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Seiya2000
12-19-2025, 08:41 PM
Salutations, esteemed members of the forum.

I wish to disseminate a recently preprinted manuscript of significant consequence regarding the ancestral origins of the Hungarian nobility, specifically the illustrious Aba genus. The study, hosted on bioRxiv, deploys high-coverage whole-genome sequencing to scrutinize the skeletal remains excavated from the necropolis of Abasár, the clan’s ancestral political fulcrum.

Archaeogenetic analysis revealed East Eurasian paternal origin to the Aba royal family of Hungary
Link: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.03.20.585718v1?ct

The investigation has yielded results of profound phylogenetic significance. Contrary to autochthonous European presumptions, the Aba clan exhibits a strictly East Eurasian paternal lineage, belonging to the N1a1a1a1a4 haplogroup. This genetic signature demonstrates an unequivocal phylogenetic affinity with the ancient Xiongnu (Asian Hun) populations of Mongolia.

The data suggests that the progenitors of the Aba lineage participated in the transcontinental migration of the conquering Magyars into the Carpathian Basin during the late 9th century. Furthermore, Identity-by-Descent (IBD) analysis delineates corroborative kinship ties between the Abas and other preeminent dynastic houses, including the Árpáds, the Báthorys, and the Corvinus family, indicating a pervasive consanguinity within the Hungarian aristocratic stratum. While their paternal line is Asiatic, their genomic composition displays substantial admixture with European and Middle Eastern maternal lineages, indicative of generations of exogamous matrimonial alliances.

Who was the Aba Genus?

For those unacquainted with the annals of Magyar history, the Aba (or Genus Aba) constitutes one of the most formidable and influential kindreds of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary.

The clan’s prestige is inextricably linked to Samuel Aba, the third King of Hungary (reigning 1041–1044). A figure of considerable martial and administrative prowess, Samuel served as the Palatine (Nádor) and was the brother-in-law to the founder of the state, King Saint Stephen I. His ascendance to the throne followed the deposition of Peter Orseolo, marking him as a champion of the "national" faction against perceived subservience to the Holy Roman Empire.

The Abas exercised hegemonial control over vast swathes of Northern Hungary (modern-day Heves, Borsod, and Abaúj counties, as well as parts of Slovakia). Their ancestral seat, Abasár, served not only as a strategic fortification but also as the necropolis where the biological samples for this study were procured.

Historiographically, the Abas have often been postulated to descend from the Kabars, a dissident faction of the Khazar Khaganate that joined the Magyar tribal federation prior to the Honfoglalás (the Conquest). This new genetic evidence reinforces the hypothesis of their non-European, Steppe-derived origins.

Over the ensuing centuries, the genus bifurcated into nineteen distinct noble families (including the Rhédey and Berthóty lines). Their dominance faced an inexorable decline culminating in the 1312 Battle of Rozgony, where the oligarch Amade Aba’s forces were decimated by King Charles I of Hungary (Charles Robert of Anjou), thereby shattering the clan's semi-autonomous provincial authority.

This study serves as a quintessential vindication of the Asiatic heritage inherent in the Hungarian conquering elite, providing irrefutable molecular evidence linking the Carpathian aristocracy to the nomadic civilizations of the Eastern Steppe.

Discuss.