Click for Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia Forecast
--Go on a day trip out of Ulaanbaatar driving a tank, shooting different rifles and launching grenades!!! On the   way, enjoy a nice scenery from a beautiful mountain pass!!!
--Go on a tour to nature and nomadic families observing their routine lifestyle!!!...

--Just call to 98206816 or 976 98206816!!!

Available: consulting on route-planning, rent of strong tents, gas stoves, saddles, saddle bags, safety helmets, fishing gears and sleeping bags.
On August 14th, the shamans are to hold a spirit calling ceremony in "The 13th Century" complex found near Tsonjin Boldog Hill. It's at about 75km to east from Ulaanbaatar.
Support Mongolian people by using services provided by the Mongols themselves!!!"-Now, most foreign tourists enter and leave Mongolia with foreign-owned airlines or trains, stay at foreign accommodations, eat at foreign restaurants in Ulaanbaatar and travel in the country with foreign tour companies"/admitted Davaadorj Ts, the Minister of Infrastructure and Trade. 02.10.2007/.
Mongolia travel companions wanted:
30. Looking for people to travel by bike. Ideally following a river, from Ulaanbaatar/let's plan it together/. I'm flexible. A hiking tour would be great too. saraniort@yahoo.fr Tel: 95001082.  28: An Italian lady can go in coming days on a 4 or 5-day Central Eastern Mongolia tour;Read more...

Welcome to Mongolia!

Dear Guest,
Sain bainu?/ "Are you fine?"/. Ta saikhan namarjij bainu?/"Are you having a good autumn?"

It's me, Bolod, a Mongol man who runs a tour operator-the Bolod's Tours and Guesthouse in Mongolia.
Thank you for visiting my live website! It's about Mongolia and the Mongols.
Welcome to the ancestral heartland for more than 12 mln. Mongols who live now in 8 countries/Mongolia/2.7mln/, China/5.8-6.0mln/, Afghanistan/3.0-4.0mln/, Russia/0.8mln/, Iran, Burma, Kyrgyzstan and Pakistan/. ...If we can bring Herat's Moghols, Kyrgyzstan's Sart-Kalmyks, Kuko-nor's Mongols, Russia's Kalmyks and those Hazaras who are clearly of Mongol descent and who want it themselves, back to the central land of their ancestors ?! They wouldn't be coming to Mongolia as refugees, they will be here at home !  ... If Astana is bringing the ethnic Kazaks from different countries to Kazakhstan in order to make their country stronger, why Ulaanbaatar wouldn't consider to do the same?! We have enough land for everybody who wants to settle permanently in Mongolia for the ethnic reason. UN should help us too. When Soviet Union ended up with the splits, Germany has received ethnic Germans from Russia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine and other former republics too. Remember, Turkey received Turks from Bulgaria when Todor Jivkov changed his mind towards them. Ukraine and Russia welcome their ethnic kinsmen from the post-Soviet countries to settle in their countries.

We, the Mongols are even more separated than the ill-fated Kurdish people. Do we know any person, any family or any nation who is happy for being separated ?!

We invite you to visit the country and its people. You will be visiting a people with centuries-old nomadic lifestyle, listening to the absolute silence and breathing  the purest ever air  and seeing the eternal blue sky dominating over this beautiful land on Central Asian plateau:
green taiga forests, the second largest fresh water lake in Siberia, ancient burials, icy streams of crystal clear rivers,  in its north,
two-humped camels, towering sand dunes, green oases with saksaul trees, rocky mountains in scarsely green plains, natural formations of cliffs... in its South,
endless steppes, homeland of best horses, bird gathering at blue lakes, fishing rivers, numerous gazelles, volcanic craters... in its East,
snow capped mountains, great lakes, rock paintings, steep canyons, yak herds and massive sand dunes, mountain and field caves ... in its West!

