On May 18, 5:14 pm, Michael Kuettner <
Michael.Kuett...@gmx.at> wrote:
> Yusuf B Gursey wrote:
> > On May 17, 1:55 pm, Michael Kuettner <
Michael.Kuett...@gmx.at> wrote:
> >> Yusuf B Gursey wrote:
> >>> On May 16, 3:01 pm, Michael Kuettner <
Michael.Kuett...@gmx.at> wrote:
> >>>> Yusuf B Gursey wrote:
> >>>>> On May 15, 3:39 pm, Michael Kuettner <
Michael.Kuett...@gmx.at> wrote:
> >>>> <snip>
> >>>>>>> many Hungarians embraced a "Turkic" identity and invented pan-Turanism
>
> >>>>>> Some Islamic "Hungarians" left over from the Osmanic wars of aggression
> >>>>>> would be more correct.
>
> >>>>> this has nothing to do with Islam. it has to do with 19th century
> >>>>> nationalism. there were no Muslim Hungarians and the ideologues were
> >>>>> not Muslim. and pan-Turanism includes non-Muslim people.
>
> >>>> Of course it has to do with Islam.
>
> >>> please enumerate these 19th cent. / 1930's Hungarian Muslims.
>
> >> The only Pan-Turanists would have been Muslims.
>
> > well, look, so far your posts have been very scholarly and I have
> > enjoyed reading them. so I can only conclude that your are just
> > kidding now and perhaps I should apologize for missing the joke and
> > lacking a sense of humor. but let us not let th ejoke get stale.
>
> It isn't a joke.
I prefered you when I thought you were joking. if you think there was
a Muslim community behind Hungarian Pam-Turanism you are just plum
crazy or just a bigot.
> I'm just trying to gently correct your view of how things were
> in the Danubian Monarchy.
when I am interested I will ask a more scholarly person. evidently I
was mistaken.
> Pan-Turanists weren't mainstream; they were a splinter-group
I wasn't dealing with the question of whether they were mainstream or
not.
> mostly associated with Islamic ethnicities.
that's plum crazy.
> Regardless of what Turkish historians claim.
> We had Pan-Slavism in the Slavic parts, but Hungarians (who were and are
> Christian), didn't have any use for Pan-Turanism.
> Short proof : After WWI, Reichsverweser Horthy got his legitimation by
> referring to the crown of Stephan (Stephanskrone).
> No traces of embracing "Turkic" identity - it would would be contrary to
> them - they hated the Turks after two bloody wars.
of you find them irrational that's a different matter,. the indisputed
fact is that they existed and still exist.
well, I have met Hungarian Pan-Turanists, at least the moderate ones.
>
> >> Do you really think that Hungarians would want to claim kinship
> >> to people who devastated their country more than once ?
>
> >>>> Nationalism would be an "independent Hungary".
>
> >>> that's patriotism. nationalism is just feel-good superiority.
>
> >> Nope, that's not patriotism.
> >> Stephanskrone, again.
> >> Austria-Hungary was _one_ country before nationalism.
>
> > well your political views are your own.
>
> That's history, not politics.
> I know that that's different in Turkey.
>
you don't know a fucking thing about Turkey or Turkology.
>
>
> >>>>> German romantics (Herder, Fichte) invented an ideology based on
> >>>>> language. this was the Hungarian answer to it. Russian pan-Slavism was
> >>>>> the Russian imitation.
>
> >>>> The Hungarian answer to what ?
>
> >>> German supriority.
>
> >> What do have Germans to do with Austria ?
>
> > they have the same language for starters and read the same books. and
> > then there are Austrians that do regard themselves as German, like a
> > uh, that guy that had the funny moustache ...
>
> The meaning of "German" changed rather rapidly after 1848 and especially
> 1866.
> Re. funny moustache :
> There's a funny moustache guy called Attatürk who did a nice genocide on
I won't even comment on that.
> Armenians. The genocide on Kurds (pardon - mountain Turks) is still
> going strong, isn't it ?
I really don't care to discuss politics with you.
> And yes, for starters we ruled the Holy Roman Empire for half a
what "we"? are you a Hapsburg?
> millenium; but the later Germany united under the Prussians is something
> very different. Btw, the HRE was disbanded in 1806 by an Austrian
> emperor; and no, Germany isn't the successor.
>
> >> You really should read up on the events leading up to 1866 -
> >> you know, "Prussian" supremacy in the Deutscher Bund which later
> >> became "German" superiority in the _newly formed_ Germany, but never
> >> in Austria.
