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Devastation is a first-person shooter video game by American developer Digitalo Studios, released for Windows and Linux in 2003. The game takes place in an impoverished, dystopian near-future Earth, pitting an underground group of rebels against an oppressive, all-powerful mega-corporation .
Hódmezővásárhely Magyar bank. Before the Mongol invasion of Hungary, at least seven villages with churches existed in the area. After the devastation caused by the Mongols, more villages were established, but these later became victims of the Turkish invasion. The territories of these villages were later absorbed by Hódmezővásárhely as ...
Devastation (video game), a first-person shooter video game developed by Digitalo Studios, released in February 2003; Mortal Kombat: Devastation, a cancelled Mortal Kombat film; Devastation (comics), a fictional character and DC Comics villain in the Wonder Woman comic book; The Transformers: Devastation, a six-issue Transformers comic miniseries
The Hungarians had first learned about the Mongol threat in 1229, when King Andrew II granted asylum to some fleeing Rus' boyars.Some Magyars (Hungarians), left behind during the main migration to the Pannonian basin, still lived on the banks of the upper Volga (it is believed by some that the descendants of this group are the modern-day Bashkirs, although these people now speak a Turkic ...
The Hungarian Wikipedia (Hungarian: Magyar Wikipédia) is the Hungarian/Magyar version of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Started on 8 July 2003 by Péter Gervai, this version reached the 300,000-article milestone in May 2015. [1] The 500,000th article was born on 16 February 2022. [2]
The siege of Budapest or battle of Budapest was the 50-day-long encirclement by Soviet and Romanian forces of the Hungarian capital of Budapest, near the end of World War II. ...
Đura Hardi, "Cumans and Mongols in the Region of Srem in 1241–1242: a Discussion on the Extent of Devastation", in Истраживања, Vol. 27, 2016, pp. 84–105. Gábor Hatházi, Katalin Szende, "Ethnic Groups and Cultures in Medieval Hungary", in Zsolt Visy, László Bartosiewicz (eds.), Hungarian Archaeology at the Turn of the ...
The Magyar tribes led by Árpád, forced out of their original homeland north of Bulgaria by Tsar Simeon after the Battle of Southern Buh, settled in the territory at the end of the 9th century displacing the founding Bulgarian settlers of the towns of Buda and Pest, [19] [60] and a century later officially founded the Kingdom of Hungary. [19]