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Kecskemét is capital of Little Cumania in Alföld region:
Early history of Kecskemét from the wikipedia:
"The first archaeological trace of a human in the area is about five thousand years old. The Sarmatians invaded the area in the first century B.C.; since then the area has been continuously inhabited by a variety of cultures. János Hornyik, the first town historian, believed that the settlement known as Partiskum of the Sarmatian Jazygian was here. Contemporary consensus among historians is that it is more likely permanent settlement occurred only after the Hungarian conquest. "
The first tragedy started in 13. century when mongols are massacred and destroyed the local hungarians:
"At the beginning of the 13th century, there were seven villages in the area, each with a population of 200–300 formed near the village church, a typical rural pattern. They were all destroyed by the Mongol Invasion."
And unfortunatelly this is the end of the hungarian culture of Kecskemét. The first problems are started when this unpopulated city (hungarians are extinct) became the capital of cumans who have migrated and settled there in the 13. century:
"Some of the villages revived at the time of the Cumanians' colonization."
These cumans were real tyrants of this region and these nomad mongoloid pagan asians from Kecskemét opressed christian hungarians very often:
"A 30-40 ezres kun lakosság nagy része letelepedtek tehát Magyarország keleti részein, ám eredeti nomadizáló, rabló életmódjukat megtartották, így hamarosan heves összetűzésekre került sor az alföldi magyarok és a vad ázsiai nép között. "
Translate:
"most of the 30000-40000 cuman population have settled in the eastern part of Hungary, although they continued their nomadic, robber lifestyle, so there were many fight between alföld hungarians and these savage asian folk"
Source:
http://tortenelemcikkek.hu/node/227
"The Cumans then left for the Balkans and the Second Bulgarian Empire, going on a rampage of destruction through Hungary "equal to that which Europe had not experienced since the incursions of the Mongols."[13]:37[56]"
"The Cuman tribes subsequently settled throughout the Great Hungarian Plain, creating two regions incorporating the name Cumania (Kunság in Hungarian): Greater Cumania (Nagykunság) and Little Cumania (Kiskunság). Six of these tribes were the Borchol (Borscol), who settled in county of Temes (the Borchol clan was also active around Rus'; they were also a tribe of the Golden Horde mentioned as Burcoylu); Csertan, who settled in Little Cumania; Olas, who settled in Greater Cumania; Iloncsuk, who settled in Little Cumania; Kor, who settled in the county of Csanad and the sixth being, possibly, Koncsog[14]:44[34]:174[58]"
Important to note:
"The Cumans were different in every way to the local population of Hungary – their appearance, attire, and hairstyle set them apart. "
Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumans
Interesting fact that many jews migrated here in this time:
"The town's active economic life and relatively dense population attracted more traders, craftsmen and residents, including Jews who became an important part of the town."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kecskem%C3%A9t
Fact: in medieval age this city was populated by these jewish mongoloid non hungarian mixed peoples. But this tragedy is not the last!
Everyone knows that in 16. century ottomans invaded and destroyed Hungary, mostly in central parts. Destruction of hungarian areas (% map):
According to many legends these jewish-mongoloid cumans from Kecskemét were collaborated with their turkic brother invaders and they enslaved local hungarians for a big money to sell them for middle east.
About ottoman destruction:
"As a consequence of the 150 years of constant warfare between the Christian states and Ottomans, population growth was stunted, and the network of ethnic Hungarian medieval settlements, with their urbanized bourgeois inhabitants, perished. The ethnic composition of the territory that had been part of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary was fundamentally changed through deportations and massacres, so that the number of ethnic Hungarians in existence at the end of the Ottoman period was substantially diminished.[8]"
"According to modern estimations, the proportion of Hungarians in the Carpathian Basin was around 80% at the end of the 15th century, and non-Hungarians hardly were more than 20% to 25% of the total population.[15][16][17][18] The Hungarian population began to decrease at the time of the Ottoman conquest,[15][16] The decline of the Hungarians was due to the constant wars, Ottoman raids, famines, and plagues during the 150 years of Ottoman rule.[15][16][19] The main zones of war were the territories inhabited by the Hungarians, so the death toll depleted them much faster than other nationalities.[15][19]"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottoma...e_Ottoman_rule
But in early 17. century the glorious hungarian nation take revenge on Kecskemét and their foreign rulers. When the inveded the city they massacred most of them. But the situation was bad because this region was unpopulted because of wars with ottomans and there were no hungarians here. Later many romanian, serbian, gypsie people migrated to city and became citizen and of course descedants of jewish-mongoloid cumans are returned back too and they are here until the present day.
Another fact: cumans were separatist in 1918-1920 when Trianon happened and they wanted an own territory outside of Hungary and they betrayed hungarians again. Stears is historian and he can confirm it too.
So basically many hungarians have bad opinion on Kecskemét and the hungarian society don't consider them real hungarians since they are descedants of traitors and magyarized foreigners. And what happened with jewish-mongoloid cuman survivors? Nobody knows.... but maybe their blood is in the locals to make them traitors again.
An user from Kecskemét said that:
I think he get this information from his own town, many of them are gypsie admixed turanids:
Fortunatelly the real hungarian patriots like Stears live with us to reveal their anti-hungarian evil plan.
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