02 – HONFOGLALÁS… THE MAGYARS ARE BACK HOME (SZÁKELY-MAGYAR ROVÁSÁRÁS)

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Abstract

8000 years, 1 mother Isten

Map of the Magyar Migrations

Alans in Africa

(click and zoom the image)

 

In the 2nd millennium B.C., the Pannonici (a European Flavio population, who had written the Vinča signs) used the Flavio 16-letters VUARK alphabet (See my previous book).

Around 1000 B.C., before the Celts would assimilate them, some Pannonici migrated and settled around Dzungaria, in Central Asia. They brought their rovás there, encrypted them, and spread them over a large area, in Asia.

The oldest inscription written in Pannonico VUARK has been found in Central Asia. The inscription has been dated 5th century B.C. and confirms the existence of the rovásat a much earlier date than has so far been believed. This script consists of letters, which existed already in Pannonia in an alphabet of the 14th century B.C. (see my next book) and in the earliest Etruscan and Greek alphabets. The script contains characters and ligatures that would later be used in Southern Chinese and other Asiatic scripts.

The Pannonico Pazyryki, (taken from the name of their common sacred place, in Central Asia) opened the Silk Road, through the Dzungarian Gate, at least 2,500 years ago. They established ‘China settlements’ along the Silk Road from Loulan (Tarim Basin) to the lower reaches of the Huang He and even in Yunnan, Southern China. They became a rich population. They wore silk clothes, gold juwelry, Celtic style garments, and the same conical headdress that had been in use in Europe before the arrival of the Indo-Europeans. They enjoyed ephedra and they could afford to leave real treasures in their tombs.

In 160 B.C. some Pazyryki moved from China to preside over the northern branch of the western silk route, thus forming a line of peoples (allied with the Chinese), which stretched from the Turris Lapidea to the western terminal of the northern silk route, Tanaïs, on the Don River. At the same time, the Chinese started garrisoning the Gan Su Corridor and, in 138 B.C., they completed the lengthening of the Great Wall in order to protect the Corridor from the Huns. At the end of the 2nd century B.C., the Chinese had complete control over the eastern branch of the Silk Road from Chang’an to the Turris Lapidea.

Trade on the northern silk route died down after the Roman Emperor Antoninus had opened the sea route, in 166 A.D., and later, with the decadence of the Roman Empire. In 330 A.D., the Chinese abandoned the forts that defended the eastern silk route.

In the middle of the 9th century, the Uyghurs, a Turkic people, invaded the Tarim Basin, where the Pazyryko Arsi, an Ugric population, was dwelling since centuries. The Arsi, the Alans, the Seres and other Flavio populations then left Central Asia, gathered between the Volga and the Don rivers, confederated, and, in the year 895, took possession again of their ancestral lands in Pannonia – Honfoglalás. The Magyars still used the same language, the same rovás, and the same numbers that they had used 2,000 years earlier, in Europe.

The alphabet research confirms a collection of old and ‘new’ evidence from anthropologists, linguists, geneticists, historians, and archaeologists. Most of the ‘new’ evidence is not even new. It is simply old evidence that nobody had ever connected, or had any interest in connecting it, to the Hungarian history… or ‘they’ had connected it to the ‘Aryans’!

This book is about how the Pannonici became Pazyryki and finally Magyars. This research has been made possible by the recent easier accessibility of Russian and Chinese sources.

ISBN 88-95025-08-03 (978-88-95025-08-7), 272 pages, including 50 black and white tables, plus 2 coloured maps.

Key words: History of Fenno-Ugria – Origins of the Runes and Rovás – Silk Road – Etruscans – Tocharians – Ainu – Neanderthals – Non Chinese scripts in China – Yunnan – Origins of Democracy – Urheimat – Honfoglalás – Pannonico cultural heritage in Asia – Contribution of the Magyars to the Chinese, Korean, and Japanese cultures.

The following is an incomplete list of sources quoted in the book:

Institutions:

  • Academy of Sciences, Bucureşti, Romania· Answers.com
    · Atomic Energy Commission, France
    · BBC news, UK
    · Cheonmachong Excavation Site Report, Korea
    · Ch’ien-han-shu, Chronicles, China
    · China.org
    · Etimo.it
    · Etymonline.com
    · Harvard-Yen Ching Institute, Cambridge, MA, U.S.A.
    · Hou Han Shu, Chronicles, China
    · Institute of Archaeology, Alma Ata, Kazakhstan
    · Institute of Archaeology, Beijing, China
    · Jilin University, Chang-chum, China
    · Magadan Institute of Biology, Russia
    · Ministry of Culture, Athens, Greece
    · Museums, Europe
    · National Science Foudation of China, Bejing, China
    · National Science Foudation of Yunnan, China
    · Nestor’s Chronicles
    · Omniglot.com
    · Prifysgol Cymru, Wales, U.K.
    · Proel.com
    · Russian Academy of Sciences, Magadan, Russia
    · Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia
    · Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk, Russia
    · Russian Academy of Sciences, Sankt Peterburg, Russia
    · Saraswati Dictionary, India
    · Shih-Chi, Chronicles, China
    · Silk Road Foundation, Saratoga, CA, U.S.A.
    · Smithsonian Institution, U.S.A.
    · TV channel ‘La 7’, Italy
    · Wei-lio, Chronicles, China
    · Wikipedia, Planet Earth