>
> > what about the guy with funny moustache?
>
> Attatürk ?
>
I was talking about an Austrian.
>
>
> >> <snip>>> Now what ? We'll call them Muslims, OK ?
>
> >>>>> again, this included many non-Muslim people
>
> >>>> Many non-Muslims to be ruled over ?
>
> >>> the idea is uniting them.
>
> >> Ah, yes, the Caliphate. Which Turkey still propagates.
>
> > again, I take this associating Islam and Hungarian Pan-Turanism a
> > joke.
>
> I've heard your head of state speaking.
> You know, that radical Muslim. Yes, he used the term "resurrection
> of the Caliphate" ...
> Pan-Turanism played no role in Hungary (see above or read Alex's posts).
>
> >> The old Ottoman empire under the rule of Turkey.Yes, we listen to the
> >> nonsense of your president ...
>
> > it's not "my" president since I don't regard him as representing my
> > interests. and it's not the president in Turkey that mainly directs
> > policy and is prominant in the public sphere, it's the prime minister.
>
> Pardon, your prime-minister.
> It's your government, it represents you.
> Sorry.
>
>
>
you don't know a fucking thing about me.
>
>
>
>
> >> <snip>
>
> >>>>> there were no Muslim Hungarians at the time. before the (Ottoman)
> >>>>> Turks, there were Muslim Bashgirds (Bashkirs) in Hungary BTW
>
> >>>> Well, there you go.
> >>>> You still don't get one thing : If one lived in the Hungarian part of
> >>>> the k.u.k. empire, he was regarded as a Hungarian.
> >>>> If the Bashkir lived in Czechia, he would be a Czech. And so on ...
>
> >>> I was talking about the early Middle Ages. here's more: certain areas
> >>> of Hungary got to be known as Turcia. later Mamluk Egypt was known by
> >>> that name, not surprising since the Mamluk Empire was known in Arabic,
> >>> at the time, as "The Turkish State", a name which the Ottoman Empire
> >>> did not use. only later was the Ottoman Empire or Anatolia called
> >>> that.
>
> >> Was known as "Turcia" in Turkish historiography ?
>
> > no. Constantine Porphyrogenitus called Hungary so.
>
> When ? You're jumping through time again. Earlier Egypt was Byzantine,
well, that happens when you make comments about the evolution of a
term.
> e.g.. And even earlier Egypt was Egyptian.
> We were talking about the time-frame of the Huns ...
>
> >> Like Curds are known as "Mountain-Turks" ?
>
> > it's spelled "Kurds". "curd" is a dairy product.
>
> I thought it was spelled "mountain - Turks" ?
> And that their provinces are still ruled by the military ?
>
two wrongs don't make a right. there are Turkish bigots as there are
Austrian bigots.
> >> <snort>
> >> So the Turkish state is Anatolia ?
>
> > I said the official Arabic name of Mamluk Egypt was al-dawlah al-
> > turkiyyah "The Turkish State" and so for a brief period was known as
> > Turcia in Europe as well.
>
> Since there were no Mamluks at the time of the Huns, we can drop the
> Turcia from much later.
I was just lighteartedly givingyou some factoids. instead I see that
you are a bigot with no sense of humor.
> Unless one wants to desperately claim older origins for the Turks ...
>
Turks and Turkish came by spontaneous creation>
> <snip>
>
> Now, I've sent a nice link to a "Hunnic" excavation.
> Elongated skulls, ostrogothic items.
you keep repeating something that is completely irrelevant ro a
linguistic discussion and refuse to deal with the evidence on which
the scholarly discussion is based on. and you are incapable of it
since you don't know a word of the languages. so whatever you may say
is irrelevant. I can follow the pros and cons of what linguists are
saying so I am frankly not interested in your opinion on the matter.
if I have a question on the skulls of the Huns I may ask you.
> And above all : No script from the "Huns".
I enumerated on what the present working theory is based on. you
didn't even bother to address it. which is fine with me since I kow
the scholarly literature on the subject, so I really don't care what
you think.
> So how can one claim that the "Hunnic language" is a precursor to Turk
> languages unless one has an agenda ?
>
it can't be a precursor as it was located in a different geogrpahical
area.
you are the one with an agenda.
> Cheers,
>
evidently no cheers from you. you don't even know how to handle a few
lighthearted comments about some factoids and go ballistic instead.
pity.
> Michael Kuettner