Discover Mongolia with Bolod's Tours which operates since 1991! Stay comfortably in Bolod's guesthouses operate since 2000! It's a truly experienced native tour operator and guesthouse reccommended by Lonely Planet's "Mongolia" guidebook of 2001/page 139/ and 2005/pages 69, 72/ and its "Trans Siberian Railway" of 2006/p. 263/, "Mongoru"/in Japanese/ by Globe-Trotter/ of 2007-2008/page 56/, "Mongolie" by Petit Fute of 2008-2009/page 86/and on the www.mongoliatourism.gov.mn- the official tourism website of Mongolia.

What's now the situation with Mongolia's tourism like? As Mr. Davaadorj Ts, the Minister of the Manufacturing and Trade admitted on October 2nd, 2007, on TV, "-Now, most foreign tourists enter and leave Mongolia by foreign-owned airlines or trains, stay at foreign-owned accommodations, eat at foreign restaurants and travel with foreign tour companies". It's true, indeed, nowdays.
This country doesn't need foreign investments in fields where the Mongols are capable or must do businesses themselves. What kind of foreign investments does Mongolia indeed need? The country needs foreign investment in manufacturing and technology most!!! Mongolia's rulers must serve in the interests of their own people.

I'm almost one of patriots who want to remain in this  last homeland instead of emigrating abroad as too many Mongols do so. Exodus of its young population and export of Mongol women are the greatest threats to the further existense of  Mongols as a nation...
Nationwide mining boom and gold rush are the greatest threat to Mongolia's nature... The gold may feed the people for 50 years, while preserved Nature-Mother would be able do it for another 5000 years.

Thank you for taking your time visiting my modest website.

I will keep my website live and constantly updated.

Bolod

Some of Mongol-owned restaurants and canteens in Ulaanbaatar:
1. "
Avtai Sain Khaan", a Mongolian meals restaurant with high-quality service in Ulaanbaatar. Located opposite to the USA Embassy. Tel: 99116670.
2. "Ikh Mongol" restaurant\original Mongolian draft beer and food and european food\, Opening hours : 10am to 11pm, located opposite Asa Circus, Tel: 320450
3. "
Ikh Khuraldai" restaurant, located at 400meters to south from Peace Bridge on Chinggis Avenue, tel: 976-11-342511, 976-11-343553

4. "Modern  Nomads" restaurant. www.modernnomads.mn

Web: 
Some of Mongol-owned companies in Mongolia:
1. www.gmobile.mn G-Mobile is the first Mongol-owned cellular operator in Mongolia!!! I'm now with G-Mobile.
2. www.monos.mn - The company's great brand  is "Salimon".

3. "Mill House" LLC, the newest flour making factory: www.millhouse.mn
\continued\

Монголчуудын тухай сэтгэгдлүүд\Impressions of the Mongols\эх үүсвэрийг заалгүй хуулахыг хориглоно!!!
Сэтгэгдэл 1: "Two were Mongolian lamas in shabby robes of saffron and crimson, bound at the waist by twisted sashes of faded purple cloth. One lama had a crushed felt hat on his shaven head, the other was bare-headed, and both wore high, leather Mongol boots. The one with hat was tall and rather gaunt, with a long nose, and sunken cheeks below high cheekbones. The other was shorter and more thickset, with a broader face. Both might have been taken for American Indians. As we camp up, they were in the act of replacing their carved snuff-bottles in their belt-purses, having taken them out to exchange them with third man, who had just joined them.
The newcomer was a layman, with a frank, pleasant expression in contrast to the somewhat furtive looks of the lamas. He too would have resembled an American Indian except for the long, drooping moustache under his small, finely chiseled nose. Unlike the lamas, he was wearing a dark blue summer robe of heavy serge, with a red sash, a brown belt hat, and cloth boots. Though the features and dress of all three were so typically Mongol, and unlike anything we had seen in China, I thought I would try the experiment of greeting them in Chinese. The taller monk answered, with quite a strong accent, explaining that he, like many other lamas of the border regions I had visited, often had occasion to deal with the Chinese merchants in buying things for his temple, and had learned their language in that way.
pages 6, 7. "The Land of the Camel" by Schuiler Cammann. 1950. The Ronald Press Company. NewYork.

