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They look extremely typical Romanians from Moldova. Szekelers, unless they look Old Magyar, are no different...
Hungarians from Pannonian region (former Arad, Bihar, Szilagy, Szatmar counties) are indeed more different: lighter and more Central European than Romanians nearby.
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Aherne contradicts himself a lot in his posts.
I've been to Hungary several times and I haven't noticed a large presence of Dinarids there. From what I've seen from my travels they are mainly Alpinids and Borrebies, along with a lot of looks unique for Hungary only. They have other types present as well, but these were the main ones. Basically they look Central Euro but with their own "twist".
Csangos don't look extremely typical Romanian, they have their own look.
No offense but you seem clueless about how Romanians look.
For example this girl looks very foreign to me, like she doesn't look like any Romanian I've seen.
These also don't look Romanian
A lot of people here seem to think Romanians look super Eastern Euro for some reason lol, when that's not the case. I'll soon post a thread with Romanian crowds from all over Romania to get a better picture of how we actually look.
Last edited by Tommie; 04-04-2024 at 10:15 PM.
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Agree with all your observations.
Exactly.Csangos don't look extremely typical Romanian, they have their own look.
Also agree, and looking forward to your thread.A lot of people here seem to think Romanians look super Eastern Euro for some reason lol, when that's not the case. I'll soon post a thread with Romanian crowds from all over Romania to get a better picture of how we actually look.
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They fit fine in Hungary and and people are being autistic about all these differences.
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But the Dinarid is also common in Hungary, however the pure Dinarid are rare. I think, the Dinarid are maybe the most frequent phenotype among the men.
Also, the Alpinid and the Baltid/Neo-Danubian are also common, but mostly among women.
The Pontid and Norid are also not rare here.
I don't think, that the Borreby is frequent in Hungary, since this is a North Germanic phenotype, but the Balkan Borreby it occurs here.
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Central Europeans
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Because Stears was born in Tolna (as i know), so he is not a budapester. Native budapesters are these who were born in the city like me.
100% german ancestry is rare indeed, but majority german ancestry is not so rare. Me, Kiel, Sekkmer have mostly german family background, and we are from Hungary.
No, transdanubians are not more german than budapesters. You dont understand. Budapest is a big metropolis, a cosmopolitan city with cosmopolitan identity. It was like New York, a melting pot of various ethnicities from all parts of Habsburg Empire. The magyarization affected mostly the urban german population like budapester germans, they mixed with hungarians or others as well, thats why the german ancestry is more common in Budapest. The rural Transdanubia was not like that, but a far more conservative place, germans and hungarians were separated and everyone married with these who lived in their village, mostly with their own ethnicity.
You should read the "Egy város titkai" book by Szabolcs Kordos, its about the nightlife of Budapest in the dualism. Interesting to see the ethnic background of local prostitutes. Just 50% of them were hungarian, others were slovak, romanian, polish, ukrainian, south slavic etc girls. Its also shows Budapest was a very diverse place.
Btw finding german or slavic surnames is common everywhere but its most visible in Budapest.
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There is an anecdote about the ethnic situation of Great Hungary. 1890' years, a hungarian politician from Budapest wanted a political campaign before the election, and he visited every region of Great Hungary, after that whe he moved back to Budapest, he did not understand what king of minority problem does exist in Hungary, because he saw only hungarians everywhere. So how is this possible that he saw only hungarians even in south Transylvania and north Slovakia too? The answer is very simple, because he visited only the bigger cities and he has never been to local rural areas where most romanians, slovaks lived. In the bigger cities everyone used hungarian language including non hungarians too.
Identity is a difficult thing. Fun fact, tons of hungarian ultra nationalist had no hungarian family background: János Damjanich was ethnic serbian, Sándor Petőfi was serb/slovak mix, Lajos Kossuth was german/slovak, Ferenc Szálasi was half armenian, Ármin Vámbéri (Wamberger) was jewish just like Béla Imrédy.
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People in Moldova have a lot of individuals that pass as East Slavs. Completely normal situation, given that the area was actually part of Kievan Rus and most likely had a Russian population before Romanians came from Transylvania. In counties such as Bacau, Vaslui, Iasi, let alone Botosani, this is not far from the standard look...
As a group, they do have some Magyar influence (you are right), such as this long faced woman (extremely typical for Old Magyars, not for Hungarians today):
So the truth is in between: they are a mixed population showing both elements, but more often the Romanian one.
Last edited by aherne; 04-05-2024 at 03:59 AM.
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