owe their origin.
— Simon of Kéza: Gesta Hunnorum et Hungarorum
Modern scholarship
Scholarly attempts in the early 18th century to prove a relationship between the Finns and the Huns led to the realization of the similarities between the Finnish and Hungarian languages. János Sajnovics's Demonstratio, the first systematic comparative study of Hungarian and the Saami languages, was published in 1770. Three decades later, Sámuel Gyarmathi demonstrated similarities between a larger group of languages that are now known as Uralic languages. However, the majority of Hungarian scholars only gradually adopted Sajnovics's and Gyarmathi's views. In the 1830s, Pál Hunfalvy still wrote that Hungarian had an intermediate position between the Finnish and Turkic languages, but later accepted that Hungarian is closely related to the Mansi and Khanty languages. Hereafter linguistics played a pre-eminent role in the research of the Magyars' prehistory because it was always the dominant linguistic theory that determined the interpretation of historical and archaeological evidence. Consequently, as historian Nóra Berend writes, Hungarian prehistory is "a tenuous construct based on linguistics, folklore analogies, archaeology, and later written evidence", because there are no certain records of the Magyars before the 9th century and the identification of archaeological cultures with peoples is highly debatable. Historian László Kontler identifies "the history of Hungarian origins" as "the history of a community whose genetic composition and cultural character has been changing, but which has assuredly spoken Hungarian or its predecessor language".
According to mainstream scholarly consensus, the Hungarians are not the autochthonous population of the Carpathian Basin. Their ancestors arrived there through a series of westward migrations across the Eurasian steppes around 894, centuries after their departure from their original homeland located somewhere in the East. Many details of the Magyars' prehistory – the location of their original homeland, the ancient Magyars' connections with the Turkic peoples and the Khazar Khaganate, their lifestyle and political organization, and the background of their conquest of the Carpathian Basin – are still subject to scholarly debates. With regard to the connections between the Magyars and the Turkic tribes, archaeologist Gyula László mooted an alternative theory in the 1960s. According to his theory of the "double conquest", a large group of people who spoke a Finno-Ugrian language arrived in the Carpathian Basin in 670, and a Turkic-speaking people conquered the same territory in the late 9th century. László's theory has never been widely accepted.
Way of life
Economy
Most Neolithic settlements were situated on the banks of rivers and lakes in the proposed original homeland of the Uralic peoples, but no houses have been excavated there. The local inhabitants primarily used tools made of stone – especially jasper from the southern Urals – , bone and wood, but baked clay vessels decorated with broken or wavy lines were also found. Their economy was based on fishing, hunting, and gathering. The basic Hungarian words connected to these activities – háló (net), íj (bow), nyíl (arrow), ideg (bowstring), and mony (egg) – are inherited from the Proto-Uralic period. The Hungarian words for house (ház), dwelling (lak), door (ajtó), and bed (ágy) are of Proto-Finno-Ugric origin. Houses built in the presumed Finno-Ugric homeland in the wider region of the Urals in the 3rd millennium BC show regional differences; in the valley of the Sosva River, square pit-houses were dug deep into the ground; along the Kama River, rectangular semi-pit houses were built. The local people were hunter-gatherers. They used egg-shaped, baked clay vessels that were decorated with rhombuses, triangles, and other geometrical forms. They buried their dead in shallow graves and showered the bodies with red ochre. They also placed objects including tools, jewels made of pierced boar tusks, and small pendants in the form of animal heads into the graves. Copper objects found in the graves, which were manufactured in the Caucasus Mountains, indicate that the inhabitants of the lands on both sides of the Ural Mountains had trading contacts with faraway territories around 2000 BC. Words from the Proto-Ugric period – ló ("horse"), nyereg ("saddle"), fék ("bridle"), and szekér ("wagon") – show that those who spoke this language rode horses. Animal husbandry spread on both sides of the Urals from around 1500 BC. The bones of domestic animals – cattle, goats, sheep, pigs, and horses – comprised 90% of all animal bones excavated in many settlements. Loan words from Proto-Iranian suggest the Ugric-speaking populations adopted animal husbandry from neighboring peoples. For instance, the Hungarian words for cow (tehén) and milk (tej) are of Proto-Iranian origin. Archaeological finds – including seeds of millet, wheat, and barley, and tools including sickles, hoes, and spade handles – prove the local population also cultivated arable lands.
