This is why Hungarian is the strangest language in Europe

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According to linguistic history research, the Hungarian language has been independent for 2500-3000 years. The survival of Hungarian is almost unprecedented on the continent, just as the survival of the Hungarian state born in the South-East was not a matter of course.
“When we tell our history, the most important thing is to be authentic and, as we say, to convey the most up-to-date knowledge according to the current state of science,” said documentary filmmaker Krisztián Bárány, speaking about the film The Rise of the Árpáds.
Together with his fellow artists, Bárány works on less well-known or controversial subjects. These can help promote joined-up thinking. These days, many people are no longer bound by “talking head” documentaries, even if the story itself is interesting. However, a live-action approach, which also shows the material environment and way of life of the time, can be digested by the masses.
Visuals give you more and more impact than 20 pages of text, and they also open up other perspectives more effectively.
For example, in the school presentations of the film In Search of the Holy Crown and our Coronation Treasures, students were given questions to answer, which they could use to further develop their knowledge according to their own interests.






So good to keep up with Hungarian happenings.
Koszonom a lehetoseget a Magyar esemenyek tudatositasarol.
Thanks for reading us 🙂
The Rise of the Ápráds –> The Rise of the Árpáds
Dear Reader, thank you for your remark, we corrected the typo. Thank you for reading us!
Mr Balogh, please add to your vocabularly the word “unparalleled” ; ignorant of it, in its stead you mis-use “unprecedented|” in the text of your essay
It is astonishing that the extremely difficult Hungarian language has survived as an outlier for so long, with hardly any modernization and with relatively little influence from the Ottoman, Habsburg and Russian empires.
Hungarian culture is very strong and unique. I can say that it is certainly great. It is more than strong enough to thrive (maybe even more than it does now) without the language.
It is a tragedy that sentimental attachment to an archaic language is holding Hungary back, by seriously limiting both its influence and its economic progress.
For Hungary to fulfil its potential, it must adopt either English or German as an acceptable (additional, not replacement) language for all official business. Within 15 years, virtually nobody would speak Hungarian for business or official matters. In the longer term, Hungarian could continue as a valued language for cultural events.
How is it even possible to classify the Hungarian language when the largest segment of the “language pie” is represented by unknown origins? Ugric, Germanic, Turkic, yes, but soooo many unknown words? Hungarian might as well be considered its own language family!