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Mongols

The Mongols (Mongolian: Монголчууд, ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯᠴᠤᠳ, Moŋğolçuud, [ˈmɔɴ.ɢɔɬ.t͡ʃot]) are an East Asian ethnic group native to Mongolia and to Inner Mongolia in China. The Mongols are the principal member of the large family of Mongolic peoples. The Oirats in Western Mongolia as well as the Buryats and Kalmyks of Russia are classified either as distinct ethno-linguistic groups or subgroups of Mongols.

Mongols
Монголчууд
Moŋğolçuud
ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯᠴᠤᠳ
Image of a Mongolian lady (incorrectly identified as Genepil, Queen consort of Mongolia[1])
Total population
c. 10–11 million
Regions with significant populations
 Mongolia      3,046,882[2]
Other significant population centers:
 China6,290,204[3]
 South Korea37,963[4]
 United States19,170[5]
 Kyrgyzstan12,000[6]
 Czech Republic10,236[7]
 Canada9,090[8]
 Japan8,772[5]
 Kazakhstan7,218[5]
 Australia5,538[5]
 Germany3,972[5]
 Sweden3,951[5]
 France3,102[5]
 Russia2,986[9]
 Turkey2,716[5]
 Austria2,579[10]
Languages
Mongolian
Religion
Predominantly Tibetan Buddhism,[11][12][13] Minority Mongolian shamanism (Tengrism),[14] Eastern Orthodox Church, Protestantism
Related ethnic groups
Other Mongolic peoples

The Mongols are bound together by a common heritage and ethnic identity. Their indigenous dialects are collectively known as the Mongolian language. The ancestors of the modern-day Mongols are referred to as Proto-Mongols.

Definition

Broadly defined, the term includes the Mongols proper (also known as the Khalkha Mongols), Buryats, Oirats, the Kalmyk people and the Southern Mongols. The latter comprises the Abaga Mongols, Abaganar, Aohans, Baarins, Chahars, Eastern Dorbets, Gorlos Mongols, Jalaids, Jaruud, Kharchins, Khishigten, Khorchins, Khuuchid, Muumyangan, Naimans, Onnigud, Ordos, Sunud, Tumed, Urad and Üzemchins.[15]

The designation "Mongol" briefly appeared in 8th century records of Tang China to describe a tribe of Shiwei. It resurfaced in the late 11th century during the Khitan-ruled Liao dynasty. After the fall of the Liao in 1125, the Khamag Mongols became a leading tribe on the Mongolian Plateau. However, their wars with the Jurchen-ruled Jin dynasty and the Tatar confederation had weakened them.

In the thirteenth century, the word Mongol grew into an umbrella term for a large group of Mongolic-speaking tribes united under the rule of Genghis Khan.[16]

History

 
Asia in 500, showing the Rouran Khaganate and its neighbors, including the Northern Wei and the Tuyuhun Khanate, all of them were established by Proto-Mongols
 
Mongol man with a hat, Yuan dynasty
 
Mongol wearing a hat, 14th c.

In various times Mongolic peoples have been equated with the Scythians, the Magog, and the Tungusic peoples. Based on Chinese historical texts the ancestry of the Mongolic peoples can be traced back to the Donghu, a nomadic confederation occupying eastern Mongolia and Manchuria. The Donghu neighboured the Xiongnu, whose identity is still debated today. Although some scholars maintain that they were proto-Mongols, they were more likely a multi-ethnic group of Mongolic and Turkic tribes.[17] It has been suggested that the language of the Huns was related to the Xiongnu.[18]

The Donghu, however, can be much more easily labeled proto-Mongol since the Chinese histories trace only Mongolic tribes and kingdoms (Xianbei and Wuhuan peoples) from them, although some historical texts claim a mixed Xiongnu-Donghu ancestry for some tribes (e.g. the Khitan).[19][20]

In the Chinese classics

 
Yuan dynasty Mongol rider

The Donghu are mentioned by Sima Qian as already existing in Inner Mongolia north of Yan in 699–632 BCE along with the Shanrong. Unofficial Chinese sources such as Yi Zhou Shu ("Lost Book of Zhou")[21] and the Classic of Mountains and Seas[22] project the Donghu's activities back to the Shang dynasty (1600–1046 BCE). However, the Hu (胡) were not mentioned among the non-Shang fang (方 "border-region"; modern term fāngguó 方國 "fang-countries") in the extant oracle bones from the Shang period.[23]

The Xianbei formed part of the Donghu confederation, and possibly had in earlier times some independence within the Donghu confederation as well as from the Zhou dynasty. During the Warring States the poem "The Great Summons" (Chinese: 大招; pinyin: Dà zhāo) in the anthology Verses of Chu mentioned small-waisted and long-necked Xianbei women,[24] and the book Discourses of the States states that during the reign of King Cheng of Zhou (reigned 1042–1021 BCE) they came to participate at a meeting of Zhou subject-lords at Qiyang (岐阳) (now Qishan County) but were only allowed to perform the fire ceremony under the supervision of Chu since they were not vassals (诸侯) by enfeoffment and establishment. The Xianbei chieftain was appointed joint guardian of the ritual torch along with Chu viscount Xiong Yi.[25]

These early Xianbei came from the nearby Zhukaigou culture (2200–1500 BCE) in the Ordos Desert, where maternal DNA corresponds to the Mongol Daur people and the Tungusic Evenks. The Zhukaigou Xianbei (part of the Ordos culture of Inner Mongolia and northern Shaanxi) had trade relations with the Shang. Liu Song dynasty commentator Pei Yin (裴駰), in his Jixie (集解), quoted Eastern Han dynasty scholar Fu Qian (服虔)'s assertion that Shanrong (山戎) and Beidi (北狄) are ancestors of the present-day Xianbei (鮮卑).[26][27] Again in Inner Mongolia another closely connected core Mongolic Xianbei region was the Upper Xiajiadian culture (1000–600 BCE) where the Donghu confederation was centered.

