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         Hungarian Mythology:     more books (18)
  1. Hungarian and Vogul Mythology by Geza Roheim, 1954
  2. Hungarian Folktales: The Art of Zsuzsanna Palk- (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities) by Linda Degh, 1995-10-01
  3. Hungarian and Vogul Mythology (American Ethnological Society Monographs, No 23) by Geza Roheim, 1988-12
  4. Hungarian and Vogul Mythology by Geza Roheim, 1966
  5. Hungarian and Vogul Mythology by Geza Roheim, 1959
  6. Hungarian and Vogul Mythology.
  7. Hungarian Folk-Tales (Oxford Myths and Legends) by Val Biro, 1992-05-14
  8. Hungarian Ballads and the European Ballad Tradition
  9. Old Hungarian Fairy Tales by Emmuska Orczy, Baroness Orczy, 2004-06-30
  10. One-Time Dog Market at Buda and Other Hungarian Folktales by Irma Molnar, 2001-12
  11. Tobias and the Dragon: A Hungarian Folk Tale (Folk Tales of the World) by Val Biro, 1989-01
  12. Folktales and Society: Story-Telling in a Hungarian Peasant Community (A Midland Book) by Linda Degh, 1989-09
  13. The Miraculous Hind: A Hungarian Legend by Elizabeth Cleaver, 1976-07
  14. Stories by Foreign Authors: Polish, Greek, Belgian, Hungarian by Various, 2003-06

1. Ancient Mythology
Ancient Mythology. Avestae Ancient PersianZorasterian document describing life of the Persian Early Hungary. Hungarian Legend The Stag. hungarian mythology. Kundalini. Middle Eastern
http://www.mythome.org/Ancient.html
Last Updated: Wednesday,December 15, 1999 Ancient Mythology

2. Myth*ing Links: Central & Eastern Europe / Finno-Ugric Peoples: Hungary / Transy
of that region could be changed in wondrous, humane ways. hungarian mythology LORE. Gyöngyvér (1909) hungarian mythology tells the story of the Hungarians (Huns and Magyars) from
http://www.mythinglinks.org/euro~east~finno~Hungary.html
[Note: this page is graphics-rich please be patient as it loads.] MYTH*ING LINKS
by Kathleen Jenks, Ph.D. GEOGRAPHICAL REGIONS
THE FINNO-UGRIC PEOPLES
HUNGARY /
TRANSYLVANIA [Also see my page on Romania , since many issues I raise here continue on that page.
Further, see the
it has significant links to the whole region, especially two that explore the historical reasons
behind the West's tragic dismembering of this region.]
[Map from a now-defunct site] 19 August 2001
Author's Note: I created this page more than a year ago, but it only had a handful of links. Constant demands drew my attention elsewhere, leaving this page with many ungrokked links. I did not know until recently, when an eloquent Hungarian complained about the inadequacy of the above map, how ruthlessly Hungary had been dismembered after World War I. Especially bitter for Hungary was the loss of what we know as Transylvania ( Erd ly in Hungarian), a large, beautiful, mysterious region that was given to Romania by France at Trianon in 1920 to punish Hungary for siding with Germany during the war. As my Hungarian correspondent pointed out to me, "The Hungarian culture is not limited to the trianon boarders. Most of Hungary's history and culture is best represented in Transylvania (since Transylvania more or less remained the only chunk of Hungary not occupied by the Ottomans or by the Austrians)...."

3. Links For Museum
Please visit often for updates. Copyright © 2003 Cleveland Hungarian Heritage Museum Hungarian Music Page (Midi Sounds) Mythology. hungarian mythology. News, Business Information
http://www.jcu.edu/language/hunghem5.htm
P lease visit often for updates. Links to other Hungarian sites
HUNGARIAN HERITAGE MUSEUM
Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Sponsored by the
E-mail: magyarmuzeum@hotmail.com You can call the Gift Shoppe/Museum at the Galleria at Erieview directly at 216 523-3900
(voice mail when not open)

Please note: volunteers are needed !
Friends and Patrons of the Museum
your help is requested ! Please contact:
Hungarian Heritage Society
P. O. Box 24134
Cleveland, Ohio 44124
click here to e-mail us
Visitors, please note! These links are intended only as a service to you. The Hungarian Heritage Museum and/or Society is not responsible for the contents of these suggested links. Mention of a link does not constitute endorsement of, nor affiliation with, nor commercial promotion of the sponsoring organization. Please also see our Hungarian-American Cleveland and NE Ohio "Events Calendar" which includes LINKS to "Useful Addresses" in Cleveland and NE Ohio.
GREAT LINKS to Other Hungarian Sites!
Archeology, Artifacts
Hungarian Archeological Artifacts
Art
Hungarian painting!