Сэтгэгдэл 2: " We found the Mongols to be a hospitable people with full, healthy-looking faces and often with handsome and intelligent intelligent features...
In the morning several Mongol men and women looked in on us and very kind-heartedly sewed the extensions on our sleeves and fixed knapsacks for us. The Chinese have a long way to go to match the Mongols in kindness...".
"The Chinese Agent In Mongolia" by Ma Ho-t'ien. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press, 1949.

Сэтгэгдэл 3: " Here, for the first time, we accosted representatives of pure Mongol race; truculent-looking rascals they seemed to us, after the reserved and rather timid Uriankhai/энэ тохиолдолд Тувачуудыг хэлж байна.А.Б/. The natural influence of the wild life and freedom of the open Mongolian plateau could be traced in their careless and reckless manner; they were loud-speaking, rough soldiery, used to a hard life, apt to bully those below them, but respectful to their superiors./page 260/
...Thus we never saw the Khan/of the Durbets/; and much to our regret, for he was a rare type of an hereditary prince of ancient stock, claiming direct descendent from Jenghis Khan himself. One evening two of his sons visited us, giving us thereby an idea of appearance of a Mongol of a good birth. After our dealings with the rift-raft of the herdsmen, with rough soldiers and with primitive hunters, we had grown accustomed to the idea that all Mongols were heavily built, rough, ill-mannered, ugly to look upon, and with leathery faces, but these two Mongol gentlemen astonished us by their indefinable look of breeding and by their charm of manner. Of average height, and lightly built, with clean, sharp-cut features, soft, dark, olive skin and small hands, they showed a marked contrast to their retainers. Their had the refined air, the politeness of manner, courteous style, which belongs only to those Mongols who are accustomed to rule...There is still "spirit" left in the Mongols, judjing by these two men of a good birth; they, at any rate, gave us no impression of decay or deterioration. Turned into the right channels, the Mongol Khans could wield great power to good effect. Even now the tide is turning, and when the nomads have realized their strength and regained their self-reliance, they may also regain their independence..."/pages 269, 270/.
"Unknown Mongolia"/a record of travel and exploration in North-West Mongolia and Dzungaria/ by Douglas Carruthers. 1913. London. Hutchinson & Co

Сэтгэгдэл 4: "Саяын хөдөөний монголчууд огт танихгүй хүнийг зочилсонд би их баярласан, сэтгэл минь их хөдөлсөн. Гэвч надад нэгэн гунигт бодол төрж байна. Тэд одоо мөхөөд байхгүй болсон миний ард түмнийг санагдуулчихлаа. Гайти арлын уугуул- монголжуу төрхтэй хүмүүсийн сүүлийн хэдхэн төлөөлөгчийн нэг нь би\Одоо тэнд чинь гол төлөв африкчууд болон миний ард түмнийг хядсан европчуудын үр садаас цөөн хүн байдаг\. Манайхан үнэндээ, яг саяын монголчууд\малчин 2 айлыг хэлж байна. А.Б\ шиг зочломтгой, цайлган зангаасаа болж мөхсөн юм. Өөрөөр хэлбэл харийнхан тэдний минь зочломтгой занг ашиглан арлыг маань эзлэн авсан юм даа. Бас тэд нар жаргаснаас хойш гадагшаа гардаггүй уламжлалтай байж. Энэ үеээр нь европчууд тэднийг минь жинхэнэ хяддаг байсан. Тэд минь хэт гэнэн, болгоомжгүй байж дээ...". Швейцарын парламентын гишүүн байсан гэх нэгэн авгай 2009 оны намар Төв аймгийн нутагт надад ярьсан билээ.

