Finno-Ugric countries - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Finno-Ugric_countriesThe Finno-Ugric countries are the three independent nation states with a national majority that speaks a Finno-Ugric language: Finland and Estonia, which are inhabited by Baltic Finnic peoples, and Hungary, which is majority Magyar. The three countries are represented in the Finno-Ugric Congress. They work together in funding research on Finno-Ugric topics and in protecting the minority rights of other Finno-Ugric-speaking nations that do not occupy sovereign states; collectively these have been
Finno-Ugric languages | Britannica
www.britannica.com › topic › Finno-Ugric-languagesFinno-Ugric languages, group of languages constituting much the larger of the two branches of a more comprehensive grouping, the Uralic languages (q.v.). The Finno-Ugric languages are spoken by several million people distributed discontinuously over an area extending from Norway in the west to the Ob River region in Siberia and south to the lower Danube River in Europe.
Ancient tribe Finno-Ugric peoples: DNA origins analysis - iGENEA
www.igenea.com › en › ancient-tribesMost Finno-Ugric ethnic groups, predominantly small and micro-ethnic, are widespread on the territory of Russia. They belong to the macro-grouping of the Uralic peoples. Today, a total of 12 Finno-Ugric peoples live in Russia, 10 of them in the European part and 2 in Western Siberia. The most densely populated Finno-Ugric communities live outside Russia, namely Hungarians (14.5 million), Finns (5.1 million) and Estonians (1.1 million) in their own states.
Finno-Ugric languages - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Finno-Ugric_languagesFinno-Ugric or Finno-Ugrian, is a traditional grouping of all languages in the Uralic language family except the Samoyedic languages. Its formerly commonly accepted status as a subfamily of Uralic is based on criteria formulated in the 19th century and is criticized by some contemporary linguists such as Tapani Salminen and Ante Aikio as inaccurate and misleading. The three most-spoken Uralic languages, Hungarian, Finnish, and Estonian, are all included in Finno-Ugric, although linguistic roots
Finno-Ugric countries - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finno-Ugric_countriesThe Finno-Ugric countries are the three independent nation states with a national majority that speaks a Finno-Ugric language: Finland and Estonia, which are inhabited by Baltic Finnic peoples, and Hungary, which is majority Magyar. The three countries are represented in the Finno-Ugric Congress. They work together in funding research on Finno-Ugric topics and in protecting the minority rights of other Finno-Ugric-speaking nations that do not occupy sovereign states; collectively these hav…
Finno-Ugric | people | Britannica
www.britannica.com › topic › Finno-UgricIn Finland: Ethnic groups. Peoples of Uralic (specifically Finno-Ugric) stock dominated two settlement areas. Those who entered southwestern Finland across the Gulf of Finland were the ancestors of the Hämäläiset (Tavastians, or Tavastlanders), the people of southern and western Finland (especially the historic region of Häme); those who entered from the southeast were….