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There is no need for temples, no need for complicated philosophies. My brain and my heart are my temples; my philosophy is kindness.

Dalai Lama

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Andras Paloczi Horvath
author size: 16
USD
138.59
price size: 16
The London Bookworm /AbebooksUK
dealer size: 16
ISBN10: 963132740X, ISBN13: 9789631327403, [publisher: Corvina,Budapest, Budapest] Softcover Paperback. Pechenegs, Cumans, Iasians. Steppe Peoples in Medieval Hungary. Very slight crease to corner front and back cover. Translated by Timothy Wilkinson. In the tenth to the thirteenth centuries A.D. the last waves of nomad migrants arrived at the western fringes of the Eurasian Steppe and the Carpathian Basin. At the end of the ninth century the Pechenegs had set themselves up to the west of the Volga; by the middle of the eleventh century the Ghuzz had made their appearance, with the Cumans in their footsteps. In the first half of the thirteenth century the mighty Cuman-Kipchak tribal federation had been smashed by the great campaigns of the Mongols in the West. At the turn of the millennium the consolidating Hungarian state on several occasions received and settled various fragments of the disintegrating nomadic tribal federations and organized themselved from them the light cavalry of the king's standing army, fighting according to nomad tactics. Newly arrived in Hungary, these peoples enjoyed collective privileges and retained their way of life, customs and old pagan beliefs for a considerable time before gradually settling down, accepting Christianity and eventually becoming absorbed into Magyar Society. Their cultural heritage enriched the culture of the Magyar people, and study of their archaeology belongs to the early history of Hungary. The author's ma ...
description size: 16
Andras Paloczi Horvath
USD
152.04
thelondonbookworm.com /Biblio
Budapest: Corvina,Budapest, Date: 1989. Paperback. Pechenegs, Cumans, Iasians. Steppe Peoples in Medieval Hungary. Very slight crease to corner front and back cover. Translated by Timothy Wilkinson. In the tenth to the thirteenth centuries A.D. the last waves of nomad migrants arrived at the western fringes of the Eurasian Steppe and the Carpathian Basin. At the end of the ninth century the Pechenegs had set themselves up to the west of the Volga; by the middle of the eleventh century the Ghuzz had made their appearance, with the Cumans in their footsteps. In the first half of the thirteenth century the mighty Cuman-Kipchak tribal federation had been smashed by the great campaigns of the Mongols in the West. At the turn of the millennium the consolidating Hungarian state on several occasions received and settled various fragments of the disintegrating nomadic tribal federations and organized themselved from them the light cavalry of the king's standing army, fighting according to nomad tactics. Newly arrived in Hungary, these peoples enjoyed collective privileges and retained their way of life, customs and old pagan beliefs for a considerable time before gradually settling down, accepting Christianity and eventually becoming absorbed into Magyar Society. Their cultural heritage enriched the culture of the Magyar people, and study of their archaeology belongs to the early history of Hungary. The author's main field of research is medieval settlement reconstruction. He ...

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