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The Mesopotamian colonization of Turkestan in around 3800-3700 BCE started also from the area of Urmia Lake is already scientifically proven. These colonies played important role in the creation of the Hunnish people and writing. Huns thought Chinese to writing in about 2800-2700 BCE. The first Central Asian rovás reminiscences were found exactly in Xinjiang, China the borderland of Gobi Desert in two round graves from the 3rd millennia, the time of Chinese dynasty Xia, The graves kept Europid, blonde people, sawed pants, leader shoes and felt hat. The found carved writings identified as "Tielo, or Hunnish" by Chinese scholars. These are the findings already analysed from genetic point of view, as evidences of the Eastern colonization and move from Mesopotamia. Today's Western culture is based on Roman sources, being inheritors of Etrurians both in architecture, culture, and basic state organization. The origin of Etrurians is mostly unknown. However any laic or scholar Hungarian can get an inevitable answer observing archaeological findings written in Etrurian runic writing. The one to one similarity with the Hungarian rovás and even more, with the Hungarian language is so big, that based on this high rate of likeliness, we can say, the Etrurian and the Hungarian language is the same. The next conclusion even being to weird is that Etrurian culture is the culture of old Hungarians. Romans took over from the old Hungarian culture that was handed over to today's "West". ![]() Hungarian runes ![]() Etruscan runes Aside from physiology, recent genetic research has provided clues about national origins and kinships. The CMH haplotype is the most common haplotype among Iraqi Kurds, Southern and Central Italians and Hungarians. Within the blood group system attributed to Landsteiner, the rate of the typically Hungarian "0" and "B" blood types (31.05% and 17.90%) is off from that of Indo-European and Finno-Ugric nations, but is within the range found among Central Asian Turkic nations. Besides this, there is another blood type among Hungarians, the Diego [A+], present in no other people of Europe. The "Mongolian spot", almost unknown in Europe, has 22.6% occurrence, and Lactose intolerance (missing lactose digestive enzyme), rare elsewhere, is at 37% among Hungarians, as in Central Asia. The skin splinter system of Hungarians has Central Asian characteristic (low bend rates, but high vortices). The Gm-marker research pointed out that the Gm abst and Gm afb3 gene markers occurring among Hungarians are missing among other European populations. International Mitochondrial DNA research has also recently identified additional Central Asian characteristics among Hungarians. Hungarians had to come from Central Asia or had to be in contact with the Central Asian nations to the genetic results, also supporting the concepts based on historical reports, that the main groups of the people forming the Hungarian nations had to be somewhere in the land of the Fertile Crescent and Central Asia, among Sumerians, Sabir, As-Alans, Yazigs, and their descendants. The results also prove the possible role of Hungarians in the Mediterranean expansions from the Eastern banks to West, explaining the Tzekel-Sicul-Székely similarities and the possible Etruscan connection. Sources:
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