Early history of the Magyars '', the only
chronicle which mentions Menumorut The most important source of the
Magyars' early history is a work known as
De Administrando Imperio, written by the
Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII around 952. According to the emperor, the Magyars "lived together with" the
Khazars "for three years, and fought in alliance" with them for an unspecified time. The text suggests that the Magyars were once subjected to the
Khazar Khaganate, the dominant power of the lands between the rivers
Dnieper and
Volga, but modern historians debate whether their subjection lasted only for a couple of years, as the emperor states, or for a longer period. In the same area, three or four local variants of the
Saltovo-Mayaki archaeological culture, which represented semi-nomadic groups, emerged in the western regions of the
Eurasian steppes in the second half of the 8th century. Internal strife and attacks by neighboring tribes caused the decline of the Khaganate in the early 9th century. The Magyars were among the Khazars' subject peoples who seceded, settling in the
Pontic steppes to the north of the
Black Sea. According to Emperor Constantine VII, the
Kabars, who "were of the race" of the Khazars, also rebelled against the Khaganate and joined the Magyars. This event occurred before 881, because in that year the Magyars and the Kabars invaded
East Francia, according to the longer version of the
Annals of Salzburg. The Magyars also intervened in a war between
Bulgaria and the
Byzantine Empire on the latter's behalf in about 894. The Bulgarians formed an alliance with the
Pechenegs, who dwelled in the lands east of the Magyars, and they jointly invaded the Pontic steppes and defeated the Magyars, forcing them to move to the
Carpathian Basin in search for a new homeland. Their
conquest of the Carpathian Basin is the principal subject of the
Gesta Hungarorum. The
Gesta was written after 1150 by an unidentified author, who is referred to as
Anonymus in modern scholars' works. He wrote primarily of the Magyars' battles with six local rulers, including Menumorut, who are not named in other
annals and chronicles. On the other hand, Anonymus did not write of
Svatopluk I of Moravia,
Luitpold of Bavaria, and other local rulers whose fights with the conquering Magyars were described in late 9th-century or early 10th-century sources.
Crișana on the eve of the Hungarian Conquest Burial sites unearthed at
Valea lui Mihai and other sites along the
Ier River containing remains of horses show that the
Avars settled in
Crișana shortly after their arrival in the Carpathian Basin in 567. However, few belt mounts decorated with griffins and tendrils or other such features of later Avar craftsmanship have been found in the same region. A distinct group of barrow cemeteries, or
tumulithe so-called "
Nușfalău–Someșeni" cemeteriesappeared in the lands bordering on "
Late Avar" cemeteries in the 8th century. In contrast with the Avars, who practised inhumation, the populations using these cemeteries
cremated their dead. "Nușfalău–Someșeni" cemeteries show similarities to some in the
East Slavic territories, but they yielded items similar to examples unearthed in West Slavic sites and to "Late Avar" belt mounts. The Avars' power collapsed after
Charlemagne and his commanders launched a series of campaigns against the western regions of the Carpathian Basin between 788 and 803. However, Avar groups survived the destruction of their empire:
Regino of Prüm wrote that the Magyars first "roamed the wildernesses of the Pannonians and the Avars" in the Carpathian Basin after their flight from the Pontic steppes. According to historian
András Róna-Tas, these wildernesses of the Avars
(solitudo Avarorum) were situated in the plains along the rivers Tisza and Danube, including Crișana. The collapse of the
Avar Khaganate enabled the development of
"Great" Moravia, a Slavic polity which emerged in the region of the
Middle Danube. Svatopluk I of Moravia, who reigned from 870 to 894, expanded his authority over a large region. Svatopluk's empire included Crişana, according to historian Gyula Kristó, since Emperor Constantine's reference to "great Moravia, the unbaptized" describes the rivers
Timiș,
Mureș,
Criș, Tisza and Toutis as within its territory. Archaeologist rejects Kristó's theory, because no archaeological finds from the late 9th century evidence Moravian influence in Crișana. The Bulgarians also benefited from the fall of the Avar Khaganate. One of the military commanders of
Omurtag of Bulgaria drowned in the Tisza, showing that Omurtag, who ruled between 814 and 831, attempted to expand his authority towards this river. The Bulgarians allied with the
Franks and invaded Moravia in both 863 and 883. Based on sources from around 870, the Persian scholar
Gardizi wrote of two peoples, the Nandarin and the Mirdāt, whose lands were ten days' journey apart. Historians István Bóna and
György Györffy identify the Nandarins as Bulgarians (because
nándor was the
Hungarian exonym for the Bulgarians), and the Mirdāt as Moravians. If their identifications are valid, the distance between Bulgaria and Moravia was about circa 870. ==Anonymus's narration==