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         Hungarian Mythology:     more books (32)
  1. Hungarian and Vogul Mythology by Geza Roheim, 1954
  2. Hungarian Folklore: Hungarian Fairy Tales, Hungarian Folklorists, Hungarian Mythology, Shamanistic Remnants in Hungarian Folklore, Táltos
  3. Hungarian Mythology: István Kertész
  4. Hungarian and Vogul Mythology (Monographs of the American Ethnological Society, 23) by Géza Róheim, 1954
  5. Hungarian Folktales: The Art of Zsuzsanna Palk- (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities)
  6. Mitologiai kislexikon (Hungarian Edition) by Gyorgy Szabo, 1992
  7. Hungarian Folk Tales by Val Biro, 1992-06
  8. Old Hungarian Fairy Tales by Baroness Orczy, 2010-05-23
  9. Indiai regek es mondak (Hungarian Edition) by Ervin Baktay, 1977
  10. One-Time Dog Market at Buda and Other Hungarian Folktales by Irma Molnar, 2001-12
  11. Vogul Folklore by Bernat Munkacsi, Otto J. Von Sadovszky, et all 1995-11
  12. The Glass Man and The Golden Bird: Hungarian Folk and Fairy Tales by Ruth Manning-Sanders, 1968-03
  13. The Miraculous Hind: A Hungarian Legend by Elizabeth Cleaver, 1976-07
  14. Turkish Fairy Tales and Folk Tales: Tr. From the Hungarian Version by R. Nisbet Bain. Illustrated by Celia Levetus (1901) by Ignacz Kunos, 2009-07-08

61. Suchmaschine Acoon - Webkatalog
mythology Read about ancient gods, heroes, monsters, and muses Myths Legends ofHungary Retellings of hungarian myths and legends, as well as essays proposing
http://www.acoon.de/cgi-bin/showcat.exe?cat=Top/Arts/Literature/Myths_and_Folkta

62. Szén-14 Datálás (Hungarian) - ChristianAnswers.Net
Például Woodmorappe, The mythology of Modern Dating Methods c. muvében található www.ChristianAnswers.Net/hungarianChristian Answers Network PO Box 200
http://www.christiananswers.net/hungarian/q-aig/aig-c007h.html
Mennyire pontos a Szén-14-es (radiokarbonos) kormeghatározási módszer?
This article is also available in English: How accurate is Carbon-14 dating? English answer
A szén-14-es ( C) kormeghatározási módszer alatt rendszerint a radiokarbonos méréseket értjük, amik millió, illetve milliárd éves dolgok korát tudják meghatározni - maga a szén datálás csak maximum néhány ezer évet tud átfogni. Sokakban felmerül a kérdés, hogyan lehet belesûrítve több millió év története a Bibliába. Világos, hogy ilyen nagy idõintervallumot nem lehet a Bibliába sûríteni anélkül, hogy felrúgnánk mindazt, amit a Biblia Isten jóságáról, a bûn eredetérõl, a halálról és a szenvedésrõl mond - amiért Jézus eljött a világba (Lásd Hat nap alatt? Ez komoly?! A keresztyének fõ jellemzõje, hogy komolyan veszik Jézus Krisztus szavait. Õ pedig azt mondta: "a teremtés kezdete óta az embert férfivá és nõvé teremtette az Isten" (Márk 10,6). Ennek csak akkor van értelme, ha az idõtengely a teremtés hetével kezdõdik, néhány ezer évvel ezelõtt. Semmi értelme, ha az ember sok milliárd év után jelent meg a földön. Elõször a szén-14 kormeghatározási módszert vizsgáljuk meg, majd rátérünk a többi datálási módszerre.

