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For example there is a Hungarian word for fortress 'szombat' which was current in the Middle Ages providing ever more mounting evidence of not only control but also foundation of Kiev by the Khazars who named it Sambat (Sambatas in Roman sources). Sam = high, bat = fortress, Küi=low/harbor - ev = settlement. Khazars called the high ground where the fortress stood as 'Sambat' and lower ground where the harbor was located and the people resided as Küiev.
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Árpád was the Grand Prince of the Hungarians, who led us into where we are in Europe today. He name is Turkic, as was the first Hungarian King, Vajk, who took the Christianized name István, much like Oghuz Turks took Arab/Islamic names but still have separate Turkic origin names. Byzantine Emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus speaks of Árpád as the "great prince of Turkey" (ὁ μέγας Τουρκίας ἄρχων) when referring to him and Hungary.
Our national anthem speaks of Bendegúz, a Hunnic chieftain (Turkic name origin munčuq, munʒuq, minʒaq, bunčuq, bonʒuq, mončuq), and how God granted his sons a home in the Carpathian, and the flourishing of descendants of Árpád:
Őseinket felhozád
Kárpát szent bércére,
Általad nyert szép hazát
Bendegúznak vére.
S merre zúgnak habjai
Tiszának, Dunának,
Árpád hős magzatjai
Felvirágozának.
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Yup. It was already talked about in other threads of TA. Kiev was founded by Khazars as trading outpost where Slavic and Viking tribesmen, among others, were coming to trade their products.
Khazars founded it and were levying good tax. They were very rich, so you understand the financial source of the khagan's huge tent made from imported Chinese silk and the golden globe on top of it which symbolized his glory and rule (which the Oghuz eyed to take over, hence origin of kızıl elma phrase).
Claiming the International
by Arlene B. Tickner, David L. Blaney
p.89
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