Сэтгэгдэл 5: "The houseboys, Chinese privates from the Sarachi district of central Suiyuan, tried to crowd into the mess hall, saying that if "that no-account" could come in, they could too. They recognized him as a Mongol by the scarlet vest he wore with his student uniform-no Chinese would wear anything as bright- and Sa-hsien people, as members of the first wave of Chinese migtation into the Mongol grazing lands, are the most open in their scorn of the people they dispossessed.
Their feeling was even more obvious next morning when Fred went to ask the cook for an extra plate of eggs to give Dunguerbo. "Mongol no good!" the Chinese servants said with emphasis. This annoyed us very much, as Dunguerbo had a far finer personality and a much more generous nature than most of the Chinese we had contact with up there"
page127, "The Land of the Camel" by Schuyler Cammann. The Ronald Press Company. New York. 1950.

Сэтгэгдэл 6: "...I call the whole thing a tragedy because it does not give either Chinese or Mongol fair chance. The Mongols at present are, as a race, at a standstill, if they are not dying. Yet with wise treatment they would become again withing 2 generations a proudand self-reliant people. The world needs more and more its pasture lands, to supply civilazation with wool and meat and hides. The Mongols, with Russia on one side of them and China on the other, are powerless. As a nation they are unarmed and incoherent.."
"The Desert Road to Turkestan" by Owen Lattimore. 1929, Boston.

Сэтгэгдэл 7: "Huc and after him, Prjevalsky have described the Tsaidam Mongols as morose and melancolic, speaking little-in fact, hardly better than animals. I was glad to find all those I met quite different from what the accounts of these travelers had caused me expect. Not only they showed themselves ready to do anything for me, but they expected themselves to make my stay agreeable, inviting me, or playing on a rough kind of banjo they manufacture themselves".
page 130, The Land of the Lamas" by Rockhill W.W/a journey into eastern Tibet and Mongolia in 1888-1889/.

Сэтгэгдэл 8: "Away in the distance we had seen some black spots from which faint columns of blue smoke were raising peacefully in the morning air. these were the yurts, or felt tents, of the Mongols, towards which we were making.. .. All round the sides of the tent boxes and cupboards were neatly arranged and at one end were some vases and images og Buddha. In the centre, was fireplace, situated directly beneath the hole of the place. I was charmed with the comfort of the place. The Chinese inns, at which I had so far had to put up, were cold and draughty. Here the sun came streaming in through the hole in the top, and there were no draughts whateever. Nor was there any dust; and this being the tent of a well-to-do Mongol, it was clean and neatly arranged"
-"Among the Celestials" by Captain Younghusband, C.I.E. London. John Murray, Albemarle Street. 1898

Сэтгэгдэл 9: "At Urga, in June, the great meet which the Living God blesses with his presence is an amazing spectacle, reminiscent of the pageants of the ancient emperors. All the elite of Mongolia gather on the banks of the Tola River, dressed in their most splendid robes, and the archery, wrestling, and horse racing are famous throughout the East. This love of sport is one of the most attractive characteristics of the Mongols. It is a common ground on which a foreigner immediately has a point of contact. The Chinese, on the contrary, despise all forms of physical exercise. They consider it "bad form," and they do not understand any sport which calls for violent exertion. They prefer to take a quiet walk, carrying their pet bird in a cage for an airing ; to play a game of cards; or, if they must travel, to loll back in a sedan chair, with the curtains drawn and every breath of air excluded"
page 158, "Across Mongolian Plains" by Roy Chapman Andrews. D. Appleton and Company. New York. 1921.

