Hungarian runes or Rovás (Székely Rovásírás) are are thought to have descended from the Turkic script (Kök Turki) used in Central Asia, though some scholars believe the Hungarian Rovás pre-date the Turkic script. They were used by the Székler Magyars in Hungary until the 11th century. In remote parts of Transylvania however, the runes were still used up until the 1850s. During the 20th century there was a revival of interest in the alphabet.
Hungarian (Magyar), a Uralic language with about 15 million speakers in Hungary, Romania, Serbia, Ukraine and Slovakia. There are also many people of Hungarian origin in the UK and other European countries, the USA, Canada and Australia.
(Ezt) az Úr születése utáni 1501. évben írták. Mátyás, János, István kovácsok csinálták. Mátyás mester (és) Gergely mester csinálták [uninterpretable].
(This) was written in the 1501st year of our Lord. The smiths Matthias, John (and) Stephen did (this). Master Matthias (and) Master Gergely did [uninterpretable]
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Hungarian_script
Feher Taltos Traditional Hungarian Drummers (Regélő Fehér Táltos)
Information about Hungarian Runes
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Hungarian_script
http://www.solyommadar.hu
http://www.pararadio.hu/010326_196/rovas.html
http://books.google.com/books?id=TyK8azCqC34C&pg;=PA177&hl;=hu&source;=gbs_toc_r&cad;=3#v=onepage&q;&f;=false
Reading the Runes - The Hungarian Quarterly (in English)
http://www.hungarianquarterly.com/no157/080.html
Hungarian Runic Textprocessor (Freeware)
http://www.dsuper.net/~elehoczk/frmain.htm
Armenian, Avestan, Bassa (Vah), Beitha Kukju, Carian, Carpathian Basin Rovas, Coptic, Cyrillic, Dalecarlian runes, Elbsan, Etruscan, Fraser, Georgian (Asomtavruli & Nuskha-khucuri), Georgian (Mkhedruli), Glagolitic, Gothic, Greek, Hungarian Runes, Irish, Khazarian Rovas, Korean, Latin, Lycian, Lydian, Manchu, Meroïtic, Mongolian, N'Ko, Ogham, Old Church Slavonic, Oirat Clear Script, Old Italic, Old Permic, Orkhon, Phrygian, Pollard Miao, Runic, Santali, Somali, Sutton SignWriting, Tai Lue, Thaana, Todhri, Uyghur