63. Hungarian Academy Of Sciences
peoples, and other ethnological investigations), works on the Encyclopaedia ofUralic mythology and the eightvolume handbook titled hungarian Ethnography.
http://www.mta.hu/english/kutatohelyek/intezetek/iet.htm
Institute of Ethnology
Address: H-1014 Budapest, Országház u. 30 Mail: H-1250 Budapest, P.O.Box 29 Phone: Fax: Internet: www.neprajz.mta.hu E-mail: paladi@neprajz.mta.hu Director: Attila Paládi-Kovács , C.M. Main fields of research: Systems of folk beliefs and customs; archaic folklore genres; the role of literature in folklore, social anthropology (including comparative researches); tradition, identity and national symbols, historical ethnography; non-European researches (Hungarian ethnogenesis, history and ethnography of Finno-Ugrian peoples, and other ethnological investigations), works on the Encyclopaedia of Uralic Mythology and the eight-volume handbook titled Hungarian Ethnography

64. Hungarian Academy Of Sciences
public administration served during the history of hungarian public administration Suchfeatures as lifestyle, language, religion, mythology, arts, and
http://www.mta.hu/english/egyeb/strategiai/kot18.html
Series of books
TURN OF THE MILLENIUM. Strategic researches at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND ADMINISTRATIVE INSTITUTION (COUNTY, REGION, MICRO-REGIO) SUMMARY PART I. SPATIAL INSTITUTION AND REGIONAL POLICY PÁLNÉ KOVÁCS, ILONA PLANNING STRATEGIES AND SPATIAL IDENTITY IN THE 90s IN HUNGARY The study describes spatial categories introduced by the Act on Regional Development and Physical Planning and the specific features of their legal regulation and institutional establishment. The study pays special attention to the functioning of regional development organisations in the county, micro-regional and regional tier. An entire chapter analyses the issue of identity and cohesion within Hungarian macro-regions. The author points to the fact, that the process of regionalisation promises to be long in lack of regional traditions but especially regional resources and competencies and it definitely requires support through intensive PR and marketing activities. HORVÁTH, GYULA CHALLENGES OF EUROPEAN REGIONALISM AND THE HUNGARIAN STRATEGY FOR REGIONAL POLICY The paper examines the driving forces of the European regionalism and its influence on East-Central European regional development, focusing on transformation of the regional structure of the Hungarian economy.

65. EPICS OF THE HUNGARIAN PLAIN
all available models, ancient and medieval, for ideas; the mythology, essential to tradition,he made important use of published hungarian sources historical
http://www.mek.iif.hu/porta/szint/human/szepirod/magyar/arany/epics/html/
EPICS OF THE HUNGARIAN PLAIN FROM
JÁNOS ARANY English and Introduction
by
ANTON N. NYERGES
CLEVELAND, OHIO
CONTENTS Preface
Introduction: An Epic Journey

Death of Buda

Toldi
...
Brief Bibliography

PROEM
The Miraculous Hind The shadows are long on the pale and sapphire hills of Potowatomi. The cicadas are keening on the high wind in the oaks. I wait for the white sleepwalker of the sky deer eyes, I detect them in the dark tall grasses of night. Two sleepwalkers we. The shadows are long on the pale and sapphire hills. I followed her one night fleeing into the Field of Burrs a prairie people transplanted into the sky. And ever since a burr sticks on my centaur back. I cannot be in peace... the cicadas are keening on the high wind in the oaks. Nyerges PREFACE I intend this work as a reassessment of Hungarian epics and their place among the basic stories of the world. Thus far they have been seen from the viewpoint of the literary historian, baroque and romantic influences, and this interpretative emptiness has played into the hands of a benign neglect for ancient and elementary traditions. The Introduction and the transformation into English of four of János Arany's epics provide the insights of cultural change and patterning as the basis of a new approach to the centuries-old background and history of the Hungarian epic. Here we see Hungarian poetry in its uniqueness. While the traditions and ideologies of industrial classes everywhere meet mounting problems, Arany's viability is living proof that the people who produced him shall have a real voice in determining the conditions of their industrial future. Arany's significance rests in his sane involvement with life as he tells the story of the peasant evolution.

