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  1. Taksony ( [ˈtɒkʃoɲ], also Taxis or Tocsun; [1] before or around 931 – early 970s) was the Grand Prince of the Hungarians after their catastrophic defeat in the 955 Battle of Lechfeld.

  2. Nov 16, 2022 · Taksony became the Grand Prince of the Hungarians just or shortly after the Battle of Lechfeld, but his authority must have been only nominal over some regions of the Carpathian Basin inhabited by the Hungarians. During his rule a large number of Pechenegs and Khalyzians immigrated to the territory of the future Hungary.

  3. Jul 8, 2022 · Compare DNA and explore genealogy for Taksony (Arpadhazi) of Hungary born abt. 931 Szekesfehervar, Fejer Hungary died 972 including ancestors + descendants + 1 photos + Y-chromosome DNA + more in the free family tree community.

    • Male
    • Unknown (Von Kumanien) of Cumenia
  4. Taksony ( [ˈtɒkʃoɲ], also Taxis or Tocsun; before or around 931 – early 970s) was the Grand Prince of the Hungarians after their catastrophic defeat in the 955 Battle of Lechfeld. In his youth he had participated in plundering raids in Western Europe, but during his reign the Hungarians only targeted the Byzantine Empire. Read more on Wikipedia.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TaksonyTaksony - Wikipedia

    Taksony ( German: Taks) is a town of roughly 6,000 inhabitants roughly 23 kilometers south of Budapest, on the bank of the Ráckeve branch of the Danube known as Kisduna (Little Danube).

  6. Taksony became the Grand Prince of the Hungarians just or shortly after the Battle of Lechfeld, but his authority must have been only nominal over some regions of the Carpathian Basin inhabited by the Hungarians.

  7. If this report is reliable, Taksony was one of the few Hungarian leaders to survive the battlefield. Modern historians, including Zoltán Kordé and Gyula Kristó, suggest that Fajsz abdicated in favor of Taksony around that time.