https://blog.myheritage.com/2019/08/hungarys-secret-new-study-by-myheritage/
> 23% of the population of Budapest was jewish in 1910
> Budapest was considered the jewish Mecca of eastern Europe
>the mayor of Vienna Karl Lueger referred to Budapest as Judapest
>61 percent of the merchants in Hungary were jews
>58% of the book printers in Hungayry were jewish
>42% of the innkeepers in Hungayry were jewish
>48% of the doctors in hungayry were jewish
In the nineteenth century, the Neolog Jews were located mainly in the cities and larger towns. They arose in the environment of the latter period of the Austro-Hungarian Empire – generally a good period for upwardly mobile Jews, especially those of modernizing inclinations. In the Hungarian portion of the Empire, most Jews (nearly all Neologs and even most of the Orthodox) adopted the Hungarian language as their primary language and viewed themselves as "Magyars of the Jewish persuasion".[96] The Jewish minority which to the extent it is attracted to a secular culture is usually attracted to the secular culture in power, was inclined to gravitate toward the cultural orientation of Budapest.