Manufacturing
Middle Ages
Entangled History of Medievalism in
Nineteenth-Century Europe
Edited by
Patrick J. Geary and Gábor Klaniczay
LEIDEN • BOSTON
2013
© 2013 Koninklijke Brill NV ISBN 978-90-04-24486-3
CONTENTS
List of Figures ...................................................................................................
Acknowledgements ........................................................................................
ix
xiii
Introduction .....................................................................................................
1
PART ONE
MEDIEVALISM IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY HISTORIOGRAPHY
National Origin Narratives in the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy .....
Walter Pohl
13
The Uses and Abuses of the Barbarian Invasions in the Nineteenth
and Twentieth Centuries .........................................................................
Ian N. Wood
51
Oehlenschlaeger and Ibsen: National Revival in Drama and
History in Denmark and Norway c. 1800–1860 .................................
Sverre Bagge
71
Romantic Historiography as a Sociology of Liberty:
Joachim Lelewel and His Contemporaries .........................................
Maciej Janowski
89
PART TWO
MEDIEVALISM IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY ARCHITECTURE
The Roots of Medievalism in North-West Europe:
National Romanticism, Architecture, Literature ..............................
David M. Wilson
Medieval and Neo-Medieval Buildings in Scandinavia .......................
Anders Andrén
111
139
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contents
Restoration as an Expression of Art History in Nineteenth-Century
Hungary ........................................................................................................
Ernő Marosi
159
Digging Out the Past to Build Up the Future:
Romanian Architecture in the Balkan Context 1859–1906 ...........
Carmen Popescu
189
Ottoman Gothic: Evocations of the Medieval Past in Late
Ottoman Architecture ..............................................................................
Ahmet Ersoy
217
Medievalism and Modernity: Architectural Appropriations of the
Middle Ages in Germany (1890–1920) .................................................
Michael Werner
239
PART THREE
MEDIEVALISM IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY PHILOLOGY
A Cross-Country Foxhunt: Claiming Reynard for the National
Literatures of Nineteenth-Century Europe ........................................
Joep Leerssen
Restoration from Notre-Dame de Paris to Gaston Paris .....................
R. Howard Bloch
The Czech Linguistic Turn: Origins of Modern Czech Philology
1780–1880 ......................................................................................................
Pavlína Rychterová
259
279
299
PART FOUR
MEDIEVALISM AND ITS ALTERNATIVES IN
NATIONAL DISCOURSES
‘Medieval’ Identities in Italy: National, Regional, Local ......................
Tommaso di Carpegna Falconieri
319
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contents
vii
Between Slavs and Old Bulgars: ‘Ancestors’, ‘Race’ and Identity in
Late Nineteenth-Century Bulgaria ........................................................
Stefan Detchev
347
With Brotherly Love: The Czech Beginnings of Medieval
Archaeology in Bulgaria and Ukraine ..................................................
Florin Curta
377
The Study of the Archaeological Finds of the Tenth-Century
Carpathian Basin as National Archaeology:
Early Nineteenth-Century Views ...........................................................
Péter Langó
Notes on Contributors ...................................................................................
Index of Proper Names .................................................................................
397
419
425
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THE STUDY OF THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL FINDS OF THE
TENTH-CENTURY CARPATHIAN BASIN AS NATIONAL
ARCHAEOLOGY: EARLY NINETEENTH-CENTURY VIEWS
Péter Langó
The conquest of the Carpathian Basin by the Hungarian tribal alliance
has always been an important topic of Hungarian national history. The
emphasis on eastern origins and the expansion of a warrior nomadic
people was a focal point of nineteenth-century Romanticism. This period
forms part of the basis of national identity as well. In early research, the
image of a noble, eastern warrior was very popular, and the notion that
the archaeological remnants of the conquering Hungarians were to be
sought in the East took shape at that time as well. Hungarian scholarship
later classified the period between Late Antiquity and the kingdom of the
Árpád dynasty in relation to national scholarship. In the case of the finds
of the Conquest Period, they were all regarded to be of eastern origin.
The biased, national character of research on early Hungarian archaeological finds caused further problems. Foreign scholars specialising in the
study of the ninth to eleventh centuries rarely touched on the issue. It was
primarily scholars from neighbouring countries who studied the problem,
mainly because such finds had been made in their countries as well. The
conclusions drawn by researchers in Hungary and in the neighbouring
countries, however, were often contradictory, usually because of political factors. Various nations created different narratives about the period,
in which archaeological sources were interpreted very differently. From
a distance, this dispute about the archaeological interpretation of the
tenth-century Carpathian Basin must have seemed nonsensical and lacking in any scientific foundation. Thus, it is understandable that specialists
of other areas rarely investigated the archaeological remains of the Carpathian Basin more thoroughly. Their interest in the findings and scholarship of the region was further hindered by the fact that the approaches
to archaeology adopted in Hungary and the surrounding countries sought
to answer questions that were uninteresting in the international research
environment.
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After a while, this one-sided oriental preference in Hungarian archaeological research has changed.1 Interest in the contemporary remains of
the wider region appeared first in connection with the supposedly eastern
finds of the so-called “horizon of crushed silver.”2 It later became clear
that there were even closer relationships between the contemporary finds
from Byzantium and the Carpathian Basin.3
At the end of the eighteenth and for much of the nineteenth century,
most historians and social theorists were proponents of nationalistic concepts. As emphasized by Daniele Conversi: “By glorifying the heroism of
the great figures of the national past they tried to justify historically their
own political goals.”4
The early history and ethnogenesis of a nation has a fundamental role
in the formation of its historical consciousness, and the problem of the
origin is often connected to various political views. This sense of the origin often contains completely fictitious elements, which were intended
to serve the political aims of a given group and strengthen its claims to
legitimacy. This practice can be observed in the formation of Hungarian
historical consciousness as well. The assessment of the foundation of the
state, the conquest, and the preceding period have always been influenced by modern political interests, although this interaction was mutual:
political views fed and influenced historical assessments, and in turn
1 Csanád Bálint, “On ‘Orient-preference’ in archaeological research on the Avars, protoBulgarians and conquering Hungarians,” in Post-Roman Towns, Trade and Settlement in
Europe and Byzantium, ed. Joachim Henning (Berlin, New York: Walter de Gruyter, 2007),
545–62.
2 Béla Szőke, A honfoglaló és kora Árpád-kori magyarság régészeti emlékei [The archaeological remains of the Conquest and the Early Arpad Periods] (Budapest: Akadémiai
Kiadó, 1962), 35–52.