After the Donghu were defeated by Xiongnu king Modu Chanyu, the Xianbei and Wuhuan survived as the main remnants of the confederation. Tadun Khan of the Wuhuan (died 207 AD) was the ancestor of the proto-Mongolic Kumo Xi.[28] The Wuhuan are of the direct Donghu royal line and the New Book of Tang says that in 209 BCE, Modu Chanyu defeated the Wuhuan instead of using the word Donghu. The Xianbei, however, were of the lateral Donghu line and had a somewhat separate identity, although they shared the same language with the Wuhuan. In 49 CE the Xianbei ruler Bianhe (Bayan Khan?) raided and defeated the Xiongnu, killing 2000, after having received generous gifts from Emperor Guangwu of Han. The Xianbei reached their peak under Tanshihuai Khan (reigned 156–181) who expanded the vast, but short lived, Xianbei state (93–234).

Three prominent groups split from the Xianbei state as recorded by the Chinese histories: the Rouran (claimed by some to be the Pannonian Avars), the Khitan people and the Shiwei (a subtribe called the "Shiwei Menggu" is held to be the origin of the Genghisid Mongols).[29] Besides these three Xianbei groups, there were others such as the Murong, Duan and Tuoba. Their culture was nomadic, their religion shamanism or Buddhism and their military strength formidable. There is still no direct evidence that the Rouran spoke Mongolic languages, although most scholars agree that they were Proto-Mongolic.[30] The Khitan, however, had two scripts of their own and many Mongolic words are found in their half-deciphered writings.

Geographically, the Tuoba Xianbei ruled the southern part of Inner Mongolia and northern China, the Rouran (Yujiulü Shelun was the first to use the title khagan in 402) ruled eastern Mongolia, western Mongolia, the northern part of Inner Mongolia and northern Mongolia, the Khitan were concentrated in eastern part of Inner Mongolia north of Korea and the Shiwei were located to the north of the Khitan. These tribes and kingdoms were soon overshadowed by the rise of the First Turkic Khaganate in 555, the Uyghur Khaganate in 745 and the Yenisei Kirghiz states in 840. The Tuoba were eventually absorbed into China. The Rouran fled west from the Göktürks and either disappeared into obscurity or, as some say, invaded Europe as the Avars under their Khan, Bayan I. Some Rouran under Tatar Khan migrated east, founding the Tatar confederation, who became part of the Shiwei. The Khitans, who were independent after their separation from the Kumo Xi (of Wuhuan origin) in 388, continued as a minor power in Manchuria until one of them, Abaoji (872–926), established the Liao dynasty (916–1125).

Mongol Empire

 
A portrait of Kublai Khan by Araniko (1245–1306)
 
Mongol huntsmen, Ming dynasty

The destruction of Uyghur Khaganate by the Kirghiz resulted in the end of Turkic dominance in Mongolia. According to historians, Kirghiz were not interested in assimilating newly acquired lands; instead, they controlled local tribes through various manaps (tribal leaders). The Khitans occupied the areas vacated by the Turkic Uyghurs bringing them under their control. The Yenisei Kirghiz state was centered on Khakassia and they were expelled from Mongolia by the Khitans in 924. Beginning in the 10th century, the Khitans, under the leadership of Abaoji, prevailed in several military campaigns against the Tang dynasty's border guards, and the Xi, Shiwei and Jurchen nomadic groups.[31]

Remnants of the Liao dynasty led by Yelü Dashi fled west through Mongolia after being defeated by the Jurchen-led Jin dynasty and founded the Qara Khitai (Western Liao dynasty) in 1124 while still maintaining control over western Mongolia. In 1218, Genghis Khan incorporated the Qara Khitai after which the Khitan passed into obscurity. Some remnants surfaced as the Qutlugh-Khanid dynasty (1222–1306) in Iran and the Dai Khitai in Afghanistan. With the expansion of the Mongol Empire, the Mongolic peoples settled over almost all Eurasia and carried on military campaigns from the Adriatic Sea to Indonesian Java and from Japan to Palestine (Gaza). They simultaneously became Padishahs of Persia, Emperors of China, and Great Khans of the Mongols, and one (Al-Adil Kitbugha) became Sultan of Egypt. The Mongolic peoples of the Golden Horde established themselves to govern Russia by 1240.[32] By 1279, they conquered the Song dynasty and brought all of China proper under the control of the Yuan dynasty.[32]

... from Chinggis up high down to the common people, all are shaven in the style pojiao. As with small boys in China, they leave three locks, one hanging from the crown of their heads. When it has grown some, they clip it; the strands lower on both sides they plait to hang down on the shoulders.[33]