Сэтгэгдэл 10: "There were several Mongol yurts about, and we had visits from some of the men. They were tall, strong, muscular fellows, but very childish, amused at everything, and very rough in their manners.
Looking on these uncouth, indolent men, it was difficult to imagine that they were the descendants of the wild Tartar ordes, who under Chengiz Khan had conquered China, had penetrated to India, had subdued all Turkestan and Pursia, and swept through Russia even to Central Europe..."-
page 128, "Among the Celestials" by Captain Younghusband, C.I.E. London. John Murray, Albemarle Street. 1898

Сэтгэгдэл 11: "The question naturally arises, Why the Mongols decreasing when they own so good a land? whatever the cause of Mongol decadence, it cannot be through lack of available territory"./page 290/
"Lama-ridden, and fleeced by the Chinese, the Mongols remain in a state of serfdom under their chiefs"./page 293/
"Such questions came to us as the red-coated Mongol horsemen rode near us during the day, sat around the camp-fires with us at night. They could tell us nothing, they were unaware of their ancient greatness. Only the name of Jenghis remained in their memory, and him they treated as a deity and spoke of with reverence"/page 295/
"Let us look at the Mongols of the present day. The traveller in Mongolia, alive to the history and former greatness of the people who dwell there, will recognise much at the present day that corresponds to those old accounts of the Mongols as here quoted. He will note that they are still hardy, still capable of enduring fatigue, cold, and hunger; so far, indeed, as physique goes, the Mongol of to-day is probably equal of the men Jenghis Khan let to battle"./page 306/
"Lamaism in Mongolia has been countenanced, and in every way encouraged, by the Chinese, who were clever enough to realise the influance such an organisation would exercise over nomad people. The Chinese patronized and endowed the monasteries, and granted special privileges to the lamas... Lamaism absorbes a large portion of the male population by inducing a vast majority of men, who under ordinary conditions of life would be the bread-winners and workers, to turn into a species of parasite. The boys, for instance, who in the earlier days devoted their time to martial and physical exercises, camp-work, or herding the flocks, are now entered at early age as students in the lamaseries, and their lives are entirely sacrificed to the forms and services of religion; when grown up, this tends to make them lead idle, useless lives, wholly dependent on others, when they should be independent and self-supporting."
pages 312, 313, "Unknown Mongolia"/a record of travel and exploration in North-West Mongolia and Dzungaria/ by Douglas Carruthers. 1913. London. Hutchinson & Co
/үргэлжлэл бий/

2009-06-15
Monday, 15 June 2009 00:00
"A number of Chinese, young and old, ferry workers and inn servants, had followed us up from the riverbank, showing the invariable rude curiosity about foreigners that we always found in the back country, but could never entirely get used to. When we stopped to look at the Mongols, a few of the younsters laughed, and some of the adults walked off with expressions of disgust. One old man spat in contempt. "Mongol dogs!" he exclaimed. His attitude of disdain, and that of those around him, seemed to express more than the usual bad feeling of uneducated Chinese toward other peoples in the remote frontier regions. The 4 Mongols, in their turn, were pointedly ignoring the Chinese who stood behind us, making it plain that no love was lost on their side, either. I supposed that mutual ill-feeling was probably due to the intolerance of the two different peoples thrown together in a sparse frontier region. The struggle for livelihood between the inpushing Chinese immigrants and the native Mongolians would inevitably bring them into constant competition, while their very different ways of life, as settled farmers and nomadic herdsmen, would make for constant misunderstandings.
I admitted to myself, though, that this explanation was probably oversimplified. In any case, I decided on the way back to the river that I would take every opportunity, in the spare time permitted by my job, to study the life of the Mongols and notice its differences from Chinese ways. Perhaps by doing this, I could find out the various elements that made for the misunderstanding and mutual hatred. This added a personal objective to the military one, for my travels in Inner Mongolia".
page 8, chapter -First Impressions of Mongolia-, " The Land of the Camel" by Schuyler Cammann. The Ronald Press Company. New York. 1950.
 