66. Greatest Hungarian Poets
hero, remains the best narrative poem in hungarian literature. It is distinguishedby penetrating characterization, a striking use of mythology and chivalry
http://www.zoltech.net/h/poets.html
Greatest Hungarian Poets Index
Hungarian Literature
Ady, Endre

Arany, Janos

Jokai, Mor
...
Petofi, Sandor

The growth of Hungarian literature was influenced by the need to establish the Hungarian language in a written form, by national history, and by foreign literary trends. Latinizing of the culture after Hungary's conversion to Christianity delayed the rise of an indigenous literature, and the Hungarian language was first used to translate religious matter, the earliest known text originating around 1200. Increased translation of religious texts and of the Bible during the Reformation as well as a growth in nationalism sparked by the Turkish invasions gave impetus to the development of a literature written in Hungarian. These factors and the influence of humanism helped to produce Hungary's first true poet, Balint Balassi, and the epic poet Miklos Zrinyi. From the mid-18th century to the 1848 War of Independence, literary growth was accelerated by the Enlightenment, romanticism, and opposition to the Habsburgs. Authors' attempts to promote literature and nationhood gradually bore fruit. Gyorgy Bessenyei founded a learned society; Ferenc Kazinczy led successful efforts at language reform; Karoly Kisfaludy founded the Aurora; and newspapers and other journals flourished. The Academy was created in 1830, the National Theater in 1837. Sandor Kisfaludy, his brother Karoly, and Milhaly Vorosmarty revived Hungary's past. The poets Sandor PETOFI and Janos ARANY and the novelists Jozsef EOTVOS and Maurus JOKAI raised poetry and fiction to new heights.

67. TRANSYLVANIA IS HUNGARIAN! - HISTORICALLY MAGYAR
where they preserve traditional European methods of agriculture, body of beliefs,and mythology, as well as the most archaic dialect of the hungarian language.
http://www1.freewebs.com/hun/csangohungarians.htm
404 - Page Not Found

68. Myths Website Results :: Linkspider UK
com mythology Essays on mythology, which gives us insight into what it meansto be human. Myths Legends of Hungary - Retellings of hungarian myths and
http://www.linkspider.co.uk/Arts/Literature/MythsandFolktales/Myths/
Myths Websites from Linkspider UK Keyword: Myths Linkspider UK Directory
Myths
Search for
Directory Tree: Top Arts Literature Myths and Folktales : Myths (476) Add URL Advertise Here! Personalize Amazon ...
  • Tibetan
    See Also:
  • 69. Eng 363/Mythology And Folklore
    General Folklore and mythology; Regional Folklore and mythology (links to Frankish/French/Breton,Germanic, Greek, Guam, Haitian, hungarian, Incan/AndeanIndian
    http://www.shsu.edu/~eng_wpf/eng363.html
    Mythology
    and
    Folklore
    Online Sources for Mythology

    70. Budapest
    mythology Russian mythology - Russian, mythology mythology, Socialist Realism -Mark and Budapest - Duna Quai Budapest - Duna Quai, hungarian Liberty hungarian
    http://www.softworx.com/trl/hiarpt/images/budapest/Page1.html
    Budapest
    Page 1 Page 3
    Socialist Realist Park
    Socialist Realist (not Popeye)
    Socialist Realism
    Mythology - Russian
    Mythology
    Socialist Realism - Mark and Engles
    Two Heroes
    Socialist Realist types
    Socialist Realism 1970s
    December 1919 Reality Country House Duna - Buda Duna - Pest Duna - Pest - Univerasity Buda - Pest Pest - Quai Pest Budapest - Duna Quai Hungarian Liberty Hungarian Liberty - base Budapest - St Stephen Budapest - seicento Budapest - Citadel Budapest - 17th Budapest - Citadell remnant Budapest - Citadel restoration Budapest - Eugene de Savoie Budapest - Citadel Budapest - Citadel