— Zhao Gong

With the breakup of the empire, the dispersed Mongolic peoples quickly adopted the mostly Turkic cultures surrounding them and were assimilated, forming parts of Afghanistan's Hazaras, Azerbaijanis, Uzbeks, Karakalpaks, Tatars, Bashkirs, Turkmens, Uyghurs, Nogays, Kyrgyzs, Kazakhs, Caucasaus peoples, Iranian peoples and Moghuls; linguistic and cultural Persianization also began to be prominent in these territories. Some Mongols assimilated into the Yakuts after their migration to northern Siberia and about 30% of Yakut words have Mongol origin. However, remnants of the Yuan imperial family retreated north to Mongolia in 1368, retaining their language and culture. There were 250,000 Mongols in southern China and many Mongols were massacred by the rebel army. The survivors were trapped in southern China and eventually assimilated. The Dongxiangs, Bonans, Yugur and Monguor people were invaded by the Ming dynasty.

Northern Yuan

 
The Northern Yuan dynasty and Turco-Mongol residual states and domains by the 15th century

After the fall of the Yuan dynasty in 1368, the Mongols continued to rule the Northern Yuan dynasty in northern China and the Mongolian steppe. However, the Oirads began to challenge the Eastern Mongols under the Borjigin monarchs in the late 14th century and Mongolia was divided into two parts: Western Mongolia (Oirats) and Eastern Mongolia (Khalkha, Inner Mongols, Barga, Buryats). The earliest written references to the plough in Middle Mongolian language sources appear towards the end of the 14th c.[34]

In 1434, Eastern Mongol Taisun Khan's (1433–1452) prime minister Western Mongol Togoon Taish reunited the Mongols after killing Eastern Mongol king Adai (Khorchin). Togoon died in 1439 and his son Esen Taish became ruler of Northern Yuan dynasty. Esen later unified the Mongol tribes. The Ming dynasty attempted to invade the Northern Yuan in the 14–16th centuries, however, the Ming dynasty was defeated by the Oirat, Southern Mongol, Eastern Mongol and united Mongol armies. Esen's 30,000 cavalries defeated 500,000 Chinese soldiers in 1449. Within eighteen months of his defeat of the titular Khan Taisun, in 1453, Esen himself took the title of Great Khan (1454–1455) of the Great Yuan.[35]

The Khalkha emerged during the reign of Dayan Khan (1479–1543) as one of the six tumens of the Eastern Mongolic peoples. They quickly became the dominant Mongolic clan in Mongolia proper.[36][37] He reunited the Mongols again. In 1550, Altan Khan led a Khalkha Mongol raid on Beijing. The Mongols voluntarily reunified during Eastern Mongolian Tümen Zasagt Khan rule (1558–1592) for the last time (the Mongol Empire united all Mongols before this).

Eastern Mongolia was divided into three parts in the 17th century: Outer Mongolia (Khalkha), Inner Mongolia (Inner Mongols) and the Buryat region in southern Siberia.

The last Mongol khagan was Ligdan in the early 17th century. He got into conflicts with the Manchus over the looting of Chinese cities, and managed to alienate most Mongol tribes. In 1618, Ligdan signed a treaty with the Ming dynasty to protect their northern border from the Manchus attack in exchange for thousands of taels of silver. By the 1620s, only the Chahars remained under his rule.

Qing-era Mongols

 
Map showing wars between Qing Dynasty and Dzungar Khanate
 
A Dzungar soldier called Ayusi from the high Qing era, by Giuseppe Castiglione, 1755
 
The Battle of Oroi-Jalatu in 1755 between the Qing (that ruled China at the time) and Mongol Dzungar armies. The fall of the Dzungar Khanate

The Chahar army was defeated in 1625 and 1628 by the Inner Mongol and Manchu armies due to Ligdan's faulty tactics. The Qing forces secured their control over Inner Mongolia by 1635, and the army of the last khan Ligdan moved to battle against Tibetan Gelugpa sect (Yellow Hat sect) forces. The Gelugpa forces supported the Manchus, while Ligdan supported Kagyu sect (Red Hat sect) of Tibetan Buddhism. Ligden died in 1634 on his way to Tibet. By 1636, most Inner Mongolian nobles had submitted to the Qing dynasty founded by the Manchus. Inner Mongolian Tengis noyan revolted against the Qing in the 1640s and the Khalkha battled to protect Sunud.

Western Mongol Oirats and Eastern Mongolian Khalkhas vied for domination in Mongolia since the 15th century and this conflict weakened Mongol strength. In 1688, the Western Mongol Dzungar Khanate's king Galdan Boshugtu attacked Khalkha after murder of his younger brother by Tusheet Khan Chakhundorj (main or Central Khalkha leader) and the Khalkha-Oirat War began. Galdan threatened to kill Chakhundorj and Zanabazar (Javzandamba Khutagt I, spiritual head of Khalkha) but they escaped to Sunud (Inner Mongolia). Many Khalkha nobles and folks fled to Inner Mongolia because of the war. Few Khalkhas fled to the Buryat region and Russia threatened to exterminate them if they did not submit, but many of them submitted to Galdan Boshugtu.