2009-06-11
Thursday, 11 June 2009 00:00

"At one farm, belonging to an aunt of our guide, we saw 2 Mongol women, wives of his cousins, helping to thresh grain with long, primitive flails. We were surprised to see them wearing the characteristic Ordos headdress of the Dalats with coral-studded braids, instead of the Oirat swiks. In fact, we came across several homesteads of Dalats, where the Mongols were growing millet as a sideline to raising their herds of sheep and goats. It seemed strange to see a people we had always thought of as nomad herdsmen settling down as farmers. After the Chinese had taken away all their best grazing land for farming, these Mongols had to settle down in order to make a living..."

page 85, "The Land of the Camel/tents and Temples of Inner Mongolia" by Schuyler Cammann. The Ronald Press Company. New York. 1950.

 
2009-06-09
Tuesday, 09 June 2009 00:00
 

"...On resuming our march, we fell in with an en-
campment of Tangutans, with their black tents and
herds of long-haired yaks, called sarloks by the
Mongols. After crossing some more spurs of the
great range, we reached the bank of the Tatung-gol,
and encamped for the night near the temple of Cher-
tinton. The impregnable position of this temple
saved it from falling into the hands of the rebels,
and made it a secure place of refuge for the neigh-
bouring Tangutan population. In the next chapter I
will describe this people more fully ; suffice it for the
present to remark, that at first sight we were struck
with their resemblance to gipsies..."

"Mongolia: The Tangut Country and the Solitudes of Northern Tibet:" by N. Prejevalski

Никола́й Миха́йлович Пржева́льский ( 1839- 1888),

 
2009-06-07
Sunday, 07 June 2009 00:00

"But what was Mongolia and what were the Mongols without Khans and without chiefs of ancient lineage?...From time to time, however, rumours reached us of one of Mongolian Khan who yet remained. He was said to be mighty and strong and to have kept full possession of all his power and dignity. He ruled over a land away in the west, far from all the pilgrim routes of the Mongols. Not one the many Mongols I met at Chiang's shop had ever seen this great Khan or had visited his country... They called themselves Torguts and their ruler was the mighty Torgut Khan, and they dwelt so far away that the pilgrimage from their home steppes to the holy city and back again took a whole year...". page 7, "Men and Gods in Mongolia"/Zayagan/ by Henning Haslund. National Travel Club. New York. 1935

 
2009-06-04
Thursday, 04 June 2009 00:00

Since my crew were Mongols, it increased this sympathetic feeling  and gave us good standing with the native population as we progressed deeper into Mongolia. From the air we would have looked like a naval convoy on a sea of grass; our heavily loaded camels the cargo ships, our outriders the surrounding cruisers and destroyers. At one stage we broke up into several small units, each with a leader who knew the country, the better to infiltrate the Chinese lines.

page 56, -"China Caravans" by Robert Easton. Capra Press. Santa Barbara, California.

 

 
2009-05-29
Friday, 29 May 2009 00:00

Old photo.

 
2009-05-27
Wednesday, 27 May 2009 00:00

On photo: Byambadorj in Ulaanbaatar. 2008.2.06/3rd from right/. Photo by www.olloo.mn. The Grand Sumo Tournament's final held on May 24, 2009, in Tokyo was expected to be just another fight between the two Mongolian yokozuna, Hakuho and Asashoryu, until the 14th day, when the Bulgarian ozeki, Kotooshu, won Hakuho and into a tie with the recently promoted Mongolian ozeki.
On the final day, the Harumafuji/formerly Ama/, recently promoted Mongol ozeki, defeated the Bulgarian, while Hakuho defeated his fellow Mongol yokozuna Asashoryu, leaving both leaders tied with records of 14-1. Harumafuji then defeated Hakuho in the final playoff bout becoming the 3rd Mongol to receive the Emperor’s Cup of Japan.

Mongols now dominate Japanese sumo. Hakuho has won 10 and Asashoryu has won 23 the Emperor's cup of Japan. Japanese wrestlers have not won the Emperor’s Cup since veteran ozeki Tochiazuma did it in January 2006. There are now 9 Mongols in the top Makuuchi division and 4 more in the Juryo division, plus 6 more foreign rikishi in the top division: one each from Bulgaria, Estonia, Russia, and South Korea; and two from Georgia.