3 Károly Mesterházy, “Bizánci és balkáni eredetű tárgyak a 10–11. századi magyar sírleletekben I” [Byzantine and Balcanic objects in Hungarian graves of the 10th-11th centuries I],
Folia Archaeologica 41 (1990): 87–115; idem, “Bizánci és balkáni eredetű tárgyak a 10–11.
századi magyar sírleletekben” II, [Byzantine and Balcanic objects in Hungarian graves of
the 10th–11th centuries II] Folia Archaeologica 42 (1991): 145–177; idem, “Der byzantinischbalkanische Handel nach Ungarn im 10–11. Jahrhundert im Spiegel der Gräberfunden”, in
Byzance et ses voisins. Mélanges à la mémorie de Gyula Moravcsik. (Szeged: József Attila
Tudományegyetem, 1994), 117–28. Csanád Bálint, “Mediterráneum és a Kárpát-medence
kapcsolatai a kora középkori régészet szemszögéből” [Relations of the Mediterranean and
the Carpathian Basin. A viewpoint of early medieval archaeology], in Változatok a történelemre. Tanulmányok Székely György tiszteletére [Studies in honour of Gy. Székely], ed.
Gyöngyi Erdei and Balázs Nagy (Budapest: Budapesti Történeti Múzeum, 2004), 37–41.
4 Daniele Conversi, “Reassessing theories of nationalism. Nationalism and boundary
maintenance and creation,” Nationalism and Ethnic Politics 1 (1995): 85.
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took inspiration from them. The thinking of scholars investigating early
Hungarian antiquities was strongly influenced by their sense of belonging
to the natio Hungarica. Their main goal was to reveal the early history
of the ‘noble Hungarian nation’ and present its archaeological remains.5
The national ideal of the era and the ambition to collect all the historical
sources of the past of the nation greatly facilitated the discovery of tenthcentury Hungarian antiquities. After the unearthing of the treasures of
Nagyszentmiklós (Sânnicolau Mare, Ro.) or later the grave of Benepuszta,
this ambition ensured greater attention to later finds (Fig. 1).6 The other
determining factor was the expansion, over the course of the eighteenth
century, of the nobility’s long-lived (lateral) concept of the nation. This
attitude, and within it the ideal of the noble conquerors, saturated early
historical and archaeological research.7
The birth of modern Hungarian archaeology could be dated to 1761, when
Johann Ferdinand Miller published his study on Pannonian small finds.8
Scientific fieldwork was launched by István Schönvisner (1738−1818),
the earlier prefect of the Theresianum in Vienna. In 1777 he became the
first lecturer of the department of archaeology and numismatics at the
5 Éva Ring, Államnemzet és kultúrnemzet válaszútján [At the crossroads of nation state
and culture state] (Budapest: Eötvös Kiadó, 2004), 143−53.
6 Ernő Marosi, “Survival or Revival? The Nagyszentmiklós treasure in Hungarian art
history,” in The Gold of the Avars. The Nagyszentmiklós Treasure, ed. Éva Garam (Budapest:
Magyar Nemzeti Múzeum and Helikon Kiadó, 2002), 134–142.
7 The foundations of this attitude were fixed already in the Tripartitum, a collection
of unwritten law compiled by István Werbőczy at the beginning of the sixteenth century: István Werbőczy, Tripartitum opus juris consuetudinari regni Hungariae (Budapest:
Tudománytár, 1990), I. Part, Titulus III. 64−7. See Arnold Suppan, “Cuius regio eius natio.
Nationale Abgrenzung und Ausgrenzung in Ostmitteleuropa,” in Szomszédaink között
Kelet-Európában. Emlékkönyv Niederhauser Emil 70. születésnapjára, [Studies presented to
E. Niederhauser on his 70th birthday] ed. Ferenc Glatz (Budapest: Magyar Tudományos
Akadémia Történettudományi Intézete, 1993), 361. István Fodor, “The Culture of Conquering Hungarians,” in Tender Meat under the Saddle, (Krems: Medium Aevum Quotidianum,
1997), 30. Rudolf Chmel, “A magyarkomplexus és a szlovák–magyar megbékélés” [Hungarian complex and Slovakian–Hungarian reconciliation], Limes 49 (2001/5): 64−65. As
shown by the debate between the law professor Mihály Bencsik and the theologist Jan
Baltazar Magin from Dubnice. Bencsik wanted to exclude the Slovakian-speaking population of Trencsén County from the natio Hungarica with the argument that ‘they are not
of Hungarian origin, but the descendants of Svatopluk, who were subjugated in the battle
with the Hungarians’. Ring, Államnemzet, 130.
8 Gábor Vékony, “The history of archaeological fieldwork in Hungary,” in Hungarian
Archaeology at the Turn of the Millennium, ed. Zsolt Visy and Mihály Nagy (Budapest:
Ministry of National Cultural Heritage of Hungary and Teleki László Fundation, 2003),
15−6.
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Fig. 1. Lithography of Miklós Szerelmey from the book ‘Magyar hajdan és jelen’
[Hungarian past and present.] published in 1847 about the finds held as ‘ancient
Hungarian’: the find from Benepuszta and the ornaments of the Nagyszentmiklós
Treasure.
university. The Ratio Educationis issued (1777) by Maria Theresa stressed
the importance of the development of university collections, which were
relevant to the university, originally founded in Nagyszombat and later
moved to Buda and then to Pest. Schönvisner continued his work there
until 1794, when he was appointed as the director of the University Library.
In his first work he described the Roman bath unearthed in Óbuda at Florián Square. His debate with István Szalágyi (Salagius) was the first of its
kind in Hungarian archaeology. It concerned the Roman road system.9
The work of András Blaskovich and Antal Balla in this field is also worthy
9 Imre Szentpéteri, A Bölcsészettudományi Kar története (1635−1935) [The history of
the Faculty of Arts (1635−1935)] (Budapest: Királyi Magyar Egyetemi. Nyomda, 1935), 297;
Albert Gárdonyi, A történelmi segédtudományok története [The history of the auxiliary
sciences of history] (Budapest: Magyar Történelmi Társulat, 1926), 12; Domokos Kosáry,
Művelődés a XVIII. századi Magyarországon [Culture in 18th century Hungary] (Budapest:
Akadémiai Kiadó, 1996), 577; Ernő Marosi, “Utószó. Programok a magyar művészettörténetírás számára” [Postface. Programs for Hungarian art history], in A magyar művészettörténet-írás programjai. Válogatás két évszázad írásaiból [Programs for Hungarian art history.