In 1683 Galdan's armies reached Tashkent and the Syr Darya and crushed two armies of the Kazakhs. After that Galdan subjugated the Black Khirgizs and ravaged the Fergana Valley. From 1685 Galdan's forces aggressively pushed the Kazakhs. While his general Rabtan took Taraz, and his main force forced the Kazakhs to migrate westwards.[38] In 1687, he besieged the City of Turkistan. Under the leadership of Abul Khair Khan, the Kazakhs won major victories over the Dzungars at the Bulanty River in 1726, and at the Battle of Anrakay in 1729.[39]

The Khalkha eventually submitted to Qing rule in 1691 by Zanabazar's decision, thus bringing all of today's Mongolia under the rule of the Qing dynasty but Khalkha de facto remained under the rule of Galdan Boshugtu Khaan until 1696. The Mongol-Oirat's Code (a treaty of alliance) against foreign invasion between the Oirats and Khalkhas was signed in 1640, however, the Mongols could not unite against foreign invasions. Chakhundorj fought against Russian invasion of Outer Mongolia until 1688 and stopped Russian invasion of Khövsgöl Province. Zanabazar struggled to bring together the Oirats and Khalkhas before the war.

Galdan Boshugtu sent his army to "liberate" Inner Mongolia after defeating the Khalkha's army and called Inner Mongolian nobles to fight for Mongolian independence. Some Inner Mongolian nobles, Tibetans, Kumul Khanate and some Moghulistan's nobles supported his war against the Manchus, however, Inner Mongolian nobles did not battle against the Qing.

There were three khans in Khalkha and Zasagt Khan Shar (Western Khalkha leader) was Galdan's ally. Tsetsen Khan (Eastern Khalkha leader) did not engage in this conflict. While Galdan was fighting in Eastern Mongolia, his nephew Tseveenravdan seized the Dzungarian throne in 1689 and this event made Galdan impossible to fight against the Qing Empire. The Russian and Qing Empires supported his action because this coup weakened Western Mongolian strength. Galdan Boshugtu's army was defeated by the outnumbering Qing army in 1696 and he died in 1697. The Mongols who fled to the Buryat region and Inner Mongolia returned after the war. Some Khalkhas mixed with the Buryats.

The Buryats fought against Russian invasion since the 1620s and thousands of Buryats were massacred. The Buryat region was formally annexed to Russia by treaties in 1689 and 1727, when the territories on both the sides of Lake Baikal were separated from Mongolia. In 1689 the Treaty of Nerchinsk established the northern border of Manchuria north of the present line. The Russians retained Trans-Baikalia between Lake Baikal and the Argun River north of Mongolia. The Treaty of Kyakhta (1727), along with the Treaty of Nerchinsk, regulated the relations between Imperial Russia and the Qing Empire until the mid-nineteenth century. It established the northern border of Mongolia. Oka Buryats revolted in 1767 and Russia completely conquered the Buryat region in the late 18th century. Russia and Qing were rival empires until the early 20th century, however, both empires carried out united policy against Central Asians.

The Qing Empire conquered Upper Mongolia or the Oirat's Khoshut Khanate in the 1720s and 80,000 people were killed.[40] By that period, Upper Mongolian population reached 200,000. The Dzungar Khanate conquered by the Qing dynasty in 1755–1758 because of their leaders and military commanders conflicts. Some scholars estimate that about 80% of the Dzungar population were destroyed by a combination of warfare and disease during the Qing conquest of the Dzungar Khanate in 1755–1758.[41] Mark Levene, a historian whose recent research interests focus on genocide,[42] has stated that the extermination of the Dzungars was "arguably the eighteenth century genocide par excellence."[43] The Dzungar population reached 600,000 in 1755.

About 200,000–250,000 Oirats migrated from western Mongolia to Volga River in 1607 and established the Kalmyk Khanate.The Torghuts were led by their Tayishi, Höö Örlög. Russia was concerned about their attack but the Kalmyks became a Russian ally and a treaty to protect the southern Russian border was signed between the Kalmyk Khanate and Russia. In 1724 the Kalmyks came under control of Russia. By the early 18th century, there were approximately 300,000–350,000 Kalmyks and 15,000,000 Russians.[citation needed] The Tsardom of Russia gradually chipped away at the autonomy of the Kalmyk Khanate. These policies, for instance, encouraged the establishment of Russian and German settlements on pastures the Kalmyks used to roam and feed their livestock. In addition, the Tsarist government imposed a council on the Kalmyk Khan, thereby diluting his authority, while continuing to expect the Kalmyk Khan to provide cavalry units to fight on behalf of Russia. The Russian Orthodox church, by contrast, pressured Buddhist Kalmyks to adopt Orthodoxy. In January 1771, approximately 200,000 (170,000)[44] Kalmyks began the migration from their pastures on the left bank of the Volga River to Dzungaria (Western Mongolia), through the territories of their Bashkir and Kazakh enemies. The last Kalmyk khan Ubashi led the migration to restore Mongolian independence. Ubashi Khan sent his 30,000 cavalries to the Russo-Turkish War in 1768–1769 to gain weapon before the migration. The Empress Catherine the Great ordered the Russian army, Bashkirs and Kazakhs to exterminate all migrants and the Empress abolished the Kalmyk Khanate.[44][45][46][47][48] The Kyrgyzs attacked them near Balkhash Lake. About 100,000–150,000 Kalmyks who settled on the west bank of the Volga River could not cross the river because the river did not freeze in the winter of 1771 and Catherine the Great executed influential nobles of them. After seven months of travel, only one-third (66,073)[44] of the original group reached Dzungaria (Balkhash Lake, western border of the Qing Empire).[49] The Qing Empire transmigrated the Kalmyks to five different areas to prevent their revolt and influential leaders of the Kalmyks died soon (killed by the Manchus). Russia states that Buryatia voluntarily merged with Russia in 1659 due to Mongolian oppression and the Kalmyks voluntarily accepted Russian rule in 1609 but only Georgia voluntarily accepted Russian rule.[50][51]