The Magyars' ancestors gave up their settled way of life because of the northward expansion of the steppes during the last centuries of the 2nd millennium BC. Ethnographic studies of modern nomadic populations suggest cyclic migrations – a year-by-year movement between their winter and summer camps – featured in their way of life, but they also cultivated arable lands around their winter camps. Most historians agree the Magyars had a mixed nomadic or semi-nomadic economy, characterized by both the raising of cattle and the cultivation of arable lands. Turkic loanwords in the Hungarian language show the Magyars adopted many practices of animal husbandry and agriculture from Turkic peoples between the 5th and 9th centuries. For instance, the Hungarian words for hen (tyúk), pig (disznó), castrated hog (ártány), bull (bika), ox (ökör), calf (borjú), steer (tinó), female cow (ünő), goat (kecske), camel (teve), ram (kos), buttermilk (író), shepherd's cloak (köpönyeg), badger (borz), fruit (gyümölcs), apple (alma), pear (körte), grape (szőlő), dogwood (som), sloe (kökény), wheat (búza), barley (árpa), pea (borsó), hemp (kender), pepper (borz), nettle (csalán), garden (kert), plough (eke), ax (balta), scutcher (tiló), oakum (csepű), weed (gyom), refuse of grain (ocsú), fallow land (tarló), and sickle (sarló) are of Turkic origin. Most loanwords were borrowed from Bulgar or other Chuvash-type Turkic language, but the place and the time of the borrowings are uncertain. The Magyars' connections with the people of the Saltovo-Mayaki culture may have contributed to the development of their agriculture, according to Spinei.
According to Ibn Rusta, the late 9th-century Magyars "dwell in tents and move from place to place in search of pasturage", but during the winters they settled along the nearest river, where they lived by fishing. He also said their "land is well watered and harvests abundant", showing they had arable lands, although it is unclear whether those lands were cultivated by the Magyars themselves or by their prisoners. Taxes collected from the neighboring peoples, a slave trade, and plundering raids made the Magyars a wealthy people. Gardezi wrote that they were "a handsome people and of good appearance and their clothes are of silk brocade and their weapons are of silver and are encrusted with pearls", proving their growing wealth. However, 9th-century Byzantine and Muslim coins have rarely been found in the Pontic steppes.
Archaeological finds from the Carpathian Basin provide evidence of the crafts practiced by the Magyars. 10th-century warriors' graves yielding sabres, arrow-heads, spear-heads, stirrups, and snaffle bits made of iron show that blacksmiths had a pre-eminent role in the militarized Magyar society. Engraved or gilded sabres and sabretache plates – often decorated with precious stones – and golden or silver pectoral disks evidence the high levels of skills of Magyar gold- and silversmiths. Cemeteries in the Carpathian Basin also yielded scraps of canvas made of flax or hemp. The positioning of metal buttons in the graves shows the Magyars wore clothes that either opened down the front or were fastened at the neck. Ear-rings were the only accessories worn above the belt by Magyar warriors; jewelry on their upper bodies would have hindered them from firing arrows. In contrast, Magyar women wore head jewelry decorated with leaf-like pendants, ear-rings, decorated pectoral disks, and rings with gemstones.
A man seeking a bride was expected to pay a bride price to her father before the marriage took place, according to Gardizi's description of the late 9th-century Magyars. The Hungarian word for bridegroom – vőlegény from vevő legény ("purchasing lad") – and the expression eladó lány (verbatim, "bride for sale") confirm the reliability of the Muslim author's report. A decree of Stephen I of Hungary prohibiting the abduction of a girl without her parents' consent implies that pretended abduction of the bride by her future husband was an integral part of ancient Magyar matrimonial ceremonies.
Military
The Magyars' military tactics were similar to those of the Huns, Avars, Pechenegs, Mongols, and other nomadic peoples. According to Emperor Leo the Wise, the main components of Magyar warfare were long-distance arrow-fire, surprise attack, and feigned retreat. However, the contemporaneous Regino of Prüm said the Magyars knew "nothing about ... taking besieged cities". Archaeological research confirms Leo the Wise's report of the use of sabres, bows, and arrows. However, in contrast with the emperor's report, spears have rarely been found in Magyar warriors' tombs. Their most important weapons were bone-reinforced reflex bows, with which they could shoot at a specific target within 60–70 metres (200–230 ft).
In battle do not line up as do the in three divisions, but in several units of irregular size, linking the divisions close to one another although separated by short distances, so that they give the impression of one battle line. Apart from their battle line, they maintain an additional force that they send out to ambush careless adversaries of theirs or hold in reserve to support a hard-pressed section. ... Frequently they tie the extra horses together to the rear, that is, behind their battle line, as protection for it. They make the depth of the files, that is, the rows, of their battle line irregular because they consider it more important that the line should be thick than deep, and they make their front even and dense. They prefer battles fought at long range, ambushes, encircling their adversaries, simulated withdrawals and wheeling about, and scattered formations.
— Leo the Wise: Tactics
Religion
See also: History of Christianity in HungaryModern scholarly theories of the Magyars' pagan religious beliefs and practices are primarily based on reports by biased medieval authors and prohibitions enacted during the reigns of Christian kings. Both Christian and Muslim sources say the Magyars worshipped forces of nature. They gave offering to trees, fountains, and stones, and made sacrifices at wells; these are evidenced by the prohibition of such practices during the reign of Ladislaus I of Hungary in the late 11th century. In accordance with the custom of the peoples of the Eurasian steppes, the pagan Magyars swore oaths on dogs, which were bisected to warn potential oathbrakers of their fate. Simon of Kéza also wrote about the sacrifice of horses. According to the Gesta Hungarorum, the seven Magyar chiefs confirmed their treaty "in pagan manner with their own blood spilled in a single vessel".