A selection of the writings of two centuries] ed. Ernő Marosi (Budapest: Corvina Kiadó,
1999), 328−9; Endre Tóth, “A továbbélő ókor” [Antiquity continued], in Történelem-Kép
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of mention, together with that of Péter Katanics (1750−1825), who, coming to the University from Eszék (Osijek, Hr.), continued Schonvisner’s
work as his successor. Archaeological research at the time was closely
connected to the high education, dominated by Classical and Roman
archaeology. Thus research on artefacts of Hungarian origin was minimal
or non-existent. The first Hungarian artefacts that awoke interest were
the Holy Crown and the royal insignia. A monograph written by Péter
Révay (1659), the keeper of the insignia, marked the inception of interest
in Hungarian artefacts, followed in 1790 (when the crown was returned to
Buda) by the work of Elek Horányi and József Peczely and five years later
Istvan Weszprémy and István Katona. The end of this period was marked
by the work of József Koller, published in 1800. In 1788, a debate flared up
concerning Lehel’s Horn (oliphant) from Jászberény (Fig. 2).10
Count Révay was the first person to pay attention to the antiquities
relevant to an understanding of national history. The popularity of his
work is best reflected by the fact that it was reprinted several times. The
study of the material remains of the national past received a strong impetus when the reforms initiated by Joseph II reached the royal insignia and
the legal claims of the aristocracy and nobility attached to them. Due to
the national resistance provoked by the reforms of the emperor, there
was increasing scholarly interest not only in the actual royal insignia, but
also the oliphant of Jászberény, which has also been considered an early
symbol of power. Already at the time it was associated with Lehel, the
Hungarian commander known from written sources, whose legendary
life came to an end in 955, after the defeat at Augsburg. He is reported
to have been executed by Heinrich, the Bavarian duke of Regensburg.11
During the eighteenth century aristocratic tradition firmly connected the
[History-Image], ed. Árpád Mikó and Katalin Sinkó (Budapest: Magyar Nemzeti Galéria,
2000), 265–75; Vékony, The history, 16−17.
10 Gárdonyi, A történelmi segédtudományok 15; Marosi, Utószó, 328. Etele Kiss, “A jászberényi Lehel kürt—kései recenzió néhány elfeledett tanulmányhoz” [Lehel’s Oliphant
from Jászberény—some late remarks to forgotten studies], in. Szállástól a mezővárosig,
[The development of a dwelling place to an oppidum] ed. Péter Langó (Jászfényszaru,
2000), 67–82. idem, Lehel kürtje, in Történelem-Kép [History—Image], ed. Árpád Mikó and
Katalin Sinkó (Budapest: Magyar Nemzeti Galéria, 2000), 520–6.
11 István Bóna, A magyarok és Európa a 9–10. században [Hungarians and Europe in the
9th–10th centuries] (Budapest: História, 2000), 55. Chief Lehel and his horn appear also
in the Hungarian chronicles. “Cui Leel ait: ‘Afferatur michi tuba mea, cum qua primum
bucinans postea hec tibi respondebo.’ Allataque est tuba ei et appropians cesari, cum se
ingereret ad bucinandum ipsum cesarem sic fortiter in fronte cum tuba fertur precussisse, ut illo solo ictu imperatot moreretur.” Chronicon Pictum (Budapest: Magyar Helikon
Könyvkiadó, 1964), 95.
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Fig. 2. The pagan burial’ at Vereb. The second “coin dated” grave came to light in 1853. The grave of a male, (20–24 years
old youth) buried together with his horse, and a horse harness. After: Érdy, A verebi pogánysír.
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oliphant with the Hungarian conquest. Among the early national relics,
there were some other early medieval treasures, which had been found
in the territory of the Hungarian Kingdom, but came to be kept in the
treasury in Vienna. Due to its general features, the treasure from Szilágysomlyó (Şimleu Silvaniei, Ro.) was not associated with the Hungarians.12
As István Sándor, one of the most influential scholars at the time, has
remarked, “this treasure was given by a Byzantine Emperor to one of his
trustworthy officials in the province, who had distinguished himself in his
position.”13 The fate of the treasure found at Nagyszentmiklós was quite
different. Immediately after its discovery and first publication the treasure became one of the key pieces relevant to national archaeology. István Sándor interpreted the signs as runes and consequently assigned the
objects to the ‘Hun-Hungarian-Cuman-Sicul group’, which he considered
as part of the same ethnic entity. His opinion exerted a determinative
influence on research and the interpretation of these objects for a long
time. The story is quite similar in this respect to the narrative associated
with the oliphant of Jászberény.14 The treasure of Nagyszentmiklós is still
considered by most Hungarians as belonging exclusively to the nomadic
tradition,15 and Lehel’s oliphant still belongs to the Hungarian and early
Iassian national tradition.16
The founding of the Hungarian National Museum in 1802 was a turning
point, since for the first time it provided a framework for a collection suitable for scientific analysis. Institutions similar to the Hungarian National
Museum founded by Ferenc Széchényi, appeared in the region at the same
time. For instance, in 1804, two years after the founding of the Hungarian
National Museum, S.K. Potocki opened his collection in Wilanów. A number of other Polish aristocrats followed his example. In Prussia, Frederick
William III established the Berlin Museum (which later came to be known
as the Altes Museum) in 1815. The Prague Museum (1818), Zagreb Museum
(1821), and Ljubljana Museum (1821) were also founded in the same period.
12 Alfred Bernhard-Walcher, “Der Schatzfund I von Szilágysomlyó,” in. Barbarenschmuck und Römergold. Der Schatz von Szilágysomlyó, ed. Wilfried Seipel (Wien and Milano:
Skira, 1999), 22.
13 István Sándor: “Némelly Jegyzetim Schönvisner Úrnak betses Munkájához,” [Some
remarks on the invaluable work of Mr. Schönvisner] Sokféle 9 (1808): 134.
14 Júlia Papp, Művészeti ismeretek gróf Sándor István (1750–1815) írásaiban, [Connoisseurship in the writings of count István Sándor (1750–1815)] (Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1982),
55, 150.
15 Marosi, Survival, 134–135. See: Csanád Bálint: A nagyszentmiklósi kincs [The treasure
of Nagyszentmiklos. Archaeological studies], (Budapest: Balassi Kiadó, 2004), 246–56.