In the early 20th century, the late Qing government encouraged Han Chinese colonization of Mongolian lands under the name of "New Policies" or "New Administration" (xinzheng). As a result, some Mongol leaders (especially those of Outer Mongolia) decided to seek Mongolian independence. After the Xinhai Revolution, the Mongolian Revolution on 30 November 1911 in Outer Mongolia ended an over 200-year rule of the Qing dynasty.

Post-Qing era

With the independence of Outer Mongolia, the Mongolian army controlled Khalkha and Khovd regions (modern day Uvs, Khovd, and Bayan-Ölgii provinces), but Northern Xinjiang (the Altai and Ili regions of the Qing Empire), Upper Mongolia, Barga and Inner Mongolia came under control of the newly formed Republic of China. On February 2, 1913 the Bogd Khanate of Mongolia sent Mongolian cavalries to "liberate" Inner Mongolia from China. Russia refused to sell weapons to the Bogd Khanate, and the Russian czar, Nicholas II, referred to it as "Mongolian imperialism". Additionally, the United Kingdom urged Russia to abolish Mongolian independence as it was concerned that "if Mongolians gain independence, then Central Asians will revolt". 10,000 Khalkha and Inner Mongolian cavalries (about 3,500 Inner Mongols) defeated 70,000 Chinese soldiers and controlled almost all of Inner Mongolia; however, the Mongolian army retreated due to lack of weapons in 1914. 400 Mongol soldiers and 3,795 Chinese soldiers died in this war. The Khalkhas, Khovd Oirats, Buryats, Dzungarian Oirats, Upper Mongols, Barga Mongols, most Inner Mongolian and some Tuvan leaders sent statements to support Bogd Khan's call of Mongolian reunification. In reality however, most of them were too prudent or irresolute to attempt joining the Bogd Khan regime.[52] Russia encouraged Mongolia to become an autonomous region of China in 1914. Mongolia lost Barga, Dzungaria, Tuva, Upper Mongolia and Inner Mongolia in the 1915 Treaty of Kyakhta.

In October 1919, the Republic of China occupied Mongolia after the suspicious deaths of Mongolian patriotic nobles. On 3 February 1921 the White Russian army—led by Baron Ungern and mainly consisting of Mongolian volunteer cavalries, and Buryat and Tatar cossacks—liberated the Mongolian capital. Baron Ungern's purpose was to find allies to defeat the Soviet Union. The Statement of Reunification of Mongolia was adopted by Mongolian revolutionist leaders in 1921. The Soviet, however, considered Mongolia to be Chinese territory in 1924 during a secret meeting with the Republic of China. However, the Soviets officially recognized Mongolian independence in 1945 but carried out various policies (political, economic and cultural) against Mongolia until its fall in 1991 to prevent Pan-Mongolism and other irredentist movements.

On 10 April 1932 Mongolians revolted against the government's new policy and Soviets. The government and Soviet soldiers defeated the rebels in October.

The Buryats started to migrate to Mongolia in the 1900s due to Russian oppression. Joseph Stalin's regime stopped the migration in 1930 and started a campaign of ethnic cleansing against newcomers and Mongolians. During the Stalinist repressions in Mongolia almost all adult Buryat men and 22,000–33,000 Mongols (3–5% of the total population; common citizens, monks, Pan-Mongolists, nationalists, patriots, hundreds of military officers, nobles, intellectuals and elite people) were shot dead under Soviet orders.[53][54] Some authors also offer much higher estimates, up to 100,000 victims.[54] Around the late 1930s the Mongolian People's Republic had an overall population of about 700,000 to 900,000 people. By 1939, Soviet said "We repressed too many people, the population of Mongolia is only hundred thousands". The proportion of victims in relation to the population of the country is much higher than the corresponding figures of the Great Purge in the Soviet Union.