    71. Tree Mythology I
    Tree mythology and Dieties Pages I Back to Home Back to Alphabet, Isten hungarian - A God who’s eagles led the people to their new homeland.
    http://members.aol.com/birchfire/TreesIL.html
    Tree Mythology and Dieties Pages I
    Back to Home
    Back to Alphabet
    Idho - Celtic - One of the Oghams. Yew Tree Immortal Tree - China - Made famous by Hsuan Tsang, this Banyan tree is said that one would be given deliverance if one dies at the hand of this tree. This is an actual tree and has a history of people who have died jumping out of its branches. Irminsul (Herminsol Irmensaule) - Germanic Anglo-Saxon Tribes - The name of their World Tree. Isten - Hungarian - A God who’s eagles led the people to their new homeland. The tree is one of his symbols. Itchita - Yakut - A Goddess of the earth who lives in the white beech tree. Ixtab - Maya - She is the goddess of the gallows and protector of those who committed suicide. One of the more morbid deities, she is seen as a decomposing body with a noose around her neck, hanging from a tree. Thank you for your visit Book, Papers and Web site References This Page created April 1, 2001 Updated Nov 7, 2002
    Please E-mail me with any Critique, Comments, Complaints or Questions. Be sure to Enter subject as "Trees" Congratulations, you are number...

    72. Folklore & Mythology Studies Volume 11 & 12 (Double Issue), 1987-1988
    that both calling and answering a telephone have inspired oral traditional materials. 4Linda Degh's study of the families of hungarian steelworkers in the
    http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/folklore/library/wojcik.html
    "At the Sound of the Beep":
    An Analysis of the Structure and Traditional Speech Forms of Answering Machine Greetings[ A

    by Daniel Wojcik
      Well, actually, I hate 'em. Usually I hang up on answering machines, and I own one! Yeah, I really hate 'em too. They're practical, I guess. But I still hate 'em. I like talking to some machines, if the messages are funny ... or weird. Some machines I don't mind. ...
    Most individuals in the United States today have probably interacted with telephone answering machines at some time in their lives, and will continue to do so on an increasingly regular basis. Encounters with these devices seem to evoke mixed responses from people, and are frequently characterized as humorous, frustrating, ridiculous, embarrassing, or even dehumanizing. During my transactions with these machines over the years, I have become intrigued by the various ways answering machine owners greet callers and express themselves through their initial announcement. A great deal is often expressed during these twenty-to-thirty-second verbal vignettes. However, the basic purpose as well as the structure of this form of speech appears very consistent from greeting to greeting. In this paper I examine the structural consistencies exhibited among answering machine announcements, and consider their similarities to traditional greeting and leave-taking formulas. The assorted expressive forms and selected aspects of speech displayed in these announcements are discussed as well, such as the use of slang, proverbial expressions, humor, homonymy, ellipsis, etc. I also demonstrate how this type of pre-recorded communication has inspired the creation of new greetings, closings, and forms of expressing which are themselves rapidly becoming traditions.

    73. Study Of Religion IDP
    M126. Baltic and Slavic Folklore and mythology. M128. hungarian Folkloreand mythology. M129. Folklore and mythology of the Ugric Peoples.
    http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/religion/IDP.HTM
    Gradutate Study INTERDEPARTMENTAL PROGRAM IN THE STUDY OF RELIGION Major Requirements Faculty Advisor: Scott Bartchy
    5343 Bunche Hall
    Student Affairs Officer: Arlecia Powell-Halley
    329 Dodd Hall
    Counseling Drop-in Hours: by appointment
    PREPARATION: Required - Four lower division courses :
    • History 4 Philosophy 2 Two courses selected from: Anthropology 9, East Asian Languages and Cultures 60, History 1A, lB, lC, 9A, 9C, 9D, 10A, 10B, 11A, 11B.
    TOTAL 16 UNITS MAJOR Required - Fourteen upper division courses selected from the course list Group I - 4 courses :
    • Philosophy 175 and Religion 100 and Two other courses from the Group I list
    Group II - 2 courses from the Group II list Group III - 3 courses from the Group III list :
    • One course in Christianity and One course in Islam and One course in Judaism
    Group IV - 2 courses from the Group IV list Any Group - 3 more courses: any upper division courses from the course list TOTAL 56 UNITS
    • No course intended to satisfy the major or preparation for the major may be taken on a pass/not pass basis.

