Fortune Telling Collection - Free divination - Are Hungarians who swept Europe and indirectly destroyed the Western Roman Empire descendants of Huns?

Are Hungarians who swept Europe and indirectly destroyed the Western Roman Empire descendants of Huns?

Speaking of Huns, we are all familiar with them. Xiongnu is a national tribe in ancient China. They are nomadic people who have lived in the north of the Central Plains for generations. The recorded word Xiongnu first appeared in Qin Shihuang's period. Qin Shihuang took a series of measures to stabilize the situation, including expelling the Huns. During the period of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty, the Huns harassed the border and Huo Qubing marched eastward, leaving a much-told story of "sealing the wolf to live in Xu". After that, the Xiongnu split, the southern Xiongnu surrendered, and the northern Xiongnu was defeated by Dou Xian Ban Gu.

Some people easily confuse "Hungarians" with "Huns", but in fact we know very little about "Hungarians". Most of the records about Hungarians appeared in ancient western documents, which first appeared along the Caspian Sea, around the 2nd century. Two centuries later, Hungarians began to enter eastern Europe, and attacked other European nations, such as Goths and Germans, almost swept Europe, and then entered Rome, indirectly destroying the Western Roman Empire.

As for the relationship between Hungarians and Huns, the general view now is that they are irrelevant. According to the related cultural relics unearthed in the west, we find that the so-called Hungarians are not very tall, and their facial features are very different from those of westerners. It is no exaggeration to say that they are yellow. On the other hand, related cultural relics unearthed in China show that Huns have angular faces and thick hair, unlike the yellow race. By comparing their figures, it is found that Huns are much taller than Hungarians, which cannot be confused.

In addition to these, the differences between Hungarians and Huns are also manifested in culture and technology. For example, after the Xiongnu War, tribal leaders would give a glass of wine to those who killed enemy generals in recognition, and many gold and silver funerary objects and other animal-style decorative patterns would be found in Xiongnu graves. Looking at the relevant records of Hungarians, we find that their life is primitive. They use animal bones as weapons and divination, and there is no clear burial etiquette. So there is not much connection between the two.