 
Khorloogiin Choibalsan, leader of the Mongolian People's Republic (left), and Georgy Zhukov consult during the Battle of Khalkhin Gol against Japanese troops, 1939

The Manchukuo (1932–1945), puppet state of the Empire of Japan (1868–1947) invaded Barga and some part of Inner Mongolia with Japanese help. The Mongolian army advanced to the Great Wall of China during the Soviet–Japanese War of 1945 (Mongolian name: Liberation War of 1945). Japan forced Inner Mongolian and Barga people to fight against Mongolians but they surrendered to Mongolians and started to fight against their Japanese and Manchu allies. Marshal Khorloogiin Choibalsan called Inner Mongolians and Xinjiang Oirats to migrate to Mongolia during the war but the Soviet Army blocked Inner Mongolian migrants' way. It was a part of a Pan-Mongolian plan and few Oirats and Inner Mongols (Huuchids, Bargas, Tümeds, about 800 Uzemchins) arrived. Inner Mongolian leaders carried out active policy to merge Inner Mongolia with Mongolia since 1911. They founded the Inner Mongolian Army in 1929 but the Inner Mongolian Army disbanded after ending World War II. The Japanese Empire supported Pan-Mongolism since the 1910s but there have never been active relations between Mongolia and Imperial Japan due to Russian resistance. The nominally independent Inner Mongolian Mengjiang state (1936–1945) was established with support of Japan in 1936; also, some Buryat and Inner Mongol nobles founded a Pan-Mongolist government with the support of Japan in 1919.

 
World War II Zaisan Memorial, Ulaan Baatar, from the People's Republic of Mongolia era.

The Inner Mongols established the short-lived Republic of Inner Mongolia in 1945.

Another part of Choibalsan's plan was to merge Inner Mongolia and Dzungaria with Mongolia. By 1945, Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong requested the Soviets to stop Pan-Mongolism because China lost its control over Inner Mongolia and without Inner Mongolian support the Communists were unable to defeat Japan and Kuomintang.

Mongolia and Soviets supported Xinjiang Uyghurs' and Kazakhs' separatist movement in the 1930–1940s. By 1945, the Soviets refused to support them after its alliance with the Chinese Communist Party and Mongolia interrupted its relations with the separatists under pressure. Xinjiang Oirat's militant groups operated together the Turkic peoples but the Oirats did not have the leading role due to their small population. Basmachis or Turkic and Tajik militants fought to liberate Central Asia (Soviet Central Asia) until 1942.

On February 2, 1913 the Treaty of friendship and alliance between the Government of Mongolia and Tibet was signed. Mongolian agents and Bogd Khan disrupted Soviet secret operations in Tibet to change its regime in the 1920s.

On October 27, 1961, the United Nations recognized Mongolian independence and granted the nation full membership in the organization.

The Tsardom of Russia, Russian Empire, Soviet Union, capitalist and communist China performed many genocide actions against the Mongols (assimilate, reduce the population, extinguish the language, culture, tradition, history, religion and ethnic identity). Peter the Great said: "The headwaters of the Yenisei River must be Russian land".[55] The Russian Empire sent the Kalmyks and Buryats to war to reduce the populations (World War I and other wars). During the 20th century, Soviet scientists attempted to convince the Kalmyks and Buryats that they're not Mongols during (demongolization policy). 35,000 Buryats were killed during the rebellion of 1927 and around one-third of the Buryat population in Russia died in the 1900s–1950s.[56][57] 10,000 Buryats of the Buryat-Mongol Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic were massacred by Stalin's order in the 1930s.[58] In 1919 the Buryats established a small theocratic Balagad state in Kizhinginsky District of Russia and it fell in 1926. In 1958, the name "Mongol" was removed from the name of the Buryat-Mongol Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.

On 22 January 1922 Mongolia proposed to migrate the Kalmyks during the Kalmykian Famine but bolshevik Russia refused. 71,000–72,000 (93,000?; around half of the population) Kalmyks died during the Russian famine of 1921–22.[59] The Kalmyks revolted against the Soviet Union in 1926, 1930 and 1942–1943 (see Kalmykian Cavalry Corps). In 1913, Nicholas II, tsar of Russia, said: "We need to prevent from Volga Tatars. But the Kalmyks are more dangerous than them because they are the Mongols so send them to war to reduce the population".[60] On 23 April 1923 Joseph Stalin, communist leader of Russia, said: "We are carrying out wrong policy on the Kalmyks who related to the Mongols. Our policy is too peaceful".[60] In March 1927, Soviet deported 20,000 Kalmyks to Siberia, the tundra and Karelia.The Kalmyks founded the sovereign Republic of Oirat-Kalmyk on 22 March 1930.[60] The Oirats' state had a small army and 200 Kalmyk soldiers defeated 1,700 Soviet soldiers in Durvud province of Kalmykia but the Oirats' state was destroyed by the Soviet Army in 1930. Kalmykian nationalists and Pan-Mongolists attempted to migrate Kalmyks to Mongolia in the 1920s. Mongolia suggested to migrate the Soviet Union's Mongols to Mongolia in the 1920s but Russia refused the suggestion.

Stalin deported all Kalmyks to Siberia in 1943 and around half of the (97,000–98,000) Kalmyk people deported to Siberia died before being allowed to return home in 1957.[61] The government of the Soviet Union forbade teaching the Kalmyk language during the deportation. The Kalmyks' main purpose was to migrate to Mongolia and many Kalmyks joined the German Army. Marshal Khorloogiin Choibalsan attempted to migrate the deportees to Mongolia and he met with them in Siberia during his visit to Russia. Under the Law of the Russian Federation of April 26, 1991 "On Rehabilitation of Exiled Peoples," repressions against Kalmyks and other peoples were qualified as acts of genocide.