 
2009-05-26
Tuesday, 26 May 2009 00:00
 

"...On resuming our march, we fell in with an en-
campment of Tangutans, with their black tents and
herds of long-haired yaks, called sarloks by the
Mongols. After crossing some more spurs of the
great range, we reached the bank of the Tatung-gol,
and encamped for the night near the temple of Cher-
tinton. The impregnable position of this temple
saved it from falling into the hands of the rebels,
and made it a secure place of refuge for the neigh-
bouring Tangutan population. In the next chapter I
will describe this people more fully ; suffice it for the
present to remark, that at first sight we were struck
with their resemblance to gipsies..."

"Mongolia: The Tangut Country and the Solitudes of Northern Tibet:" by N. Prejevalski

Никола́й Миха́йлович Пржева́льский ( 1839- 1888),

 
2009-05-25
Monday, 25 May 2009 00:00

1/8 1/9 1/10 1/111/8 1/9 1/10 1/11

Mongolian stamps issued in 1924.

 
2009-05-23
Saturday, 23 May 2009 00:00

Gatto Mammone. "Russia, Japan and “Red Mongolia”

From New International, Vol.1 No.3, September-October 1934, pp.88-89.
Transcribed & marked up by
Einde O’Callaghan for ETOL.

GENERAL Tanaka begins his celebrated memorandum of 1927, which lays bare the rapacious aspirations of Japan, with the following words: “In order to conquer China, we must first conquer Manchuria and Mongolia.” The first part of this program is today an accomplished fact: the annexation of Manchuria, established as a vassal empire. Now it is Mongolia that Nipponese imperialism aims to attack, “Red” or Outer Mongolia. It is thus named to distinguish it from Inner Mongolia which still remains under more or less effective dependence upon China, and is a very extensive region of more than 500,000 square miles, almost entirely desert land (the Gobi) with the exception of its eastern part which is still touched by the lingering breath of the Chinese monsoon. It is mainly at the foot of its mountain ranges, with its grassy plains, that a nomadic Mongol population is situated (some 600,000 inhabitants) and engages in breeding. The nature of the soil, the climate, manifestly determine this occupation and the nomadic life that flows from it. The grassy plains being held in common, the pastures belong to all by the same token. Not all the Mongols, however, own livestock. Moreover, the social distinctions are determined by the quantity of cattle owned. According to recent statistics, 74% are arats, that is, shepherds, 24% are lamas, that is, Buddhist monks, and 2% are princes, nobles and officials. In every family, all the male children (with the exception of the eldest who remained a “black” man, that is, a layman as distinguished from the monk who took the red or yellow robe) became lamas. Monachism was thus so far developed that in 1918 the lamas made up 44% of the male population of the country. But not all the lamas lived in a lamasery, some engaged in commerce, others lived on alms and even to this day there is no want of lamas among the highwaymen or “brigands” so much heard about in China. In Urga, the Mongolian city, resided also a Grand Lama who occupied, in the lamaic hierarchy, the first place after the Grand Lama of Tibet.

 
2009-05-22
Friday, 22 May 2009 00:00

A shaman ritual

 
2009-05-20
Wednesday, 20 May 2009 00:00
---
"...Urga streets are quite wide but not very tidy. Chinese merchants used to have complete control of this country, but since the Mongols have become independent, the number of Chinese has decreased by more than half while while the Russians have gradually increased in number. During their  most prosperous days the Chinese traders totalled 250 000 in Urga alone.* Before autonomy there were still 70 000, but now not more than 20 000 or so are left. The exodus caused in the first place by the  White Russian invasion of Urga, when many Chinese fled to avoid trouble. In the second place, they used to have pretty much of a free land and were protected by high officials, but now the Mongol Government has adopted the Russian policy of suppressing merchants....
* This figure is highly improbable. The total population of all Outer Mongolia was only about three quarters of a million."

