Another widely circulated story says that in Vienna, Austria, in 1683, a Jewish baker made bagels and presented them to Polish king Jan III Sobieski to commemorate the Polish king's victory over the Turks that year. Legend has it that the baker made bread in the shape of stirrups to commemorate the key role played by cavalry in this victory. In fact, the traditional handmade bagel is not a standard circle, but a stirrup shape. However, this may also be because the bagel is squeezed on the baking tray after it is made, resulting in deformation.
After all, these are just legends, and the more common view is that the word bagel comes from the Yiddish word beugal(bügel), which means bagel.
In Brick Lane, London, the local bakery has been selling bagels since the middle of the19th century, and the locals call bagels beigel.
/kloc-During the 1980s, German Jewish immigrants introduced the method of making bagels to the Lower East Side of Manhattan, new york, where it quickly became popular and even became a symbol of new york City. The same phenomenon happened in Montreal. Around 1920, bagels were still very rare in the United States. However, in the last two or three decades of the 20th century, bagels quickly became popular in the United States. Today, bagels have become one of the most popular breakfast foods in the world.