4. Iren Lovasz And Laszlo Hortobagyi: Fono 63
World Tree) is a mythological image that exists in the Hungarian culture and in other cultures as well the magical stag from ancient hungarian mythology, and making a sweeping arc
http://www.cdroots.com/fono-lovasz63.html
Search for music
Need Help?
Iren Lovasz and Laszlo Hortobagyi
Vilgafa
Listen to some brief MP3 samples:
Regélök, míg élök
(Szlavónia)
A vöröslo nap felkeltekor
(csuvas altatódal)
Márton Szép Ilona
(Moldva) Also see:
Makam
with Iren Lovasz
Credit card orders are placed on a secure server.
Please note! Most CDs have been imported from Europe or Asia. They are not all shrink-wrapped, and I am not going to con you by wrapping them here just to make you think they have been sterilized in America. We guarantee that the CDs and the contents are all brand new and in perfect condition. Whenever I can, I use recycled shipping materials. They may not look as pretty on the outside, but they save money and keep the trash dumps a little bit emptier.

5. HUNMAGYAR.ORG - HUNGARIAN MYTHOLOGY
hungarian mythology tells the story of the Hungarians (Huns and Magyars) fromtheir origins to the foundation of the Hun Empire and of its successor state
http://www.hunmagyar.org/hungary/myth/myth.html
H ungarian mythology tells the story of the Hungarians (Huns and Magyars) from their origins to the foundation of the Hun Empire and of its successor state, Hungary. This traditional account, which goes back thousands of years, has been preserved by the Hungarian people despite the centuries of persecution by a foreign christianization imposed by force and which sought to destroy all traces of the ancient Hungarian culture. T he importance of Hungarian mythology therefore lies not only in its cultural value, but also in the fact that it is an ancient historical record of the Hungarian nation. Here is a brief overview of some of the main themes of ancient Hungarian mythology (click on images below).
MAIN
FOLKDANCE FOLKCOSTUMES ARTIFACTS ... LINKS

6. Untitled
hungarian mythology I. God and his helpers. Fred Hamori. This only a short summary of hungarian mythology starting from before their conversion to Christianity.
http://www2.4dcomm.com/millenia/myths.htm
Hungarian Mythology I
God and his helpers
Fred Hamori This only a short summary of Hungarian Mythology starting from before their conversion to Christianity. This first part will mainly be about God and his helpers, other parts will deal with the Devil and his deimons and Mythical Heroes.
Early Reference to their religion.
Theopylaktos Simocata /Greek/ : "The Turks (Hungarians) respect fire, air, water and even the earth and sing praises to earth, however they only worship the one who created heaven and earth." [Note the Greeks called Hungarians at first Turks and only later did they get familiar with their proper Magyar (Macar) name after they settled next to them.] Abufeda /Arab? or Persian/ :"The Magyars are a Turkic nation, their territory is between the Bedsenak (later absorbed by Hungarians) and the Sikul (also absorbed by Hungarians). Both were eastern nations in origin. The other neighboring nations of the Hungarians before their settlement in their current homeland also had a similar religion as the following examples show. Menander: The Avar-Hun Khan swears to the god of fire "deus ignis, aui in coelo est."

7. HUNMAGYAR.ORG - HUNGARIAN MYTHOLOGY - THE WHITE STAG
Just as in Sumerian and Scythian myhtology, in hungarian mythology, the stagis also seen as a mystical being with magical powers and whose role was to
http://www.hunmagyar.org/hungary/myth/stag.html
N imrud was the great legendary ruler of ancient Sumeria. One day, his two sons, Hunor and Magor went hunting. They saw a great white stag which they pursued. The stag continuously eluded them and led them to a beautiful and bountiful land. This vast land was Scythia, where Hunor and Magor eventually settled with their people. T he descendants of Hunor's people were the Huns, and the descendants of Magor's people were the Magyars. As they grew in strength and numbers, first the Huns, and then the Magyars went on to conquer new lands. T his story not only symbolizes the close ethnic relationship between the Huns and the Magyars, it is also a clear reference to their Sumerian and Scythian origins. The stag has also been an important symbol in the Sumerian and Scythian cultures. T he mythical story of the white stag illustrates how myths and legends can be based on historical facts as the archeological and ethno-linguistic evidence supports the Sumerian-Scythian-Hun-Magyar relationship which is told by this story in ancient traditional mythological form. J ust as in Sumerian and Scythian myhtology, in Hungarian mythology, the stag is also seen as a mystical being with magical powers and whose role was to indicate the will of god and to guide the Hungarians accordingly.