Page 74, "
 
2009-05-19
Tuesday, 19 May 2009 00:00

"...We saw no inhabitants on the western side of
the Kara-narin-ula. All the Mongols had fled to
the valley of the Hoang-ho, alarmed at the appear-
ance of a small band of brigands who came from the
environs of Lake Koko-nor. Such incursions were
not unfrequent in those parts of Mongolia which lay
on the borders of the districts disturbed by the
Dungan rebellion. The bands of robbers which con-
tinually made their appearance in these districts were
composfid of all kinds of vagabonds armed with
pikes or swords, and in a few instances with match-
locks..."

taken from"Mongolia, the Tangut country, and the solitudes of northern Tibet, being a narrative of three years' travel in eastern high Asia. 1876" by Przhevalskii, Nikolai Mikhailovich

 
2009-05-17
Sunday, 17 May 2009 00:00

An unique image of the 1957 Ovorkhangai-Bayankhongor-Gobi-Altai earthquake.

Mongolia experienced 3 of the greatest recorded continental/8.0 -8.5 Richter scale/ earthquakes: in 1905/on July 9th and 23rd  in Bulnai and Tsetserleg/ and 1957/on December 4th in Gobi-Altay/ and in 1967/on January 5th in Mogod.  During 20th century, Mongolia had six M7 earthquakes.

 
2009-05-14
Thursday, 14 May 2009 00:00

"At Urga, in June, the great meet which the Living God
blesses with his presence is an amazing spectacle, reminiscent of the pageants of the ancient emperors. All the elite of Mongolia gather on the banks of the Tola River, dressed in their most splendid robes, and the
archery, wrestling, and horse racing are famous throughout the East. This love of sport is one of the most attractive characteristics of the Mongols. It is a common ground on which a foreigner immediately has a point of contact.
The Chinese, on the contrary, despise all forms of physical exercise. They consider it "bad form," and they do not understand any sport which calls for violent exertion. They prefer to take a quiet walk, carrying their pet bird in a cage for an airing ; to play a game of cards; or, if they must travel, to loll back in a sedan chair, with the curtains drawn and every breath of air excluded"

page 158, "Across Mongolian Plains" by Roy Chapman Andrews. D. Appleton and Company. New York. 1921.

 
2009-05-12
Tuesday, 12 May 2009 00:00

"Unnumbered lakes formed the homes of many wild -fowl, but the pastures still remained unused by man. So far as we could ascertain, the Yamachu plateau did not, for some unknown reason, attract the Durbet nomads, yet its pastures must be of the richest quality. The question naturally arises, Why are  the Mongols decreasing when they own so good a land ? whatever the cause of Mongol decadence, it cannot be through lack of available territory".

page 290, "Unknown Mongolia" by Douglas Carruthers. London. 1913. Hutchinson & Co.

 
2009-05-11
Monday, 11 May 2009 00:00

A photo from WWII. Ignashkeev Ivan, a Buryat/right/. 21.12.1943. Oradya-Mare. Hungary.

 
2009-05-10
Sunday, 10 May 2009 00:00

Victory Day's Congratulations !!!

 
2009-05-07
Thursday, 07 May 2009 00:00

Travels In Mongolia, 1902: Journey Of C.W. Campbell

C.W. Campbell, British Consul in China, gives a vivid account of the history, landscape and way of life of those he meets as he travels north from Peking around the fringe of the Gobi Desert and into Mongolia, an area still largely unexplored by Western travelers.

 
2009-04-29
Wednesday, 29 April 2009 00:00

On April 24th-26th, 2009, the first ever Wrestling Championship of the AllMongols since 1600s was held in Ulaanbaatar in which 128 athletes from Mongolia, China's Inner Mongolia and Russia's Buryatia, Kalmykia and Tuva took their paricipation.

 
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