Session: #303

Theme & Session Format

Theme:
6. Embedded in European archaeology: the Carpathian Basin
Session format:
Regular session

Title & Content

Title:
CANCELLED The Archaeology of Magyar Raids in Western and Eastern Europe
Content:
In the 9th and 10th centuries the highly mobile, mounted cavalry of Magyar raiders dominated the battlefields against Western and Eastern European armies. Only with the famous Battle at the Lech in AD 955 the East-Frankish King Otto I put an end to nomad incursions into Western Europe, while attacks on the Byzantine Empire continued until AD 970.
Whereas the contemporaneous “Viking raids” are almost omnipresent in the scholarly and public discourse, the “Magyar raids” are comparably little established. Nevertheless, material evidence of the Magyar can be found both as direct evidence in the context of single finds and graves and as indirect evidence in the form of fortifications as attempts of countermeasures. In various regions the interaction between Magyar and other ethnicities is archaeologically visible through a hybridisation of material culture, in particular relating to weaponry and martial attire. On the Eastern spheres of the continent e.g., evidence of Viking and Magyar warfare even merge in joint campaigns and court services performed in territories from Scandinavia to the Kievan Rus and Byzantium.
This session wants to discuss the Magyar evidence in Western and Eastern Europe between the poles of warfare and cultural adaptation (in the light of the written sources) during the period preceding the settlement of the Carpathian Basin and especially at the dawn of the Kingdom of Hungary. The session will address the following questions:

What is the material evidence of the Magyar within the Carpathian Basin?
How do we interpret Magyar armoury from different contexts found outside their homelands?
Which fighting techniques made the Magyar raiders so successful on the battlefield?
What countermeasures have been undertaken by their opponents?
Is it possible to identify plundered objects from Eastern and Western Europe in the Carpathian Basin?
Can we pinpoint the interfaces of technology transfer and cultural adaption?
Keywords:
Magyar raids, Kingdom of Hungary, Magyar armoury and fighting techniques, early medieval warfare, fortresses and fortifications
Session associated with MERC:
yes
Session associated with CIfA:
no
Session associated with SAfA:
no
Session associated with CAA:
no
Session associated with DGUF:
no
Session associated with other:

Organisers

Main organiser:
Thorsten Lemm (Germany) 1
Co-organisers:
Sven Kalmring (Germany) 1
Charlotte Hedenstierna-Jonson (Sweden) 2
Csete Katona (Hungary) 3
Affiliations:
1. Centre for Baltic and Scandinavian Archaeology, Stiftung Schleswig-Holsteinische Landesmuseen Schloss Gottorf, Schleswig
2. Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, Uppsala University
3. Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University, Budapest