8. Wikipedia Romanian Mythology
Wikipedia Free Encyclopedia's article on 'Romanian mythology' This article on Romanian mythology covers both the mythology traditional to the Romanian Thracian gods, but does not cover hungarian mythology. Table of contents showTocToggle
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanian_mythology

9. The Sumerian And Hungarian Fertility Goddess
In hungarian mythology the goddess Boldog Asszony is the goddess associatedwith birth, fertility and harvests. She has been incorporated
http://users.cwnet.com/millenia/BAU.htm
The goddess of birth and fertility
Fred Hamori In Hungarian mythology the goddess Boldog Asszony is the goddess associated with birth, fertility and harvests. She has been incorporated into Hungarian Catholicism, there are 7 goddesses known to be called by a generic title Boldog Asszony. One of these is called Nagy Boldogaszony, who is also the mother of the rest of them. They are associated with the following;
*the giver and protector of life and the family.
*healing and herbes
*bountifull harvest, fruitgrafting and harvest time
*fertility of man, animal and plants
*selection of brides and mates for man.
At this point a few definitions of the name's composition is important.
Turkic BAYEK/BOL =bountifull, spacious, wide
Dravidian BAYEK, BEYEK=much
Sumerian BA =to give, provide, rations, divide Elamite ASAN =goddess. Balkar GOSEN =lady Sumerian BABA =a title of BAU as the giver of life. In various FinnUgorlanguages she is called by different names like: Votjak Kildisin=birth giving goddess, great mother, creator.

10. Untitled
hungarian mythology I God and his helpers. Fred Hamori. References for informationon hungarian mythology. Kandra Kabos, Magyar Mythologia , Eger, 1897.
http://users.cwnet.com/millenia/myths.htm
Hungarian Mythology I
God and his helpers
Fred Hamori This only a short summary of Hungarian Mythology starting from before their conversion to Christianity. This first part will mainly be about God and his helpers, other parts will deal with the Devil and his deimons and Mythical Heroes.
Early Reference to their religion.
Theopylaktos Simocata /Greek/ : "The Turks (Hungarians) respect fire, air, water and even the earth and sing praises to earth, however they only worship the one who created heaven and earth." [Note the Greeks called Hungarians at first Turks and only later did they get familiar with their proper Magyar (Macar) name after they settled next to them.] Abufeda /Arab? or Persian/ :"The Magyars are a Turkic nation, their territory is between the Bedsenak (later absorbed by Hungarians) and the Sikul (also absorbed by Hungarians). Both were eastern nations in origin. The other neighboring nations of the Hungarians before their settlement in their current homeland also had a similar religion as the following examples show. Menander: The Avar-Hun Khan swears to the god of fire "deus ignis, aui in coelo est."

11. Encyclopedia: Sun Mythology
gods of truth, honesty, virtue, prophecy, intellect and fertility. Solar Deities. Abenaki mythology. Keezos-en Hittite mythology. Arinna. hungarian mythology. Napkir ly. Ibo mythology
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/sun-mythology

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    Encyclopedia : Sun mythology
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    People have worshiped the Sun and deities who represent the Sun for all of recorded history. Hence, many beliefs and legends have been formed around this worship. Sun deities are generally (though not always) male, and usually the brother, father, husband and/or enemy of the lunar deity (usually female). They were often gods of truth, honesty, virtue, prophecy, intellect and fertility.

    12. Hungarian Creation Myth
    hungarian mythology also claims the origin of 7 branches of the Hungarian people,who probably were followers of 7 different national gods once long ago
    http://www.stavacademy.co.uk/mimir/hungariancreation.htm
    Hungarian Creation Myth Excerpt of the legend of creation from the Hungarian saga
    The Saga of the Legend of the Stag,
    as collected by Adorjan Magyar
    The seeds of the Holy Sea break out of your shell.
    The eternal sea's waves are waving, and rolling.
    Their waves are rocking and their foam is hissing.
    There is no earth yet anywhere, but in the immeasurable
    heights, above in his golden house, sits the great
    heavenly father on his golden throne.
    He is the old, white haired and white bearded god of eternity.
    On his black robes there are thousands of sparkling stars. Besides him sits his wife, the Great Heavenly mother. On her white robes (palast) there are thousands of sparkling stars. She is the ancient material of which everything is made. They have existed from eternity in the past and will exist for all eternity to come. In front of them stands their beautiful golden sunbeam haired son, the sun god Magyar. The boy asks from his father: "when shall we create the world of the humans my dear father?".