 
Mongolian President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj (right)

After the end of World War II, the Chinese Civil War resumed between the Chinese Nationalists (Kuomintang), led by Chiang Kai-shek, and the Chinese Communist Party, led by Mao Zedong. In December 1949, Chiang evacuated his government to Taiwan. Hundreds of thousands of Inner Mongols were massacred[citation needed] during the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s and China forbade Mongol traditions, celebrations and the teaching of Mongolic languages during the revolution. In Inner Mongolia, some 790,000 people were persecuted. Approximately 1,000,000 Inner Mongols were killed during the 20th century.[62][citation needed] In 1960 a Chinese newspaper wrote that "Han Chinese ethnic identity must be Chinese minorities ethnic identity".[citation needed] China-Mongolia relations were tense from the 1960s to the 1980s as a result of the Sino-Soviet split, and there were several border conflicts during the period.[63] Cross-border movement of Mongols was therefore hindered.

On 3 October 2002 the Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that Taiwan recognizes Mongolia as an independent country,[64] although no legislative actions were taken to address concerns over its constitutional claims to Mongolia.[65] Offices established to support Taipei's claims over Outer Mongolia, such as the Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission,[66] lie dormant.

Agin-Buryat Okrug and Ust-Orda Buryat Okrugs merged with Irkutsk Oblast and Chita Oblast in 2008 despite Buryats' resistance. Small scale protests occurred in Inner Mongolia in 2011. The Inner Mongolian People's Party is a member of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization[67] and its leaders are attempting to establish a sovereign state or merge Inner Mongolia with Mongolia.

 
A Mongolic Ger

Language

 
Chronological tree of the Mongolic languages

Mongolian is the official national language of Mongolia, where it is spoken by nearly 2.8 million people (2010 estimate),[68] and the official provincial language of China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, where there are at least 4.1 million ethnic Mongols.[69] Across the whole of China, the language is spoken by roughly half of the country's 5.8 million ethnic Mongols (2005 estimate)[68] However, the exact number of Mongolian speakers in China is unknown, as there is no data available on the language proficiency of that country's citizens. The use of Mongolian in China, specifically in Inner Mongolia, has witnessed periods of decline and revival over the last few hundred years. The language experienced a decline during the late Qing period, a revival between 1947 and 1965, a second decline between 1966 and 1976, a second revival between 1977 and 1992, and a third decline between 1995 and 2012.[70] However, in spite of the decline of the Mongolian language in some of Inner Mongolia's urban areas and educational spheres, the ethnic identity of the urbanized Chinese-speaking Mongols is most likely going to survive due to the presence of urban ethnic communities.[71] The multilingual situation in Inner Mongolia does not appear to obstruct efforts by ethnic Mongols to preserve their language.[72][73] Although an unknown number of Mongols in China, such as the Tumets, may have completely or partially lost the ability to speak their language, they are still registered as ethnic Mongols and continue to identify themselves as ethnic Mongols.[68][74] The children of inter-ethnic Mongol-Chinese marriages also claim to be and are registered as ethnic Mongols.[75]

The specific origin of the Mongolic languages and associated tribes is unclear. Linguists have traditionally proposed a link to the Tungusic and Turkic language families, included alongside Mongolic in the broader group of Altaic languages, though this remains controversial. Today the Mongolian peoples speak at least one of several Mongolic languages including Mongolian, Buryat, Oirat, Dongxiang, Tu and Bonan. Additionally, many Mongols speak either Russian or Mandarin Chinese as languages of inter-ethnic communication.

Religion

 
Buddhist temple in Buryatia, Russia
 
Timur of Mongolic origin himself had converted almost all the Borjigin leaders to Islam.

The original religion of the Mongolic peoples was Mongolian shamanism. The Xianbei came in contact with Confucianism and Daoism but eventually adopted Buddhism. However, the Xianbeis and some other people in Mongolia and Rourans followed a form of shamanism.[76] In the 5th century the Buddhist monk Dharmapriya was proclaimed "State Teacher" of the Rouran Khaganate and 3,000 families and some Rouran nobles became Buddhists. In 511 the Rouran Douluofubadoufa Khan sent Hong Xuan to the Tuoba court with a pearl-encrusted statue of the Buddha as a gift. The Tuoba Xianbei and Khitans were mostly Buddhists, although they still retained their original Shamanism. The Tuoba had a "sacrificial castle" to the west of their capital where ceremonies to spirits took place. Wooden statues of the spirits were erected on top of this sacrificial castle. One ritual involved seven princes with milk offerings who ascended the stairs with 20 female shamans and offered prayers, sprinkling the statues with the sacred milk. The Khitan had their holiest shrine on Mount Muye where portraits of their earliest ancestor Qishou Khagan, his wife Kedun and eight sons were kept in two temples. Mongolic peoples were also exposed to Zoroastrianism, Manicheism, Nestorianism, Eastern Orthodoxy and Islam from the west. The Mongolic peoples, in particular the Borjigin, had their holiest shrine on Mount Burkhan Khaldun where their ancestor Börte Chono (Blue Wolf) and Goo Maral (Beautiful Doe) had given birth to them. Genghis Khan usually fasted, prayed and meditated on this mountain before his campaigns. As a young man he had thanked the mountain for saving his life and prayed at the foot of the mountain sprinkling offerings and bowing nine times to the east with his belt around his neck and his hat held at his chest. Genghis Khan kept a close watch on the Mongolic supreme shaman Kokochu Teb who sometimes conflicted with his authority. Later the imperial cult of Genghis Khan (Tengerism, centered on the eight white gers and nine white banners in Ordos) grew into a highly organized indigenous religion with scriptures in the Mongolian script.[77] Indigenous moral precepts of the Mongolic peoples were enshrined in oral wisdom sayings (now collected in several volumes), the anda (blood-brother) system and ancient texts such as the Chinggis-un Bilig (Wisdom of Genghis) and Oyun Tulkhuur (Key of Intelligence). These moral precepts were expressed in poetic form and mainly involved truthfulness, fidelity, help in hardship, unity, self-control, fortitude, veneration of nature, veneration of the state and veneration of parents.