    74. Folklore Gypsy
    of the Village by Evelyn Domján Folk or Fake? Gypsy Music and the Constructionof hungarian Identity by hungaria.org. mythology and Folklore
    http://www.linkfinding.com/cgi-bin/search/smartsearch.cgi?keywords=folklore gyps

    75. Re: Hungarian?
    Main source MacKillop, James, “Oxford Dictionary of Celtic mythology,’OUP, 1998. I think hungarian is more closely related to Finnish than to
    http://phrases.shu.ac.uk/bulletin_board/17/messages/398.html
    The Phrase Finder Phrases and Sayings Discussion Forum The Phrase Thesaurus Phrase Thesaurus Subscription ... Contacts Search the Discussion Forum Archives:
    Browse the Archives
    Phrase Finder Home
    Re: Hungarian?
    Posted by Barney on November 17, 2002 at 23:27:02: In Reply to: Re: Hungarian? posted by Word Camel on November 17, 2002 at 23:16:05: : : : : : : : : : : : : : I am US-born, but my father was from Glasgow, and he often used this term. I took it to mean a sort of cocky, dandy, self-confident sort of fellow. Does it refer to some historical figure or is it just a generic, British idiom? : : : : : : : : : : : : I think it's generic, rather than historical. You're right about cocky and self-confident, but less so about dandy. A Jack the lad is also somewhat roguish, a person who gets up to minor sins and maybe even minor crimes, albeit the expression is more fond than pejorative - you usually can't help but like a Jack the lad. I have no proof at all, but I suspect the expression arose from the joining of two separate terms - in the UK, "Jack" was used to refer to the ordinary man in the street, as in "I'm all right, Jack" (a little like the US usage of Joe, as in he's a regular Joe, I suppose). Similarly "lad" in the UK is still used to describe someone who's loud and boisterous - "he's a bit of a lad" and "laddish" are commonly used to this day. We even have the recent coinage of "ladettes" to describe lager-swilling brash twenty-something girls out in droves at night. : : : : : : : : : : : Speaking of which, why is the British flag called the Union Jack? Or maybe it's The Union, Jack? :)

    76. Re: Hungarian?
    Main source MacKillop, James, “Oxford Dictionary of Celtic mythology,’ OUP,1998. I think hungarian is more closely related to Finnish than to other
    http://phrases.shu.ac.uk/bulletin_board/17/messages/397.html
    The Phrase Finder Phrases and Sayings Discussion Forum The Phrase Thesaurus Phrase Thesaurus Subscription ... Contacts Search the Discussion Forum Archives:
    Browse the Archives
    Phrase Finder Home
    Re: Hungarian?
    Posted by Word Camel on November 17, 2002 at 23:16:05: In Reply to: Celtic Ps and Qs posted by Shae on November 17, 2002 at 22:39:40: : : : : : : : : : : : : I am US-born, but my father was from Glasgow, and he often used this term. I took it to mean a sort of cocky, dandy, self-confident sort of fellow. Does it refer to some historical figure or is it just a generic, British idiom? : : : : : : : : : : : I think it's generic, rather than historical. You're right about cocky and self-confident, but less so about dandy. A Jack the lad is also somewhat roguish, a person who gets up to minor sins and maybe even minor crimes, albeit the expression is more fond than pejorative - you usually can't help but like a Jack the lad. I have no proof at all, but I suspect the expression arose from the joining of two separate terms - in the UK, "Jack" was used to refer to the ordinary man in the street, as in "I'm all right, Jack" (a little like the US usage of Joe, as in he's a regular Joe, I suppose). Similarly "lad" in the UK is still used to describe someone who's loud and boisterous - "he's a bit of a lad" and "laddish" are commonly used to this day. We even have the recent coinage of "ladettes" to describe lager-swilling brash twenty-something girls out in droves at night. : : : : : : : : : : Speaking of which, why is the British flag called the Union Jack? Or maybe it's The Union, Jack? :)