    13. The Legend Of The Turul Hawk- Hungarian
    The Turul is a giant mythical falcon, a messenger of god in hungarian mythology,who sits on top of the tree of life along with the other spirits of unborn
    http://www.stavacademy.co.uk/mimir/turulhawk.htm
    The Legend of the Turul Hawk
    by Fred Hamori
    Background
    According to the legend of origin of the Árpád clan, it was the divine intervention of god, through his messenger the Turul, which founded the royal family. The following is a recounting of the legend by the chronicler "Anonymous", the royal scribe of King Béla III (1172-1196).(Béla=Bay-la) "In the year of our lord 819, Ügyek, the descendant of King Magog (The Scythian King Magog of the Bible lived in Northern Mesopotamia during the reign of the Assyrian king, Ashur-banipal, according to surviving Assyrian records.) and a royal leader of the land of Scythia, married the daughter of Ened-Belia, whose name was Emeshe. From her was born their first son Álmos.(In modern Hungarian the name Álmos means sleepy/dreamer, the ancient Ugrian form of the word dream however was ADOM, ADAM. The Kiev Chronicles called him Olma.) "The boy obtained his name because of the unusual circumstances of his birth, when his mother in a vision saw the great Turul descend from heaven on her and made her fertile. A great spring welled forth from her womb and began flowing westward. It grew and grew until it became a torrent which swept over the snow covered mountains into the beautiful lowlands on the other side. There the waters stopped and from the water grew a wondrous tree with golden branches. She imagined famed kings were to be born from her descendants, who shall rule not here in their present lands but over that distant land in her dreams, surrounded with tall mountains."

    14. Solar Deity - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    Redirected from Sun mythology) People have worshiped the Sun and Gods who represent the Sun for all of recorded Hittite mythology. Arinna. hungarian mythology. Napkirály. Ibo mythology
    http://en2.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_mythology
    Solar deity
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
    (Redirected from Sun mythology People have worshiped the Sun and deities who represent the Sun for all of recorded history . Hence, many beliefs and legends have been formed around this worship. Sun deities are generally (though not always) male, and usually the brother, father, husband and/or enemy of the lunar deity (usually female). They were often gods of truth, honesty, virtue, prophecy, intellect and fertility. Solar Deities

    15. Ordog
    Home ». Areas ». Mythology ». Other mythologies Search. Ordog. by Micha F A demonic creature from hungarian mythology. It personifies the dark aspects of the world
    http://www.pantheon.org/articles/o/ordog.html
    Home Areas Mythology Other mythologies ... Search Ordog
    by Micha F. Lindemans Cite rate , or print article Send comment Used sources
    A demonic creature from Hungarian mythology. It personifies the dark aspects of the world. Later it is identified with the devil. Article details N/A Article created on 03 March 1997; last modified on 07 May 2001.

    16. Sitchin Links - The Sumerians
    The Great Stag A Sumerian Divinity and its Affiliation. HungarianMythology - Sumerian influence in hungarian mythology. The
    http://www.geocities.com/sitchin_links/sumer.html
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    Sumerians
    The Sumerian texts are the oldest literature in history. Sumerian inscriptions, in cuneiform, have been found on tens of thousands of pieces of pottery, on clay cylinder seals, and on clay tablets. Most of the tablets come from the great temples of Drehem and Umma and date from the Ur III dynasty (22nd-21st centuries BC), but there are also First Babylonian Dynasty fragments (20th-17th centuries BC) and later Babylonian and Assyrian pieces. Texts comprise royal inscriptions, letters, economic, administrative and agricultural documents and literary texts. Sumerian Links Sections:
  • Sumerian tablets
  • Sumerian literature
  • Sumerian language
  • Gilgamesh ...
  • Other links Sumerian tablets top
  • Enuma Elish the Epic of Creation: - L.W. King Translation of "The Seven Tablets of Creation".
  • Sumerian Lexicon
  • The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature: (recommended)
  • Earth's Ancient History: - Vast library of the sumerian writings. (Draws most of its collection from The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature.)
  • 17. The White Stage
    It is also an important element of hungarian mythology, which believed thata great white stag led the brothers Hunor and Magar to settle in Scythia.
    http://www.geocities.com/branwaedd/whitestag.html
    The White Stag The white stag is a familiar creature of myth and legend. Its origins are likely in the totemic period of early Indo-European society, particularly the northern societies of the Celts and pre-Indo-European cultures, whose subsistence was gained not only through agriculture, but through hunting. This dependence on deer can be seen in the zoomorphic god Cernunnos. The white stag in Celtic myth is an indicator that the Otherworld is near. It appears when one is transgressing a taboosuch as when Pwyll tresspassed into Arawn's hunting grounds, or when Peredur entered the Castle of Wonders in his second adventure at the house of the Lame King. It also appears as an impetus to questthe white stag or hart often appears in the forrests around King Arthur's court, sending the knights off on to adventure against gods and fairies. (C. S. Lewis uses this device at both the beginning and end of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe It also appears in French romance and lais as a similar indicator, such as in the lais of Marie de France, when Guigemar happens upon the strange sight of a white doe with antlers. He wounds the strange, hermaphroditicnote that wordanimal, which curses him to grow up and fall in love. It is also an important element of Hungarian mythology, which believed that a great white stag led the brothers Hunor and Magar to settle in Scythia. Thus were established the Huns and Magyars.

