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Maybe they could speak Hungarian, but gypsies were not allowed to live in Hungarian villages and towns until 1945. They were allowed to make a gypsy quarter outside of the settlements. However Gypsies lived among romanians and mixed with them. (No wonder, they had similar look similar late nomadic past like the romanians)
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Gypsies were forbidden to marry ethnic Romanians.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slaver...ge_regulations
And Hungarians allowed Gypsies to settle between them. If not, prove otherwise.
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Romanian soccer fans, the cuman tatar and vlach ancestors had a visible heritage:
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romani...y_and_language
In the mid-18th century, Empress Maria Theresa (1740–1780) and Emperor Joseph II (1780–1790) dealt with the Romani question by the contradictory methods of enlightened absolutism. Maria Theresa enacted a decree prohibiting the use of the name "Cigány" (Hungarian) or "Zigeuner" (German) ("Gypsy") and requiring the terms 'new peasant" and 'new Hungarian' to be used instead. She later placed restrictions on Romani marriages, and ordered children to be taken away from Romani parents to be raised in 'bourgeois or peasant' families.
Joseph II prohibited use of the Romani language in 1783. The forced assimilation essentially proved successful. In the 19th and 20th centuries, the vast majority of the Romani population---who had settled hundreds of years earlier and held onto their customs and culture for a long time---gave up, even forgetting their native language.
During World War II, 28,000 Romani perished in Hungary.
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