China people once talked about how the Han army defeated the Huns and how the Huns defeated Rome, as if this could prove that the Han Dynasty was far superior to Rome. Regardless of whether the Hungarians were Xiongnu who moved westward, just because these two historical events were more than 300 years apart, there is not much comparability. Most nomadic people in human history have no writing, so history is recorded by the farming world, so the history we are seeing now is recorded by the farming people.
Xiongnu is a nomadic people, who once ruled the northern part of China and vast areas of Mongolian Plateau. According to legend, the Huns are descendants of Xia Jie. It can be said that the history of Xiongnu is closely related to the history of pre-Qin, Qin and Han Dynasties in China. Are Hungarians and Huns the same race? There is no definite answer as to whether there is a * * nature in national and cultural inheritance.
This nomadic people is good at riding and shooting, tough in style and brave in fighting. Under the leadership of their leader Attila, many people think that Hungarians are Huns, or Attila's Hungarians are Huns, which is incorrect. First of all, the Huns are not a certain race, but a mixture of some ethnic groups. Edward gibbon, a famous British historian, quoted this view in his classic The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, which made this conclusion spread all over Europe.
It is also from a series of Xiongnu cemeteries that scientists extracted the human molecular genes of the ancient Xiongnu. By comparing the genes of modern people, it is actually easy to find out where the Huns are hiding now.
The Xiongnu cemetery found in Indurulansumu County, Houhangai Province, Outer Mongolia, is a famous cemetery along the Huni River. Scientists have discovered an ancient tomb with an area of over 2,500 square meters here. There is no doubt that the senior leaders of Xiongnu are buried here, and their living standards are very high.