Hungarian Magyar 
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Christianity in Hungary
Magyar kereszténység

 

Hungarian
Hungarian (magyar nyelv Hu-magyar_nyelv.ogg listen (help·info)) is a Uralic language (more specifically a Ugric language) unrelated to most other languages in Europe. It is spoken in Hungary and by the Hungarian minorities in seven neighbouring countries. The Hungarian name for the language is Magyar (IPA: [ˈmɒɟɒr̪]).


Regions in Europe where the Hungarian language is spoken. Based on recent censuses and on the CIA World Factbook 2006

Hungarian has long been of great interest to linguists as one of the small number of modern European languages that do not belong to the Indo-European language family. Due to the Uralic heritage, Hungarian often sounds completely foreign to speakers of Indo-European languages. It is sometimes considered to be one of the most difficult languages for speakers of English to learn well.

Budapest

There are about 14.5 million native speakers, of whom 9.5–10 million live in modern-day Hungary. A further two million speakers live outside present-day Hungary, but in areas that were part of the Kingdom of Hungary before the Treaty of Trianon. Of these, the largest group lives in Romania, where there are approximately 1.4 million Hungarians (see Hungarian minority in Romania). Hungarian-speaking people are also to be found in Slovakia, Serbia, Ukraine, Croatia, Austria, and Slovenia, as well as about a million people scattered in other parts of the world (see Geographic distribution). As with many European languages, there are a few hundred thousand speakers of Hungarian in the United States as well.


Map showing location of the Magyars in 600 AD.

Hungarians (or Magyars, Hungarian: magyarok) are an ethnic group primarily associated with Hungary. There are around 10 million Magyars in Hungary (as of 2001).[1] Magyars were the main inhabitants of the Kingdom of Hungary that existed through most of the second millennium. After the Treaty of Trianon Magyars became minority inhabitants in the territory of present-day Romania (1,440,000; see: Hungarian minority in Romania), Slovakia (520,500; see Hungarians in Slovakia), Serbia (293,000; see Hungarians in Vojvodina), Ukraine (156,000; see: Hungarians in Ukraine), Austria (40,583), Croatia (16,500), the Czech Republic (14,600) and Slovenia (10,000). Significant groups of people with Magyar ancestry live in various other parts of the world (e.g. 1,400,000 in the United States), but unlike the Magyars living within the former Kingdom of Hungary, only some of these largely preserve the Hungarian language and traditions. The Hungarians can be classified in several sub-groups according to local linguistic and cultural characteristics. Hungarian ethnic subgroups that have a distinct identity are the Székelys, Csángós, Jassic people and Palócs


The Treaty of Trianon: Hungary lost 72% of its land and lost its sea ports in Croatia.

Hungarian Bibles:
http://www.biblia.hu/
http://www.biblegateway.com/versions/index.php?action=getVersionInfo&vid=17&lang=22
Szent István Társulati Biblia (katolikus)
Magyar Bibliatársulat újfordítású Bibliája (protestáns)


Károli Gáspár
Magyar Biblia Tanács
Káldi Noevulgáta
Káldi Biblia
Vida Sándor
Békés-Dallos
Csia Lajos Újszövetség
Görög Újszövetség
http://biblia.jezusert.com/

Modern Christianity in Hungary
Élő Magyar kereszténység

Visegrad - Hungary

Full Gospel Churches, Teljes Evengéliumi gyülekezetek:
Hiszünk a szellemi újjászületésben és az újjászületés által nyert örök életben. Ha valaki újonnan nem születik, nem láthatja az Isten országát. (Ján. 3:3)
http://www.ujteremtes.hu/
http://www.epk.hu
http://www.elokovek.hu
http://www.ujszovetseg.hu/

Hungarian Christian Portal:

http://www.ebredes.hu

Hungarian Christian Foundations:

http://www.zugoszel.hu/

Christian Art Foundation
http://www.kma-hu.com/online-tv/

More links coming soon...

 




 

 


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