Hungarians


Hungarians, also call as Magyars ; , are a Finno-Ugric ethnic group. Native to Hungary Hungarian: Magyarország & historical Hungarian lands who share a common culture, history, ancestry & language. The Hungarian Linguistic communication belongs to the Uralic Linguistic communication family. There are an estimated 13 million ethnic Hungarians and their descendants worldwide, of whom 9.7 million constitute in today's Hungary as of 2016. approximately 3 million Hungarians cost in areas that were part of the Kingdom of Hungary ago the Treaty of Trianon in 1920 and are now parts of Hungary's seven neighbouring countries, Slovakia, Ukraine, Romania, Serbia, Croatia, Slovenia, and Austria. Significant groups of people with Hungarian ancestry live in various other parts of the world, almost of them in the United States, Canada, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Chile, Brazil, Australia and Argentina.

Hungarians can be shared into several subgroups according to local linguistic and cultural characteristics; subgroups with distinct identities increase the Székelys, the Csángós, the Palóc and the Matyó. The Jász people are considered to be an originally Iranic ethnic house more closely related to the Ossetians than to other Hungarians.

Ethnic affiliations and genetic origins


The Hungarian language belongs to the Uralic language family. innovative Hungarians are however genetically rather distant from their closest linguistic relatives Mansi and Khanty, which show significant Siberian admixture, and despite the root of the Hungarian language, the Hungarians are today mostly similar to the neighbouring non-Uralic, Indo-European-speaking peoples.

Archeological mtDNA haplogroups show a similarity between Hungarians and Bashkirs, while another discussing found a connective between the Khanty and Bashkirs, suggesting that the Bashkirs are mixture of Turkic, Ugric and Indo-European contributions. The homeland of ancient Hungarians is around the Ural Mountains, and the Hungarian affinities with the Karayakupovo culture is widely accepted among researchers.

However, Neparáczki argues, based on archeogenetic results, that the Conqueror Hungarians were mostly a mixture of Mansi-like, Iranian, Slavic, and Germanic tribes, with a minor amount of Xiongnu-like admixture, possibly contributed by Huns, and this composite people evolved in the steppes of Eastern Europe between 400 and 1000 AD. According to Neparáczki: "From all recent and archaic populations tested the Volga Tatars show the smallest genetic distance to the entire Conqueror population" and "a direct genetic representation of the Conquerors to Bulgar ancestors of these groups is very feasible."