16 Kiss, Lehel kürtje, 524–5.
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Local wealthy aristocrats with strong national enthusiasm played a crucial role in these initial stages. In Hungary the Széchényi family helped to
establish these collections, in Poland Potocki, J. Ossoliński and Lubomirski, and in Bohemia Count Sternberg. The beginning of the nineteenth
century witnessed significant changes in public thinking in Hungary. The
strengthening of national feelings is reflected in the contemporary literature and historical studies (in the works kihúzandó!).17 The increased
interest in the early history of the Hungarians helped to develop the discipline of archaeology, still in search for its institutional framework, identify
the surviving material artifacts of the conquering Hungarians. The archaeology of the Conquest Period began in 1834. The finds from the vicinity of
Ladánybene were first given to sub-prefect Móricz Szentkirályi and then
delivered to the Hungarian National Museum. Szentkirályi informed the
famous collector Miklós Jankovich of the antiquities, and Jankovich
immediately published a study identifying the assemblage as artefacts of
the early Hungarians.18 This study enabled the identification of other finds
from the tenth century, which were similar to the material of Benepuszta
but contained no coins.19 A relatively long time (19 years) passed before
a scholarly study on the next group of Hungarian antiquities, the burial
from Vereb presented by Miklós Érdy, was published. These two collections and studies can be considered as the starting point of the archaeological research on the Conquest Period (Fig. 3).20
As mentioned above, the archaeological remains of the conquering
Hungarians had been recognized by the period of Romanticism. At the
beginning of the nineteenth century ancient, early mediaeval Hungarian
chronicles became popular. The increase in interest in the early history of
the Hungarians is reflected by literary works with historical topics, such
17 Kosáry, Művelődés, 321−3.
18 Miklós Jankovich, “Egy magyar hősnek,—hihetőleg Bene vitéznek,—ki még a ‘tizedik század’ elején, Solt fejedelemmel, I. Berengár császárnak diadalmas védelmében Olaszországban jelen volt, újdonnan felfedezett tetemeiről, ’s öltözetének ékességeiről” [The
newly discovered grave and the adornments of the costume of a Hungarian hero—most
probably warrior Bene—who, at the very beginning of the tenth century, participated
together with prince Solt in the glorious defence of Emperor Berengar I in Italy], A Magyar
Tudós Társaság Évkönyvei 2 (1832–1834): 281–96.
19 Péter Langó, “A nemzeti múlt ‘mívbeli emlékei.’ A honfoglaló magyarság régészeti
emlékanyagának felismerése” [Vestiges of national past. The recognition of the archaeological legacy of the Hungarians of the time of the Conquest], in A nemzeti tudományok
historikuma [The historicity of national disciplines] (Budapest: Kölcsei Intézet, 2008), 271.
20 Miklós Érdy, “A verebi pogánysír,” [The pagan grave from Vereb] A Magyar Tudományos Akadémia Évkönyvei 9 (1858): 14–27.
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Fig. 3. Árpád on the mountain of Pannonia. Framing the romantic historical
approach on the gravure of János Blascjke and Josef Axmann in 1822.
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as the epos of Zalán futása (The Flight of Zalán) by Mihály Vörösmarty
(1825), a tale of the conquest that arguably marked the beginning of the
nationalist romantic movement It was also reflected by the widespread
popularity of István Horvát, who declined membership in the Academy of
Sciences and developed his own pan-Hungarian theory (Fig. 4).
As a consequence of the antiquarian approach of the time, archaeology
was considered as a curiosity, thus archaeological studies, unlike works
of history, did not play a significant role in the presentation of the traditional ideals of national historiography. Obviously the search for national
identity in the first half of the nineteenth century was present to some
extent in these works as well, since scholars interested in antiquities were
indeed influenced by the romantic concept of a nation, as demonstrated
by the examples of Miklós Jankovich, János Jerney and János Érdy. Érdy’s
patriotic attitude is nicely illustrated by the anecdote, always cited by his
reviewers and which—quite probably—he also often recounted. According to the story, upon his visit to Budapest famous contemporary historian Theodor Mommsen ‘recognized an original Hun-Hungarian race in
Érdy and was surprised when our honourable president, the late Baron
József Eötvös, told him Érdy’s origin and former ancient German name.’21
(Fig. 5)
The turning point in the archaeological research followed political
events. The revolution of 1848, the passive resistance of the Hungarian
political elite following its suppression, and the Compromise with the
imperial house in 1867 were followed by significant changes in academic
life. Due to the economic upswing following the political consolidation
and the more liberal cultural policy, the number of sites were explored
and finds delivered to the museums grew rapidly. As a consequence of
the subsequent projects undertaken with the intention of creating a kind
of national infrastructure (which included the construction of railways
and the regulation of rivers), workers disturbed numerous archaeological
sites. The tremendous surge in the amount of physical material available
and the scholarly work on this material was also facilitated by the national
character of the research as well. In the second half of the nineteenth
century, the national thinking became even stronger. Changes in attitudes
towards culture also spurred the increase in material. The role of the earlier private collectors was taken over by local archaeological societies and
21 Iván Nagy, “Érdy János emlékezete” [In memoriam János Érdy], Értekezések a történelmi tudományok köréből II. 9. (1873): 19.
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Fig. 4. János Érdy. His original name: János Luczenbacher (1796–1871) The archaeologist of Belgian origin published the second grave from the Hungarian conquest
period.
Fig. 5. The ancient Hungarian artefacts’ from a historical poster of the Millenium
of the Hungarian conquest. After: Marczali, A vezérek kora.
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museums. In the period dominated by Flóris Rómer and Ferenc Pulszky,
one of the most prosperous periods of modern Hungarian history in many
respects (at least from the perspective of economic and infrastructural
developments), the foundations of professional research were laid. Archaeology was not involved in the economic development and minority issues
characterizing the period.22
Hungary’s legal status was restored after the Compromise. The treaty
was facilitated by a number of internal and external factors. One of the
most acute interior problems was the management of the aspirations of
the various national minorities living in the Habsburg Empire. In Hungary the formation of these aspirations was influenced by the xenophobia
underlying the concept of a “natio Hungarica” and the Romantic theory
of cultural relativity, which had gained even more ground since the end
of the eighteenth century. After the achievement of linguistic unity in
the Reform Era and the continuing lack of national independence, the
Hungarian political elite, like elites in other European states, emphasized
the importance of historiography and the ‘rediscovery of the national
past,’ while giving priority to the unity of the state. The so-called ‘Ugric–
Turkic war,’, which represented the most prominent research trends of the
period, not only clarified the origin of the Hungarian language, but also
demonstrated that, within the context of the Herderian concept of nation
(based on language and culture), national myth-making had become independent from disinterested scholarship.23
For the public, the debate seemed to revolve around the question of
whether the Hungarians were relatives of the ‘poor fish-scented FinnoUgrics’ or the ‘Turanian high cultures.’ Although the debate had no
‘worthwhile stake whatsoever,’ it exerted a lasting influence on research
on the prehistory of the Hungarians.24 As pointed out by István Fodor,
contemporary Darwinist thinking also figured in the debate, since the
scholars of the period ‘knew about Antal Reguly’s reports in the middle
of the nineteenth century on the Ob-Ugric (Vogul, Ostjak) peoples, who
lived under miserable and primitive circumstances and whose language
22 Péter Langó, “Archaeological research on the conquering Hungarians: A review,” in
Research on the prehistory of the Hungarians: A review, ed. Balázs Gusztáv Mende (Budapest: Archaeological Institute of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 2005), 227.