Scholars:

(All the scholars quoted in this book, except a few, are independent (non-Magyar!) scholars. I myself am not Magyar and I am not even blond, thus, I cannot be racist!)

  • Adams, D. Q. – Oxford Uni, UK· Akishev, Kemal – Inst. of Archaeology, Alma Ata, KZ
    · Alinei, Mario – Utrecht Uni, NL
    · Bakker, Peter – Aarhus Uni, DK
    · Bandelt, H.-J. – Hamburg Uni, DE
    · Barber, Elisabeth – Occidental College, L.A., CA, USA
    · Barbujany, Luykart – geneticists
    · Blench, Roger, Cambridge, UK
    · Bonghi Jovino, Maria – Milan Uni, IT
    · Cæsar, Julius – Roman Republic
    · Cavalli-Sforza – Stanford Uni, USA
    · Cenerini, Francesca – Bologna Uni, IT
    · Chatters, James – Washington Uni, WA, USA
    · Cheng, Keith – Pennsylvania Uni, USA
    · Chevalier, Jean – UNESCO Director, FR
    · Childe, Gordon, Indo-Europeanist
    · Cipolla, Carlo – historian, IT
    · Conan Doyle, Arthur – UK
    · Confucius, philosopher, CN
    · Coulmas, Florian – ‘Writing Systems’ Chuo Uni, Tokio, JP
    · D’Aversa, Arnaldo – “Dizionario della lingua etrusca” IT
    · Davis-Kimball, J. – CSEN, Berkeley, CA, USA
    · De Mita, Former Italian Prime Minister, Magna Grecia
    · Di Giovanni, C. – ‘La donna etrusca’, Viterbo, IT
    · Dickens, Mark – oxuscom.com
    · Diker, Selahi, Izmir, Turkey
    · Dimitrov, B. – Sofia Museum Director, BG
    · Diodorus, Siculus – Magna Grecia
    · Dubs, H. H. – China Society, London, UK
    · Duridanov, Ivan – Indo-Europeanist
    · Engels, Friedrich – philosopher, DE
    · Facchetti, G. M. – Insubria Uni, IT
    · Facchini, Fiorenzo – Bologna Uni, IT
    · Fisher, J. E. – Wien, Academy of Austria
    · Fodor, Ferenc – HU
    · Franciscus, Bob – Iowa Uni, USA
    · Gimbuteniė, Marja – UCLA, CA, USA
    · Giotto, painter, IT
    · Gnecchi Ruscone, L. – Milan Uni, IT ; Geneva Uni, CH
    · Good, Irene, Harvard Uni, USA
    · Gray & Atkinson – Indo-Europeanists
    · Guglielmino, C. R. – Pavia Uni, IT
    · Gyulai, Ferenc – HU
    · Halsall, P. – Fordham Uni, New York, USA
    · Harding, R. – Oxford Uni, UK
    · Haskin, J. – Pittsburg Uni, USA
    · Haywood, J. – ‘The Kassel Atlas of world History’, UK
    · Heine-Geldern, R. – archaeologist, DE
    · Hencken, Hugh – Cambridge, MA, USA
    · Herodotus, Greece
    · Herrmann, Albert – Harvard/Yen Ching Inst., USA
    · Homer, Hellas
    · Huan Kai – Archaeology Institute, Beijing, CN
    · Huss, Werner – Bemberg Uni, DE
    · Ivanov, V. V. (I.E.Conference 1991, UCLA Uni, USA)
    · Jacq, Christian – ‘Le petit Champollion illustre”, FR
    · Jaspers, Karl – philosopher, DE
    · Jay, J. W. – Alberta Uni, Canada
    · Julku, Kyösti – Oulu Uni, FI
    · Kamberii, Dolkun – Radio Free Asia, Washington, DC, USA
    · Kangxin, Han – Institute of Archaeology, Beijing, CN
    · Kaoguxue Zhuan Kan, ‘Xi’an Banpo’, Beijing, CN
    · Karloukovsky V. V. – Lancaster Uni, USA
    · Kezai, Simon, HU
    · Kirchoff, A. – glottologist, DE
    · Kiszely, Isztván – ‘The Hungarian old Country’, HU
    · Kodály, Zoltán – Ethnomusicologist, HU
    · Korenchy, É., Budapest Uni, HU
    · Krause-Thomas – Indo-Europeanist
    · Kühn, Herbert – ‘Auf den Spuren des Eiszeitmenschen’, DE
    · Laasko, Johanna – Wien Uni, Austria
