Dentumoger

[4] Anonymus's report of the route taken by the Hungarians from Dentumoger towards present-day Hungary suggests that he placed it in the wider region of the middle course of the Volga River.

[5] On the other hand, the toponym is composed of two parts—Dentu which refers to the Don River, and moger which stands for the Magyar endonym of the Hungarians.

[3][7] Scythia is then a very great land, called Dentumoger, over towards the east, the end of which reaches from the north to the Black Sea.

On the far side, it has a river with great marshes, called the Don, where sables can be found in such extraordinary abondance that in that land not only nobles and commoners dress in them but also with which even ox-herds, swine-herds and shepherds adorn their raiment.

Scythia is very extensive in its length and breadth and the men who dwell there, commonly called Dentumoger, have right up to the present day never been subject to the sway of any emperor.