15 research outputs found
A magyarországi kis- és közepes vállalkozások digitális tevékenysége az Európai Uniós csatlakozás tavaszán
A cikk a Budapesti Corvinus Egyetem Kisvállalkozás-fejlesztĂ©si Központjának 2004 tavaszán lefolytatott, a Gazdasági Ă©s KözlekedĂ©si MinisztĂ©rium megrendelĂ©sĂ©re kĂ©szĂtett kutatás eredmĂ©nyeit tartalmazza. A szerzĹ‘k kutatásuk során arra vállalkoztak, hogy az EurĂłpai UniĂł több tagállamában 2002-ben Ă©s 2003-ban elvĂ©gezett e-business w@tch The European e-Business Report, 2003 empirikus felmĂ©rĂ©sre alapozva, a tĂ©rbeli Ă©s idĹ‘beli összehasonlĂthatĂłság feltĂ©teleit megteremtve, helyzetelemzĂ©st adjanak a magyar kis- Ă©s közĂ©pvállalati szektor digitális tevĂ©kenysĂ©gĂ©rĹ‘l
Leprosy in the 10th–13th century AD in Eastern Hungary
In the examination of the skeletons of past human populations, the various
aspects of the pathological changes provide useful information about their living
circumstances and may be indicators of their health conditions. The purpose of this
study is two-fold: firstly, to review the published cases of the osseous leprosy in
Eastern Hungary, and secondly, to present a new case dated to the 10–13th century of a
region of present-day Eastern Hungary. In this region 8 cases have already been
published from the 10–12th centuries. The new case of osseous leprosy (HajdúdorogSzállásföldek)
– from the 12–13th centuries – is housed at the Jósa András Múzeum in
NyĂregyháza. The paleopathological investigation was carried out using macroscopic
observation and the isolation and analysis of DNA for the detection of Mycobacterium
leprae was carried out in London. The bone changes were manifested in the skull
Az autochtonitás hatása az Alföld honfoglalás kori (10. századi) népességére
The present paper deals with the 10th century population history of the Hungarian Great Plain. Our attention was primarily focused on the proportion of the 10th century Hungarian conquerors and the local populations. As the craniological results showed, the percentage of the local population might have been 57%, while that of the immigrants might have presented a smaller ratio (43%). The components of the local population were also estimated back to the previous one thousand years. According to these examinations, the characteristic features of the population surviving in the Great Plain were mainly suggestive of the Sarmatian and Germanic eras. The immigrants of the Late Avar period preceding the age of the Hungarian conquest did not seem to have been of the same importance
A migration-driven model for the historical spread of leprosy in medieval Eastern and Central Europe
Comparing skull formation of the Hungarian (Hortobágy) Zackel sheep breed by geometrics morphometrics
This work seeks to explore the morphological changes of the Hungarian (Hortobágy) Zackel sheep's skull, which occurred in the past 50–70 years. In this study, we compared individuals skull forms by geometric morphometric methods. The origin of the breed is not known, we do not know when entering the Carpathian Basin. Therefore, the comparison involved the only known early archaeological findings. We have shown that there is no difference between each period colour variations, but over time change has occurred in the skull formation of the breed