No, Hungary practices citizenship by "jus sanguis" by blood. Not by land. You have to be born to Hungarian citizens to acquire citizenship.
Section 4(3) of the Act on Nationality permits ethnic Hungarians (defined as persons "at least one of whose relatives in ascendant line was a Hungarian citizen") to obtain citizenship on preferential terms after one year of residence. In addition, the "Status Law" of 2001 grants certain privileges to ethnic Hungarians living in territories that were once part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. It permits them to obtain an identification card but does not confer the right to full Hungarian citizenship. According to the latest Citizenship Law adopted in 2010, anybody, possessing certain evidences (certificates, documents) of his or her Hungarian roots from around the World can apply for Hungarian Citizenship. The interview is lead in Hungarian either in Hungary or at one of the Consulates abroad.
If you have parents that emigrated from Hungary, acquiring Hungarian citizenship and obtaining a Hungarian passport is relatively easy and inexpensive (around $300 Cdn at this time), assuming you have proof of your ancestry and other relevant Canadian documents that are required for the application.
She is half Hungarian half American. Her mother Jaid's parents are both Hungarian but her dad's side is all American.
Yes. Paul Newman was 3/4 Hungarian. Father was 1/2 Hungarian-Jewish and mother Hungarian-christian. The wast majority of hungarians are very mixed, "true hungarians" being in minority. Therefore PN is no exception from average Hungarian. L.S./Stockholm Another mixed Hungarian
its depend on the parents nationality.
His parents are South African.
Jewish
Peter Andres parents are Greek
Gabrielle Union's parents are Haitian.
they are australian
amricans
English