. . . . . "Un betyar, bety\u00E1r ou betyare (en hongrois : bety\u00E1r, au pluriel : bety\u00E1rok) d\u00E9signe au XIXe si\u00E8cle dans le royaume de Hongrie et dans l'Empire austro-hongrois un brigand de la grande plaine hongroise. La l\u00E9gende de ces hors-la-loi, comme celle de Robin des Bois, des ha\u00EFdouks ou des klephtes grecs, en fait des h\u00E9ros qui \u00AB volaient les riches pour donner aux pauvres \u00BB."@fr . "banditry, highway robbery, horse theft mail, robbery, train robbery"@en . "The bety\u00E1rs (Hungarian: bety\u00E1r (singular) or bety\u00E1rok (plural)), were the highwaymen of the 19th century Kingdom of Hungary. The \"bety\u00E1r\" word is the Hungarian version of \"Social Bandit\". (The word itself is of Ottoman Turkish origin:\"bekar\" means 'bachelor' or 'unmarried man' in Turkish.) Several bety\u00E1rs have become legendary figures who in the public mind fought for social justice. The most famous Hungarian bety\u00E1rs were S\u00E1ndor R\u00F3zsa from the Great Hungarian Plain, J\u00F3ska Sobri, J\u00F3ska Savany\u00FA from Bakony and M\u00E1rton Vidr\u00F3czky from M\u00E1tra. Lviv Batayr's culture (\"\u0431\u0430\u0442\u044F\u0440\" (batiar)- ukrainian ) in the west part of Ukraine (Lviv, Ivano-Frankivsk, Zakarpatia, Ternopil oblast) was spread during the 19th and 20th centuries."@en . . . "Early-late 19th century"@en . . . "Bety\u00E1rs"@en . . . . . . . "32404282"^^ . . . "3037"^^ . . "Hungarian and Slovak"@en . . . "Un betyar, bety\u00E1r ou betyare (en hongrois : bety\u00E1r, au pluriel : bety\u00E1rok) d\u00E9signe au XIXe si\u00E8cle dans le royaume de Hongrie et dans l'Empire austro-hongrois un brigand de la grande plaine hongroise. La l\u00E9gende de ces hors-la-loi, comme celle de Robin des Bois, des ha\u00EFdouks ou des klephtes grecs, en fait des h\u00E9ros qui \u00AB volaient les riches pour donner aux pauvres \u00BB."@fr . "Hungary and Slovakia"@en . . . . . . "Bety\u00E1r"@fr . . . . . "1084501978"^^ . "The bety\u00E1rs (Hungarian: bety\u00E1r (singular) or bety\u00E1rok (plural)), were the highwaymen of the 19th century Kingdom of Hungary. The \"bety\u00E1r\" word is the Hungarian version of \"Social Bandit\". (The word itself is of Ottoman Turkish origin:\"bekar\" means 'bachelor' or 'unmarried man' in Turkish.) Several bety\u00E1rs have become legendary figures who in the public mind fought for social justice. The most famous Hungarian bety\u00E1rs were S\u00E1ndor R\u00F3zsa from the Great Hungarian Plain, J\u00F3ska Sobri, J\u00F3ska Savany\u00FA from Bakony and M\u00E1rton Vidr\u00F3czky from M\u00E1tra."@en . . . . "Bety\u00E1r"@en . . . . .