    18. Crypt: Links To Other Realms
    The Encyclopedia Mythica Welcome to MYTHTEXTMythology Site Religion, Mythologyand Folklore A very thorough list of links hungarian mythology God and his
    http://www.cryptmush.com/oldcrypt/other.html
    Other Realms
    The links on this page are organized into categories: For links to player and admin pages, please see the Crypt Keepers page. If you notice any of these links not working, please contact me as mab@where.com (or as Hamlet online ) and let me know.
    MUSH and MUX resources
    Horror

    19. Fileareas
    hero. hungamyt.zip, 8206, 11/899, hungarian mythology. jacjil.zip,2905, 11/8-99, Mythology Patterns seen in the face of the Moon. kinart
    http://www.boudicca.de/files/85/files.htm
    Filename Size Date Description achipol.zip Achilles and Polyxena. adameve.zip adon1.zip Info on Adonis. alcmerip.zip Alcmaeon and Eriphyle. amusfis1.zip A musing fish story. (Myth) anubis1.zip Brief information on Anubis. aphrzeu.zip About Athena, Aphrodite and Zeus. apolhyac.zip Apollo and Hyacynthus. arthufaq.zip Questions and answers on King Arthur and his time. asbabmy.zip ashtoro.zip On the Goddess' names Asharah or Ashtoroth. atlancul.zip Some information on the later Atlantean cultures. atlant1.zip Note on Atlantis. atlantis.zip The Lost continent. bachorgi.zip Description of a print on a Bacchanalian Orgy. canncake.zip Article on Mithraic mysteries. (Mythras) chioflir.zip Children of Lir. chrchiti.zip Cronus / Chronos ; Hurus / Horo - Time ? echohist.zip About Narcissus. egyplana.zip Egyptian planetary and the Gods. es_im_he.zip Esoterik im Hellenismus. faquekin.zip The first fairy Queen and King. gilgam2.zip Gilgamesh, the first human hero in literature... grego4.zip More info on the Greec Gods and Goddesses. gregod2.zip More on the Greec Gods and Goddesses. gregods.zip

    20. Filename
    hungdevi.zip, 8653, 11/299, From hungarian mythology The devil andhis helpers. inan03.zip, 3109, 11/2-99, Inanna and the Crown-symbol.
    http://www.boudicca.de/files/29/files.htm
    Filename
    Size
    Date
    Description
    3pigs.zip
    Mythology/Fairytales: Three little pigs.
    apollo.zip

    Apollo: ancient astronomical origins. The Greec God Apollo reconsidered.
    appeserp.zip

    Apples and serpents in mythology.
    artem01.zip
    Ancient picture of the Goddess Artemis. artemis2.zip About the Alans and the Goddess Artemis. arthurbl.zip Arthurian booklist. athena2.zip The Goddess Athena and the Giants. atlanehy.zip Atlantis: New hypothesis. atlangri.zip Atlantis, the Atliantis Grid, DNA and the atlanti1.zip On the myth of Atlantis. atlanti2.zip A historical conjunture about Atlantis. attisje.zip The myth of Cybele and Attis compared with . . . azteca.zip Astromythology sept/okt. baal01.zip The Myth of Ba'al: A deep research. boudd1.zip On Queen Boudicca. brigcelt.zip Brigit of the Celts. canaan.zip Canaanite-Ugaritic mythology. cernu01.zip Picture of the God Cernunnos. coatlicu.zip

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