Slovakian traditional folk dance 6: Csiko cardas
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Dear all, we lived together in the same kingdom for long-long time... No wonder we have many similarities. Yes, both nations influenced the other. There are many things in Hungarian culture of Slavic origin, and also Hungarians influenced the neighboring Slavic cultures. Csikó Csárdás has Hungarian origin. And yes, Hungarians and Slovaks genetically close to each other, because they lived together for hundreds of years.
I don't know why is this hatred necessary.
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Um... Dig into history and you'll find that Ruthenians were acctually living on those spaces and many years later Hungarians came. You are all dum if you put boreders on culture because it's imposible to do that. And btw in Croatia people dance also csardas, so I guess by your theory they also stole dance? There are bunch of people from north who migratet to south and they were wearing culture...
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@szerszamos no dear hungar, you stole it from them! Actually You dont have no own culture !!!!
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@Ms1100101 don't trust slovaks.....they have no own culture so they are steeling it from their former hungarian masters !!!!!
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@szerszamos shut up hungar, your dances, costumes and all the tradition you have doesnt look very mongolian, does it!!! :)
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fucken slovaks.....trying to steal hungarian culture !!! bunch of thiefs and liars.....csardas is HUNGARIAN !!!
HAJRÁ MAGYAROK ......
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andrisvk you are fascist and racist after your comments = ??? wtf??? I am absolutelly NOT...
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What does it mean Csiko cardas in slovak lenguage?
For me the interaction of the cutures is normal. So I do not have any problem if a slovak dance or his name has hungarian origin.
But your comment is qualifying you....
Hungarians: Dig deep enough into your family history and you will find a Slovak
Slovaks: Dig deep enough into your history and you will find a Hungarian.
Like it or not we are the same people with a different language.
boborko79 2 years ago 13
Of course, csarda doesn't mean anything is slovak.
However, if you sit in csarda and somebody put szalonna (slanina), sonka (sunka), so (sol), cukor (cukor) and palinka (palenka) on your asztal (stol) and you see puszta (pusta) or just utca (ulica) through ablak (oblok) and you feel like kiraly(kral) then you understand how much both nations share and how also Hungarians borrow words from Slovaks.
Borevit 2 years ago 7