23 János Pusztay, Az “ugor-török háború” után [In the wake of the ‘Ugric-Turkic’ war].
(Budapest: Magvető Kiadó, 1977).
24 Csanád Bálint, “A honfoglaló magyarok és Európa” [The conquering Hungarians and
Europe], in Honfoglalás és Árpád-kor, ed. János Makkay and József Korbály (Ungvár: Kárpátaljai Magyar Kulturális Szövetség, 1997), 14.
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was the closest to ours, and considered it impossible that our ancestors
could have ever lived under such conditions.’25
The most prominent scholars, among them Henrik Marczali and Gyula
Pauler, renowned Hungarian medievalists of the nineteenth century, and
influential public figures of the time (such as poets János Arany and János
Vajda and novelist Mór Jókai) supported Ármin Vámbéry’s theory of the
Turkic origin of the Hungarians.26 The participants in the debate—with
good reason—did not consider archaeology as an independent discipline yielding new conclusions that would contribute to the solution of
the—primarily linguistic—problems. As a consequence of the debate,
the world of both ‘the district judge in love with Attila’s ancient ancestry’ and the educated, nationalistic middle-class, rejected the Finno-Ugric
theory. The public—heated by nationalism in part because of the fact that
in the debates that took place in Hungary, Budapest, the Academy, or
in the newspapers about Hungarians, the Hungarian language, and its origins were discussed and decided by non-Hungarian scholars (Pál Hunfalvy;
József Budenz)—favored Vámbéry’s version of the myths of earlier times.
Among contemporary Hungarian archaeologists, only Ferenc Pulszky’s
work was followed in the academy because of his role in Hungarian politics and cultural life. The influential museum director was an enthusiastic supporter of Vámbéry’s theory—who was also a relative of his—and
described the Hungarians in his studies as mounted, conquering, ‘Turanian’ nobles. The ideal of a noble nation in his works harmonized well
with the national mythology of the ‘glorious conquest’ and the ‘thousand
year-old Hungarian state.’27 The celebration in 1896 of the one-thousandth
anniversary of the conquest and the works published on or created for
the occasion—including the Millennial Monument—fitted the general
trend of the interpretation of the past in nineteenth century Europe.28
Archaeology, as an auxiliary discipline that offered palpable illustrations
of the events of the conquest in the form of objects and artifacts, also
played an important role in the celebrations of the ‘Millennial year.’ The
25 Fodor, The Culture, 29.
26 Péter Domokos, Szkítiától Lappóniáig. A nyelvrokonság és az őstörténet kérdéskörének
visszhangja irodalmunkban [From Scythia to Lapland. Literary reactions to the problems of
linguistic affinity and prehistory] (Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1990), 109.
27 András Gerő, Der Heldenplatz Budapest als Spiegel ungarischer Geschichte (Budapest:
Corvina, 1990); Ernő Marosi, “A honfoglalás a művészetben” [The Hungarians’ landtaking
as reflected in the arts], Magyar Tudomány 103 (1996): 1028−9.
28 Sebastian Brather, Ethnische Interpretationen in der frühgeschichtlichen Archäologie
(Berlin–New York: de Gruyter, 2004), 19−22.
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first detailed, comprehensive archaeological study of the period, a work
by József Hampel, was published. It bore little resemblance to the often
turgid and hyperbolic, nationalistic style of contemporary historians. An
excerpt concerning the mission of Árpád and the conquering Hungarians
from a review by Kolos Vaszary, published in 1895 on the occasion of the
Millennium, offers a good example of the tendency towards exaggeration
in the historical works of the time: ‘What nation on our continent, however great it may be, has a thousand year-old past like ours?! Hellas, the
cradle of culture, did not survive for a thousand years. Rome, the greatest
state the world has ever known, was barely 800 years old when it started
to perish in the wake of the death of Augustus. Its great emperors were
little more than signs of the last bursts of vitality during the agony! And
our nation? Over the course of this one- thousand years not only has it
not aged, but on the contrary, it marches forward with new vitality at the
dawn of the second millennium!’29 A similar example is the description
by the historian Henrik Marczali, according to whom the Hungarian conquerors could be characterized as ‘jaunty, gallant, turbulent chaps, stolid,
withstanding all the trials of life, full of confidence in their own strength
and abilities, indefatigable when driven by their passion, insatiable when
the time comes for relaxing, eating and drinking.’30 (Fig. 6)
Later, influenced by factors previously mentioned, he reclassified the
archaeological finds and connected the poor burials to the Slavs, the
richer graves, in which the remains of horses, horse harnesses, weapons,
and objects made of precious metals were also found, to the Hungarians.
His work reinforced the concept—not free of the influence of evolutionary thinking—of ‘triumphant and rich conquering Hungarians’ often
found in contemporary historical reviews, and it lent weight and corroboration to nationalist explanations. Non-scientific views popular in Europe
at the time had less significant effect on the archaeology of the Conquest
Period. Contemporary social-anthropological concepts and political views
can be found primarily in the work of Géza Nagy. However, he expressed
his political opinion overtly only in newspaper articles, and not in scholarly publications. This was less characteristic of the scholarship of other
29 Kolos Vaszary, “Bevezetés”, [Introduction] in A magyar nemzet története I. Magyarország a királyság megalapításáig [The History of the Hungarian Nation. Hungary till the
foundation of the kingdom] ed. Sándor Szilágyi (Budapest: Athenaeum Könyvnyomda,
1895), 10.
30 Henrik Marczali, “A vezérek kora és a királyság megalapítása” [The age of the chieftains and the foundation of the kingdom], in A magyar nemzet története I, ed. Szilágyi, 56.
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Fig. 6. The Millennial Monument (1896).
outstanding archaeologists of the time, even in the case of Béla Pósta.
