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      • Around 1283 Simon of Kéza, a priest at the Hungarian royal court wrote the next surviving chronicle. He claims that the Hungarians were closely related to the Huns, earlier conquerors of the Carpathian Basin. Accordingly, in his narration, the Hungarian invasion is in fact a second conquest of the same territory by the same people.
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  2. Accordingly, in his narration, the Hungarian invasion is in fact a second conquest of the same territory by the same people. Archaeology Map showing the basic territory of Bijelo Brdo culture (10th–12th century), according to the book of Russian archaeologist Valentin Vasilyevich Sedov.

  3. The Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin, [1] also Hungarian conquest [2] or Hungarian land-taking [3] (Hungarian: honfoglalás: "conquest of the homeland") [4] was a series of historical events ending with the settlement of the Hungarian people in Central Europe at the turn of the 9th and 10th centuries.

  4. The following year, Hungarian forces participated in the invasion of Yugoslavia and the invasion of the Soviet Union. Their participation was noted by German observers for its particular cruelty, with occupied peoples subjected to arbitrary violence. Hungarian volunteers were sometimes referred to as engaging in "murder tourism." [76]

  5. The history of Hungary before the Hungarian conquest spans the time period before the Hungarian conquest in the 9th century of the territories that would become the Principality of Hungary and the Kingdom of Hungary.

  6. Between 1938 and 1940, following German–Italian mediation in the First and Second Vienna Awards, and the Hungarian invasion of Carpatho-Ukraine, Hungary enlarged its territory. It absorbed parts of southern Czechoslovakia, Carpathian Ruthenia and the northern part of Transylvania , which the Kingdom of Romania ceded.

  7. At the time of the conquest, Árpád occupied the latter position, and, following the death of the last kende in 904, he united the two positions into the office of a duke or prince. The Magyars destroyed the Moravian state in 906 and in the next year occupied Pannonia, having defeated a German force sent against them.

  8. Mar 28, 2024 · According to Gyula László, a well-known Hungarian historian and archaeologist, the empire had two centres: one may have been in the Carpathian Basin, and the other in the territory of today’s Ukraine.[1]

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