Scholars studying the Magyars' religion also take into account ethnographic analogies, folklore, linguistic evidence, and archaeological research. Artifacts depicting a bird of prey or a tree of life imply both symbols were important elements of the Magyar religion. Trepanation – the real or symbolic wounding of the cranium – was widely practiced by 10th-century Magyars. Gyula László writes that real trepanations – the opening of the skull with a chiesel and the closing of the wound with a sheet of silver – were actually surgical operations similarly to those already practiced by Arab physicians, whereas symbolic trepanations – the marking of the skull with an incised circle – were aimed at the disposal of a protective talisman on the head. According to Róna-Tas, a Hungarian word for cunning, (agyafúrt) – verbatim "with a drilled brain" – may reflect these ancient practices.
The Magyars buried their dead, laying the deceased on their backs with the arms resting along their bodies or upon their pelvises. A deceased warrior's tomb always contained material connected with his horse. These are most frequently its skin, skull, and the lower legs; these were put into its master's grave, but occasionally only the harness was buried together with the warrior, or the horse's skin was stuffed with hay. The Magyars rolled the corpses in textiles or mats and placed silver plates on the eyes and the mouth.
Scholarly theories note the similarities between the táltos of Hungarian folklore and Siberian shamans, but the existence of shamans among the ancient Magyars cannot be proven. Many elements of the Hungarian religious vocabulary, including boszorkány ("witch"), elbűvöl ("to charm"), and the ancient Hungarian word for holy (igy or egy), are of Turkic origin. Many of these loanwords were adopted into their Christian vocabulary: búcsú (indulgence), bűn (sin), gyón (confess), isten (god), and ördög (devil). According to Gyula László, a Hungarian children's verse that refers to a fife, a drum, and a reed violin preserves the memory of a pagan ritual for expelling harmful spirits by raising great noise. The refrain of another children's verse, which mentions three days of the week in reverse order, may have preserved an ancient belief in the existence of an afterlife world where everything is upside-down.
Stork, oh stork, oh little stork,
— A Hungarian children's song.
What has made your leg bleed so?
A Turkish child made the cut,
A Magyar child will cure it
With fife and drum and a reed violin.
See also
- Hungarian mythology
- Hunor and Magor
- List of Hungarian rulers
- Magyar tribes
- Old Hungarian alphabet
- Origin of the Székelys
- Principality of Hungary
- Shamanistic remnants in Hungarian folklore
- Turul
Notes
- ^ Spinei 2003, p. 13.
- ^ Kristó 1996, p. 57.
- Kristó 1996, p. 59.
- Gulya 1997, p. 92.
- Gulya 1997, pp. 89, 91.
- Róna-Tas 1999, p. 303.
- Ertl 2008, p. 358.
- Róna-Tas 1999, p. 286.
- ^ Kontler 1999, p. 34.
- Róna-Tas 1999, p. 173.
- Molnár 2001, pp. 4–5.
- Salminen, Tapani (2002). "Problems in the taxonomy of the Uralic languages in the light of modern comparative studies". Лингвистический беспредел: сборник статей к 70-летию А. И. Кузнецовой. Издательство Московского университета: 44–55. Retrieved 22 November 2014.
- Róna-Tas 1999, pp. 93–94.
- Klima 2004, p. 20.
- Fodor 1975, p. 51.
- Róna-Tas 1999, p. 317.
- Fodor 1975, p. 54.
- ^ Fodor 1975, p. 75.
- ^ Kontler 1999, p. 36.
- Veres 2004, p. 34.
- Róna-Tas 1999, p. 318.
- Csorba 1997, p. 19.
- Csorba 1997, pp. 23–24.
- ^ Veres 2004, p. 35.
- Kristó 1996, p. 31.
- Kontler 1999, pp. 36–37.
- Kontler 1999, p. 37.
- ^ Csorba 1997, p. 32.
- Fodor 1975, pp. 193–194.
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Further reading
- Bowlus, Charles R. (1994). Franks, Moravians and Magyars: The Struggle for the Middle Danube, 788–907. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0-8122-3276-3.
- Makkai, László (1994). "The Hungarians' prehistory, their conquest of Hungary and their raids to the West to 955". In Sugar, Peter F.; Hanák, Péter; Frank, Tibor (eds.). A History of Hungary. Indiana University Press. pp. 8–14. ISBN 0-253-35578-8.
External links
- Hofer, Tamás (Fall 1996). "Ethnography and Hungarian Prehistory (Edited version of a lecture held at the conference "Ethnography and Prehistory," organized by the Hungarian Prehistoric Committee of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences on December 5, 1995)". Budapesti Könyvszemle – BUKSZ. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
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