    77. Baby Names Products - The 1 Site For Names And Baby Products
    In mythology, the ruler of the winds. Nicknames Alex, Alik, Alix, Lex, Sacha (French),Sandie, Sandor (hungarian), Sandy, Sascha (German), Sasha (Russian
    http://www.babynames.com.au/search-categories-origin-results.asp?Gender=Boys&Ori

    78. Hungarian Heritage
    Original articles on hungarian ethnography, including folk literature, music, dance,games, mythology, rituals, customs, handicrafts, architecture and other
    http://www.folkscene.hu/magzines/hh/about.htm
    About Hungarian Heritage
    A New Journal on Hungarian Folklore! Hungarian Heritage Editor: Mihály Hoppál
    Assitant Editor: Eszter Csonka-Takács
    Managing Editor: Ádám Molnár Editorial Board: László Felföldi (ethnochoreology)
    Imre Gráfik (Hungarians living outside Hungary)
    Béla Halmos (the táncház movement)
    Éva Héra (festivals and fairs)
    Ildikó Kríza (folk narrative)
    Imola Küllös (book reviews)
    Ferenc Sebö (ethnomusicology)
    Attila Selmeczi Kovács (exhibitions) János Tari (films and film reviews) Vilmos Voigt (theoretical issues) Hungarian Heritage (HU ISSN 1585-9924) presents gives an overall picture of Hungarian traditional culture and will publish Original articles on Hungarian ethnography, including folk literature, music, dance, games, mythology, rituals, customs, handicrafts, architecture and other arts;

    79. English At UCLA: Folklore & Mythology Reading List
    Folktales and Society StoryTelling in a hungarian Peasant Community rites de passage(1909) Robert A. Georges, ed. Studies on mythology - and Michael
    http://englishwww.humnet.ucla.edu/graduate/reading_list/folklore_and_mythology.h
    Mark K. Azadovskii. A Siberian Tale Teller. Translated by James R. Dow. Univ. of Texas at Austin Center for Intercultural Studies in Folklore and Ethnomusicology, Monograph Series, 2, Austin, TX, 1974. Originally published as Eine sibirische M”rchenerz”hlerin , Folklore Fellows Communications, 68, Helsinki, 1926
    Dan Ben-Amos, ed. Folklore Genres . Publications the American Folklore Society, Bibliographical and Special Series, 26 (1974). (See especially the introduction and essays by Bynum, DÈgh/V·zsonyi, Seitel, Toelken, Hrdlickov·, and Ben-Amos.)
    and Kenneth S. Goldstein, eds Folklore: Performance and Communication. (See especially the introduction and essays by Hymes, Rosenberg, Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, and DÈgh/V·zsonyi)
    Bertrand H. Bronson. The Singing Tradition of Child's Popular Ballads
    Giuseppe Cocchiara.

    80. A HUNGARIAN UFO
    Meteorologists and military pilots in the western hungarian town of SIS. Catastrophism,archaeoastronomy, ancient history, mythology and astronomy. Lobster.
    http://www.science-frontiers.com/sf067/sf067g21.htm
    Science Frontiers
    ONLINE No. 67: Jan-Feb 1990 Issue Contents
    Other pages
    A HUNGARIAN UFO
    Somehow an interesting UFO report snuck into the Baltimore Sun a newspaper normally very conservative about such things. The report was embedded in a syndicated review of the week's "natural" phenomena from around the world. "Meteorologists and military pilots in the western Hungarian town of Papa reported seeing four large, and bright orange unidentified flying objects after midnight on November 25. Government meteorologist Gyula Bazso said the objects were spherical and about 50-100 yards wide. He said one flew at the speed of 2,626 miles per hour. Bazso contacted authorities at the local military airbase who sent up an experienced pilot to investigate. He located the four objects at a height of around four miles. All the UFOs were said to have disappeared suddenly after 2 a.m." (Anonymous; no title, Baltimore Sun , December 3, 1989.)

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