. . . . "Hont-P\u00E1zm\u00E1ny (Hunt-Poznan) was the name of a gens (\"clan\") in the Kingdom of Hungary. The Gesta Hunnorum et Hungarorummentions that the ancestors of the family, the brothers Hont (Hunt) and P\u00E1zm\u00E1ny (Pazman), originally from the Duchy of Swabia in the Holy Roman Empire, arrived in the late 10th century to the court of Grand Prince G\u00E9za of the Magyars: The clan Hontpaznan was mentioned for the first time in 1226 in a charter. Several prominent families of the kingdom (e.g., Szentgy\u00F6rgyi and Forg\u00E1ch) descended from the gens."@en . . . . . . . . . . "Swabian"@en . . "Hungarian"@en . "House of Ujhelyi"@en . "Hont-P\u00E1zm\u00E1ny (Hunt-Poznan) was the name of a gens (\"clan\") in the Kingdom of Hungary. The Gesta Hunnorum et Hungarorummentions that the ancestors of the family, the brothers Hont (Hunt) and P\u00E1zm\u00E1ny (Pazman), originally from the Duchy of Swabia in the Holy Roman Empire, arrived in the late 10th century to the court of Grand Prince G\u00E9za of the Magyars: The next arrivals were Hunt and Pazman, two half-brothers, courageous knights of Swabian origin. These two and their retainers had been journeying through Hungary with the intention of passing over the sea when they were detained by Duke G\u00E9za, and finally they girded King Stephen with the sword of knighthood at the river Hron, after the German custom. The clan Hontpaznan was mentioned for the first time in 1226 in a charter. Several prominent families of the kingdom (e.g., Szentgy\u00F6rgyi and Forg\u00E1ch) descended from the gens. Based on the use of the coat of arms, it is suspected that the Hunyadi family also came from the genus Hontp\u00E1zm\u00E1ny. Bonfini [in: M\u00E1ty\u00E1s kir\u00E1ly, T\u00EDz k\u00F6nyv a magyar t\u00F6rt\u00E9netb\u0151l (Magyar Helikon, Budapest, 1959)] recorded the family tradition that the Hunyadis came from Italy (\"from the Romans\"), more precisely: from the Lacedaemonians who founded a colony in Italy. It is well known that the only Spartan-founded colony was Taras (present-day Taranto) in southern Apulia. The haplotype of Hunyadi Y-DNA has long been known but has not been published. If it matched the Honp\u00E1zm\u00E1ny\u2019s (as Serbian researchers had already guessed in 2019), it would rehabilitate the much-scolded Bonfini as well. The Y-chromosomal DNA haplogroup [E1b1b1a1b1a6a1c (E-BY4281)] of the last two male members of the Hunyadi family (published: Heliyon, November 16, 2022) shows a match with the YDNA of the Hontp\u00E1zm\u00E1ny genus."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "House of Szegi"@en . . . . . "House of F\u00F6d\u00E9m\u00E1si"@en . . . "17381004"^^ . . . "c. 983"@en . "House of Boz\u00F3ky"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "200"^^ . "House of Csalomjai"@en . . . . . . . . "House of B\u00E9nyi"@en . "Hont-P\u00E1zm\u00E1ny"@en . . "1124339936"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Genus Hont-P\u00E1zm\u00E1ny"@en . . . . . "House of Czibak"@en . . . . . . . . "Conte Panzano"@en . . "House of P\u00E1zm\u00E1ny"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "House of Garadnai-Pog\u00E1ny"@en . . . . . . . . . . "16270"^^ . . . . "House of Besztercei"@en . . . . .