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  • ...ngary]]. The dismounted Mongols, with captured women, are on the left, the Hungarians, with one saved woman, on the right.]]
    99 KB (15.120 kelime) - 13:00, 25 Mart 2017
  • ...aeco-Roman historiographers called the [[Pannonian Avars]], [[Huns]] and [[Hungarians]] "Scythians". Such archaizing was a common literary topos, and implied sim
    14 KB (1.990 kelime) - 18:21, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...nd this composite people in the late 9th century.<ref>András Róna-Tas, ''Hungarians and Europe in the early Middle Ages: an introduction to early Hungarian his *András Róna-Tas, ''Hungarians and Europe in the early Middle Ages: an introduction to early Hungarian his
    26 KB (3.927 kelime) - 00:01, 30 Eylül 2019
  • ...]], thereby forming an Avar-Hungarian continuity with then newly arrived [[Hungarians]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.tankonyvtar.hu/hu/tartalom/historia/82-01/ ...outnumbered them. László's Avar-Hungarian continuity theory states that Hungarians speak Avar.<ref>{{Cite book|title=A "kettős honfoglalás"|last=László|fi
    32 KB (4.663 kelime) - 18:27, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...o-called [[Hungarians#Entering the Carpathian Basin (c. 895)|Homeconqueror Hungarians]].<ref>
    103 KB (15.025 kelime) - 18:27, 26 Mart 2017
  • Medieval [[Hungarians]] continued this tradition (see [[Gesta Hunnorum et Hungarorum]], [[Chronic ...claimed the name of Huns. The [[national anthem of Hungary]] describes the Hungarians as "blood of Bendegúz'" (the medieval and modern Hungarian version of [[Mu
    68 KB (10.472 kelime) - 18:28, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...s|East Iranian]] [[Saka language]]<ref name="Róna-Tas">András Róna-Tas, Hungarians and Europe in the early Middle Ages: an introduction to early Hungarian his # Ungari (either the [[Hungarian people|Hungarians]] or the [[Oghur languages|Oghurs]]/[[Onogurs]])
    116 KB (16.285 kelime) - 18:30, 26 Mart 2017
  • Probably similar runic writing was preserved today by the Hungarians ([[Old Hungarian alphabet]]) and [[Crimean Tatars]].<ref name="Marácz"/>
    16 KB (2.322 kelime) - 18:31, 26 Mart 2017
  • *[[András Róna-Tas|Róna-Tas, András]]. ''Hungarians and Europe in the Early Middle Ages''. Central European University Press, 1
    27 KB (4.141 kelime) - 18:51, 29 Eylül 2019
  • In 1252–53, Flemish missionary and explorer [[William of Rubruck]] saw Hungarians, Russians, Germans, and a Parisian [[goldsmith]], [[Guillaume Boucher]], in
    40 KB (6.366 kelime) - 19:12, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...ngarian+nobility&q=+symbol+of+power+among+their+nobility#search_anchor The Hungarians cross the Carpathians], Corvina Press, 1972, p. 71</ref>
    6 KB (866 kelime) - 00:26, 27 Mart 2017
  • ...9. It is claimed that [[Circassians]], [[Russians]] and [[Hungarian people|Hungarians]] (probably [[Bashkirs]]) served in his army.<ref>Encyclopedia of Mongol Em
    2 KB (268 kelime) - 09:57, 31 Mart 2017
  • ...n]], [[Tokharian]], [[Punjabis|Punjabi]]), and by the [[proto-Mongols]], [[Hungarians]] and [[Mongols]]. Its use was common among the successors of the [[Mongol ....google.com/books?hl=de&id=tQi4AAAAIAAJ&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=Tarkhan Hungarians and Europe in the early Middle Ages]", Central European University Press, p
    11 KB (1.575 kelime) - 11:29, 6 Mayıs 2017