His work is a good example because it demonstrates clearly the relationship between archaeology and politics in the dualist state. The politically
active university professor carefully separated his political activities from
his scientific research.31 The anti-Pan-Slavic attitude of the Hungarian
political elite appeared in the works only indirectly (e.g. in the interpretation of poor burials as Slavic).32 Contemporary schools of thought and
their political background, however, did leave their mark on the discipline.
Examples of this influence include the emphasis on particular peoples or
populations and their alleged qualities, in contrast with oppressed groups,
and the assertion of different forms of legitimacy through focus on military superiority.33
Although some of the stereotypes connected to the notions used in
those studies—considered nowadays pejorative—were generally accepted
31 István Schneller, “Pósta Béla”, Közlemények az Erdélyi Nemzeti Múzeum Érem- és Régiségtárából 1 (1919) [1941]: 22−4.
32 On contemporary anti-Pan-Slavic attitude see Kálmán Thaly, Az ezredévi országos
hét emlékoszlop története [The history of the seven memorial columns of the Millennium]
(Pozsony: Wigand F.K. Könyvnyomda, 1898), 7−13; Judit Hamberger, “A csehek a magyarokról” [The Czechs on the Hungarians], Limes 49 (2001/5): 32−3.
33 Timothy Kaiser, “Archaeology and ideology in southeast Europe,” in Nationalism,
Politics, and the Practice of Archaeology, ed. Philip. L. Kohl and Clare Fawcett (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1995), 101−3.
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around the end of the nineteenth century, scientific aspects always had
priority.34 In the research on the prehistory of the Hungarians, Turanism
became popular after the turn of the century.35 This hypothesis, according
to which Hungarians were related to early Turkish mounted nomads and
hailed from a common homeland (Turan), was a sort of reaction to PanSlavic movements. This theory, however, always remained in the background, and even scholars who sympathized with the idea did not promote
it. Later Turanism—like other prehistorical oddities—became popular in
non-scientific circles.36 Just as the approach to research in Hungary was
often influenced by a nationalist agenda, the evaluation of tenth century
archaeological data served nationalist goals in the Slavic areas of the Monarchy as well, not to mention the neighbouring countries. The intellectual
leaders of Slavic and Romanian-speaking national minorities considered
the Hungarian state politic as the main obstacle to their national development. Consequently, the integrative nation-building nationalism in these
areas used archaeology to further the aim of emancipation.37 The intellectual leaders of the nationalists, who expressed their aspirations in cultural life tried to separate themselves from the Hungarians. They felt that
Hungarian politics hampered the emancipation of their nation, binding
it rather to its own assimilative politics. The desire for greater national
autonomy, nourished by a number of different sources pointing in the
same general direction, had an effect on the historical consciousness
of these groups and their concepts of prehistory.38 The reclusion from
34 Derogative remarks about Slavs in Hungarian studies from the end of the 19th century can be regarded as contemporary stereotypes which were not the products of archaeology. See Judit Hamberger, “A szlovákok magyarságképének alakulása” [The formation of
the Slovaks’ image of the Hungarians], Európai tükör 9 (2004/3): 80.
35 Paikert v. Alois, “Der touranische Gedanke”, Turan (1917): 291−301; George G. Arnakis,
“Turanism, An aspect of Turkish nationalism”, Balkan Studies 1(1960): 19−32. Éva KincsesNagy, “A turáni gondolat”, [The concept of Turanism] in Őstörténet és nemzettudat 1919–1931
[Prehistory and national selfconsciousness] ed. Éva Kincses-Nagy (Szeged: Balassi Kiadó,
1991), 44–9; Ildikó Farkas, “Turanizmus”, [Turanism] Magyar Tudomány 100 (1993): 860–
868; A.V. Ratobylskaya, “Vengerskiy turanizm”, Slavjane i kočevoj mir 10 (2001): 219–27.
36 Géza Nagy, “Népvándorláskori turán öltözet”, [Turanic dress in the Migration Period]
Archaeológiai Értesítő 21 (1901) 318–323; Miklós Zsirai, “Őstörténeti csodabogarak”, [Prehistorical oddities] in A magyarság őstörténete, ed. Lajos Ligeti (Budapest: Franklin Kiadó,
1943), 266−89.
37 On the general character of the process see Conversi, Reassessing 85. Philip L. Kohl
and Clare Fawcett, “Archaeology in the service of the state: theoretical considerations,” in
Nationalism, Politics, and the Practice of Archaeology, ed. Philip. L. Kohl and Clare Fawcett
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), 3–18.
38 Ferenc Glatz, “Regionális történelemszemlélet Közép-Kelet-Európában. Magyarok és
szomszédaik az államalapítás korában”, [Regional view of history in East Central Europe.
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Hungarian—noble—values and the rejection of a common history based
on shared geography were defensive reactions. These groups attempted to
construct a prehistory for themselves that was different from the history
of the Hungarian Kingdom. The prehistory and the early history of the Slavs
had an important role in the creation of an independent historical identity,
and the demonstration of the allegedly aggressive nature of the formation
of the Hungarian state was used as legitimization of their own political
national rights.39 Pan-Slavic historiography, which gained momentum in
the second half of the nineteenth century, and the strengthening of the
idea of Turkic-Hungarian affinity (Turanism) were parallel and closely
related phenomena.40
Hungarian popular consciousness, the concepts of Daco-Romanian
and Illyrian-Croatian continuity, emerged at the same time. The growing
prominence of theories of continuity illustrates the contemporary political practice of founding arguments concerning national emancipation
and corresponding territorial claims on the assertion of early origins. The
most influential among the national movements of the Monarchy was
first Austro-Slavism, then later Pan-Slavism. This was one of the reasons
why one of the most important centers of Slavic archaeology in the second third of the nineteenth century was at the University of Vienna. The
first professor of the university to specialize in Slavic archaeology was Jan
Kollár, one of the creators of the Pan-Slavic idea, together with Šafárik and
Palacký.41 These concepts were based primarily on the common history
of Slavic peoples, and the theories of prehistory that were based on them
had a considerable influence on the interpretation of the archaeological
sources.42 Previously, the identification of Slavic finds was not evident, and
Hungarians and their neighbours in the age of state foundation] Történelmi Szemle 43
(2001): 99−100.