    · Lane, George S. – Chicago Uni, USA
    · Laozit, philosopher, CN
    · Liu 2001 pp 267, 268, CN
    · Luther, Martin – ‘Von den Juden und Ihren Luegen’, DE
    · Mair, Victor H. – Pennsylvania Uni, USA
    · Mallory, J. P. – Queen’s Uni, Belfast, Eire
    · Maraini, Fosco – ‘Gli ultimi Pagani’, IT
    · Marcellinus, Ammianus – Roman Empire
    · Marsilî – General, IT
    · Martha, Jules – Paris Uni, FR
    · McAlpin, David – “Toward Proto-Elamo-Dravidian“
    · McDonald, J. D. – Illinois Uni, USA
    · Mees, Bernard – Melbourne Uni, Australia
    · Mielczareck, Poland
    · Monti, P. – ‘Vocabolario della Gallia Cisalpina’, Como, IT
    · Nagler, Anatoly, Hermitage, Sankt Peterburg, RU
    · Negri, Mario – Milan Uni, IT
    · Nietzsche, Friedrich – philosopher, DE
    · Nordborg, Magnus – Lund Uni, Sweden
    · Nosov, Evgeny – Academy of Sciences, Sankt Peterburg, RU
    · Ohno, Susumo – Linguist, JP
    · Orie Endo – Bunkyo Uni, JP
    · Oota, Hiroki -Yale Uni, USA; Max Plank, DE; Tokyo Uni, JP
    · Pääbo, Andres, ‘The Veneti Language’, Canada
    · Parzinger, Herman – Deutsche Archaeologishes Institut, DE
    · Pernicka, E. – Freiburg Uni, DE
    · Plinius the Elder, Roman Empire
    · Pokorny, (IEED, Leiden Uni, Nederland)
    · Priscus, Ambassador, Byzantine Empire
    · Ptolemaeus, Claudius – Alexandria, Egypt
    · Puett, Michael – Harvard Uni, USA
    · Quintana,`Murci, Bandelt et alia – Geneticists
    · Renfrew, Colin – Cambridge Uni, UK
    · Riasanowsky, N.V. – Oxford Uni Press, UK
    · Richardson, David and Sue – karakalpak.com
    · Rohen, J. W. – Erlangen Uni, DE
    · Rosof, L. – Pennsylvania Uni, USA
    · Schmalstieg, W. R. – Pennsylvania Uni, USA
    · Schmid, W. P. – Indo-Europeanist
    · Schuster, Carl – 1968 Science Council of JP
    · Semino, Ornella – Pavia Uni, IT
    · Seneca – Roman Empire
    · Shaoni, Li – Uni of Nationalities, CN
    · Shriver, Mark – Anthropologist, USA
    · Shsi-Chun, Princess – “Pei-ch’ou ko”, CN
    · Shurr, Theodore – Emory Uni, USA
    · Smirnov, K. F. – Academy of Sciences, USSR
    · Stopponi, Simonetta – Macerata Uni, IT
    · Strabonius – Roman Empire
    · Sykes, Brian, Oxford Uni, UK
    · Tacitus, Roman Empire
    · Templeton, Alan – Washington Uni, St. Louis, MO, USA
    · Thuroczy, Janos – HU
    · Todd, Malcom – British Academy, UK
    · Tomashek, W. – Indo-Euroopeanist
    · Torroni, Antonio – Pavia Uni, IT
    · Trinkaus, Erik – Washington Uni, St. Louis, MO, USA
    · Van Windekens, A. J. – Indo-Europeanist
    · Villar, Francisco – Salamanca Uni, Spain
    · Villem, Richard – Tartu Uni, Eesti
    · Virgilius, Roman Republic
    · Wallin, C. A. – Explorer, FI
    · Wang, Li – Academy of Sciences, Beijing, CN
    · Watkins, Calvert – Harvard Uni, USA
    · Waugh, Daniel C. – Washington Uni, Seattle, WA, USA
    · Wiik, Kalewi – FI
    · Xenophanes, Greece
    · Yablonsky, Leonid T. – Academy of Sciences, RU
  • · Yan-Shigu – 7th c. historian, CN
    · Yao,Yong-Gang – Academy of Sciences, Yunnan, CN
“Only if you dare to consider possible what is impossible, you will be capable of great discoveries.”
Goethe

 

“Everybody knows that a thing is inexplicable until some unknowing fool comes along and explains it.”
Einstein