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Why did the Huns disappear when they went to Europe?
The Huns who were driven away by the Han Dynasty and the Hungarians who appeared in Europe are of the same strain.

After European scientists excavated a Hungarian tomb in Budapest, Hungary, they found that its burial custom was very similar to that of Xiongnu tombs in Mongolia, and the results of ethnic testing showed that it was Caucasian-Mongolian mixed.

Comparing the DNA sequence of Huns in Hulaha Valley of Mongolia with the distribution of people in the world today, it is found that the people who enjoy the DNA sequence of Huns are mainly distributed in Europe, and a few are distributed in Uzbekistan in Central Asia.

L-type was found in the Y chromosome haplotype of Hungarians, which is rare in Europe and North Asia grassland, but common in Central Asia, India and Pakistan. The above-mentioned L-type (paternal line) and Xiongnu mitochondrial DNA (maternal line) were indeed found in tombs excavated in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan around the 5th century, which proved this point. This means that the Huns were already mixed with Central Asia when they became Hungarians.