39 Emil Niederhauser, “ ‘. . . megosztották az addig egységes szláv területet’. A honfoglalás a lengyel, a cseh és a szlovák történeti irodalomban”, [The conquest of Hungary by
the Magyars in Polish, Czech and Slovak literature] Magyar Tudomány 102 (1995): 1404–15;
Gábor Vékony, “ ‘. . . alapított most Swatopluk oly birodalmat’. Viták a morva fejedelemség
történetéről” [Debates on the Moravian pricipality] Magyar Tudomány 102 (1995): 1454–61;
Lucian Boia, Geschichte und Mythos. Über die Gegenwart des Vergangen in der rumänischen
Gesellschaft (München: Böhlau Verlag, 2003), 62−76.
40 Langó, Archaeological research, 229–30.
41 Bozidar Slapšak and Predrag Novaković, “Is there national archaeology without nationalism? Archaeological tradition in Slovenia,” in Nationalism and archaeology in Europe,
ed. Margarita Díaz-Andreu and Timothy Champion (London: UCL Press, 1996), 274.
42 Sebastian Brather, Archäologie der westlichen Slawen (Berlin–New York: de Gruyter,
2001), 11−18; On the political background of Pan-Slavic archaeological concepts see also
Victor A. Shnirelman, “The faces of nationalist archaeology in Russia”, in Nationalism and
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for a long time scholars tried to separate early Slavic material from Celtic
and German finds with the help of historical and linguistic sources.
This research was defined by the fact that Šafarik—inspired by Herder—
assumed that early Slavic history, the ‘dark age’, could be delineated on
the basis of linguistic sources. This opinion was shared by other Slavicspeaking scholars in the second half of the nineteenth century.43
The method they used was the following: in areas in which sources or
place names indicated the presence of Slavic people, scholars attempted to
determine the characteristic objects that could be connected to the Slavs
in the given region. The German Friedrich Lisch, who played a leading
role in this research, attempted to isolate the Slavic material with the help
of the typological method, which was new at the time.44 Objects at that
time were often considered as ethnic markers, so once it was suggested
(following the work of Lubor Niederle) that S-terminated rings and pottery
with incised, wavy lines could be artifacts left behind by peoples of Slavic
origins, it very rapidly became a general rule (Fig. 7).45 The studies of the
archaeology in Europe, ed. Margarita Díaz-Andreu and Timothy Champion (London: UCL
Press, 1996), 223−5.
43 Włodzimirez Rączowski, “ ‘Drang nach Westen’? Polish archaeology and national
identity,” in Nationalism and archaeology, ed. Díaz-Andreu and Champion, 198−9. Florin
Curta, The Making of the Slavs: History and Archaeology of the Lower Danube Region c. 500–
700 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001), 7−8.
44 Sebastian Brather, “Slawenbilder ‘slawische Altertumskunde’ im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert,” Archeologické rozhledy 53 (2001): 725−8.
45 Lubor Niederle, “Die Skelettgraber aus der letzten prähistorischen Zeit in Böhmen,”
Mitteilungen der anthropologischen Gesellschaft in Wien 20 (1890): 105. idem, Slovanske starožitnosti. Původ a počátky Slovanů vỳchodnich. A. IV. (Praze: Bursík a Kohout, 1924). On
the contemporary reception of the study see József Ernyey, “Lubor Niederle: Slovanské
starožitnosti,” Archaeológiai Értesítő 34 (1914): 38−44, 139−45. Decoration with wavy lines
was first connected to the Slavs by Ferdinand Kruse, and it became generally accepted by
Czech scholars. See Lubor Niederle, “Bemerkungen zu einige Charakteristiken der altslawischen Gräber,” Mitteilungen der anthropologischen Gesellschaft in Wien 24 (1894): 51−4.
Josef Ladislav Pič, Přehled česke archaeologie (Praze: Komise při České Akademii císaře Fr.
Josefa Pro Vědy, Slovesnost a Uměni, 1908), 75−8. On the relationship of Pič and Niederle
see Włodzimirez Antoniewicz, “Hołd wielkości Lubora Niederlego,” Światowit 20 (1948):
2−3. Hungarian research, following first Pulszky, then Hampel, also connected the pottery
with wavy lines to the Slavs because they assumed that nomadic peoples did not manufacture pottery, but acquired it from the inhabitants of the conquered areas. Ferenc Pulszky,
“Néhány magyarországi és ősmagyar leletről,” [On some early Hungarian and other finds
from Hungary] A Magyar Tudományos Akadémia Évkönyvei 17 (1878): 224; József Hampel, Újabb tanulmányok a honfoglalási kor emlékeiről [New studies on the remains of the
Conquest Period] (Budapest: Magyar Tudományos Akadémia, 1907), 51. On the history of
research of the issue see also Miklós Takács, Die árpádenzeitlichen Tonkessel im Karpatenbecken, (Budapest: Archaeological Institute of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1986)
10−12.; Tivadar Vida, Die awarenzeitliche Keramik I. (Budapest: Archaeological Institute of
the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1999), 16−7.
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Fig. 7. S-terminated rings
very talented professor in Prague reflected neo-Slavic attitudes popular
at the beginning of the twentieth century. These works were translated
into several languages and became the pillars of Slavic research.46 These
volumes, however, focused not only on the archaeological record. Using
historical and ethnographical sources, Niederle attempted to prove that
there had been a Slavic population with homogeneous material culture
in the Carpathian Basin well before the Hungarian conquest. He believed
that most of the archaeological record from the tenth century in the Carpathian Basin could be connected to the Slavs, and in many cases he
explained the appearance of certain object types in the material culture
46 He started to study the prehistory of the Slavs after his first Russian journey in 1893.
Emil Niederhauser, A történetírás története Kelet-Európában [The history of historiography
in Eastern Europe] (Budapest: História, 1995), 167. His views were influenced by Vykentyi
V. Khvoika, Alexandr Spicin and other Russian (Ukrainian) scholars. Shnirelman, The faces,
222−3. Florin Curta, “Pots, Slavs and ‘imagined communities’: Slavic archaeologies and the
history of the early Slavs,” European Journal of Archaeology 4 (2001): 368. His connection
with contemporary neo-Slavic groups is shown by the fact that his comprehensive study
was published first in Russia in 1909, and was published in Czech only in the following
year. He intented to accomplish the aims defined by Šafarik in two six-volume monographs. Niederhauser, A történetírás története, 128, 167.
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of the conquering Hungarians with reference to Slavic mediation. In addition to the conclusions of Müller and Lissauer, he based his theory on
the ideas of Slavic Studies. For many years his works provided the guidelines for Slavic-speaking scholars in their approach to the problems of early
history.47 The publisher of the eleventh century commoners’ cemetery at
Bielo Brdo, Josip Brunšmid, also built on Niederle’s conclusions when he
identified the cemetery as Slavic (Croatian).48 The nineteenth century
scholars of the national minorities of the Monarchy represented a very different opinion on their own history than their Hungarian colleagues. Their
ideas were related primarily to Pan-Slavic concepts, marking their own
past as separate from the history of the Hungarian Kingdom. In connection
with their aspirations for autonomy, and in opposition to the Hungarian
conquest, they attempted to emphasize their own values through the principle of autochthony and to interpret the early archaeological record so
as to demonstrate the illegitimacy and violent character of the Hungarian
conquest and the foundation of the Hungarian state.49 The archaeological
47 Niederle’s role in Slavic research became so important because—beside his comprehensive reviews—he could establish an archaeological school as well. As a professor of
the university in Prague—he received this title in 1891—then the director of the Archaeological Institute in Prague he educated generations of scholars. Antoniewicz, Lubora
Niederlego 2−3. His conclusions about 10th century material were carried on mainly by
two of his students. Curta, Pots, Slavs, 368. The most outstanding of his students was Jan
Eisner, who, after Niederle’s death, became the most prominent person of the research
on the Migration Period in Slovakia. Jan Eisner, “Slované a Maďaři v archeologii,” Slavia
Antiqua 7 (1960): 189–210.
48 Josip Brunšmid, “Hrvatske sredovječne starine,” Viestnik Hrvatskog arkeologičkog
društva 7 (1903–1904): 38−40. Csanád Bálint, Südungarn im 10. Jahrhundert (Budapest:
Akadémia Verlag, 1991), 160. Željko Tomičić, “Novi prilozi vrednovanju ostavštine srednjovjekovnog groblja Bijelo Brdo II,” Prilozi 8 (1991): 95–148. idem “Neuere Erforschung der
Bijelo Brdo-Kultur in Kroatien,” Prilozi 9 (1992) 113–130. Following Niederle and Brunšmid,
Croatian, Serbian and Slovakian research generally accepted the role of S-terminated hairrinds as Slavic ethnic markers. Miklós Takács, “A Kárpát-medence, az Alpok délkeleti része
és a Balkán-félsziget kapcsolatai a 7–9. században. A jugoszláviai kutatások újabb eredményei,” [Relations between the Carpathian Basin, the southeastern Alps and the Balcan
peninsula during the 7th-9th centuries. Recent results of the investigations carried out
in Yugoslavia] Móra Ferenc Múzeum Évkönyve 1984–1985/2 [1991]: 506−7; Ágnes Ózer, “A
szerb történetírás magyarságképe,” [The Image of Hungarians in Serbian Historiography]
in A honfoglalás 1100 éve és a Vajdaság, ed. Győző Bordás et al. (Újvidék: Fórum Könyvkiadó, 1997), 230–7.
49 Emil Niederhauser, “Honfoglalás és millennium,” [The Hungarians’ landtaking and
the Millennium] Magyar Tudomány 103 (1996): 1011–7. The ‘conqueror’ attitude frequent
in Hungarian-centred historiography at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
was confronted with the contemporary Slavic approach emphasizing the contrast between
barbarian Hungarians and civilized Slavs. See Bernard Wailes and Amy L. Zoll, “Civilization, barbarism, and nationalism in European archaeology,” in Nationalism, Politics, and
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studies on Slavic unity and the ideas concerning the primarily Slavic
autochthonous population of the tenth century Carpathian Basin sought
to confirm the stereotype, inherited from Niederle, that the Hungarians
were intruders who had driven a wedge between the Slavic peoples of
the Carpathian Basin and made the development of a unified Slavic area
impossible.50
A considerable amount of time passed before the collections of objects
and artifacts previously thought to belong to Slavic peoples were reinterpreted, a lapse that may seem a bit paradoxical in light of the changes
that took place within the discipline. It was not until the 1950s, when the
orthodox Soviet politics of science had a great impact on Central European
scholarship, that new readings of the materials were offered. After this,
Hungarian research came to consider these material remains as the legacy
of the poorer social groups of the period, the so-called commoners, rather
than Slavs.51 Today these poorer cemeteries are connected, independently
of linguistic and ethnic boundaries, to the peoples of the Hungarian Principality and the Hungarian Kingdom ruled by the Árpád dynasty.52
Thus, the differing interpretations of the history of the groups of Central Europe were determined by the intersections of the national historical traditions which were elaborated in the nineteenth century. Until this
day, these opinions are tightly connected to the role of objects and groups
of remains as carriers of symbolic meanings. However, the social sciences,
embedded in a national framework, were not always able to free themselves of these nineteenth century traditions. Current events often demonstrate this clearly, for instance when the representative national value
of such an object is emphasized (one thinks of the cases of the Nagyszentmiklós treasure, the Nagymacséd cross, the horn of Lehel, or even simple
objects such as the so-called hair-rings with S-terminals), and the generally accepted and established scientific opinions are relegated to the
background.53 In the study of archaeological finds the various national
the Practice of Archaeology, ed. Philip L. Kohl and Clare Fawcett (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1995), 23−4.
50 Niederhauser, A történetírás története, 126, 167, 332−333, 401−404, 487; Takács, A Kárpátmedence, 507.
51 Béla Szőke, “A bjelobrdoi kultúráról,” [On the culture of bjelobrdo], Archaeológiai
Értesítő 86 (1959): 32–47. For a historical background see Langó, Archaeological research,
219–21.
52 Bálint, Südungarn, 159–93.
53 Bálint, A nagyszentmiklósi kincs, 105–32, 246–54. Titus Kolník, “Ikonografia, datovanie
a kultúrno-historický význam enkolpiónu z Veľkej Mače,” Slovenská archeológia 42 (1994):
125–53.
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mythologies and often contradictory narratives cannot be ignored,
since—pointing beyond the phases of the history of research—they shed
light on the cultural background that connects and at the same time, on
an interpretative level divides the peoples of the wider region.54 In Central Europe, the interpretation of archaeological remains and their ascription to particular ethnic groups (among them the nomadic peoples of the
steppe) can be regarded as a juncture that has been a significant motivating force since the beginnings of archaeological thinking, independent of
whatever the symbolic meaning of these objects may have been in their
original environment. Thus, these objects tell the story of the past on multiple levels: they are witnesses to their own pasts; through the historical
traditions attached to them, however, they not only assume a place in the
cultural canon, but also reflect historical milestones and transformations,
since through the various interpretations of the past (which changed both
in time and space) they are connected to the historical events of later
periods as well.
54 Kiss, Lehel, 525; Bálint, On “Orient-preference”, 546.
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