In 1254 Möngke Khan organized a formal religious debate (in which William of Rubruck took part) between Christians, Muslims and Buddhists in Karakorum, a cosmopolitan city of many religions. The Mongolic Empire was known for its religious tolerance, but had a special leaning towards Buddhism and was sympathetic towards Christianity while still worshipping Tengri. The Mongolic leader Abaqa Khan sent a delegation of 13–16 to the Second Council of Lyon (1274), which created a great stir, particularly when their leader 'Zaganus' underwent a public baptism. A joint crusade was announced in line with the Franco-Mongol alliance but did not materialize because Pope Gregory X died in 1276. Yahballaha III (1245–1317) and Rabban Bar Sauma (c. 1220–1294) were famous Mongolic Nestorian Christians. The Keraites in central Mongolia were Christian. In Istanbul the Church of Saint Mary of the Mongols stands as a reminder of the Byzantine-Mongol alliance. The western Khanates, however, eventually adopted Islam (under Berke and Ghazan) and the Turkic languages (because of its commercial importance), although allegiance to the Great Khan and limited use of the Mongolic languages can be seen even in the 1330s. In 1521 the first Mughal emperor Babur took part in a military banner milk-sprinkling ceremony in the Chagatai Khanate where the Mongolian language was still used. Al-Adil Kitbugha (reigned 1294-1296), a Mongol Sultan of Egypt, and the half-Mongol An-Nasir Muhammad (reigned till 1341) built the Madrassa of Al-Nasir Muhammad in Cairo, Egypt. An-Nasir's Mongol mother was Ashlun bint Shaktay. The Mongolic nobility during the Yuan dynasty studied Confucianism, built Confucian temples (including Beijing Confucius Temple) and translated Confucian works into Mongolic but mainly followed the Sakya school of Tibetan Buddhism under Phags-pa Lama. The general populace still practised Shamanism. Dongxiang and Bonan Mongols adopted Islam, as did Moghol-speaking peoples in Afghanistan. In the 1576 the Gelug school of Tibetan Buddhism became the state religion of Mongolia. The Red Hat school of Tibetan Buddhism coexisted with the Gelug Yellow Hat school which was founded by the half-Mongol Je Tsongkhapa (1357-1419). Shamanism was absorbed into the state religion while being marginalized in its purer forms, later only surviving in far northern Mongolia. Monks were some of the leading intellectuals in Mongolia, responsible for much of the literature and art of the pre-modern period. Many Buddhist philosophical works lost in Tibet and elsewhere are preserved in older and purer form in Mongolian ancient texts (e.g. the Mongol Kanjur). Zanabazar (1635–1723), Zaya Pandita (1599–1662) and Danzanravjaa (1803–1856) are among the most famous Mongol holy men. The 4th Dalai Lama Yonten Gyatso (1589–1617), a Mongol himself, is recognized as the only non-Tibetan Dalai Lama although the current 14th Dalai Lama is of Mongolic Monguor extraction.[78] The name is a combination of the Mongolian word dalai meaning "ocean" and the Tibetan word (bla-ma) meaning "guru, teacher, mentor".[1] Many Buryats became Orthodox Christians due to the Russian expansion. During the socialist period religion was officially banned, although it was practiced in clandestine circles. Today, a sizable proportion of Mongolic peoples are atheist or agnostic. In the most recent census in Mongolia, almost forty percent of the population reported as being atheist, while the majority religion was Tibetan Buddhism, with 53%.[79] Having survived suppression by the Communists, Buddhism among the Eastern, Northern, Southern and Western Mongols is today primarily of the Gelugpa (Yellow Hat sect) school of Tibetan Buddhism. There is a strong shamanistic influence in the Gelugpa sect among the Mongols.[80]

Military

Mongols battled against the most powerful armies and warriors in Eurasia.[citation needed] The beating of the kettle and smoke signals were signals for the start of battle. One battle formation that they used consisted of five squadrons or units. The typical squadrons were divided by ranks. The first two ranks were in the front. These warriors had the heaviest armor and weapons. The back three ranks broke out between the front ranks and attacked first with their arrows.[81] The forces kept their distance from the enemy and killed them with arrow fire, during which time "archers did not aim at a specific target, but shot their arrows at a high path into a set 'killing zone' or target area."[82] Mongolics also acquired engineers from the defeated armies. They made engineers a permanent part of their army, so that their weapons and machinery were complex and efficient.[83]

Kinship and family life

 
Mongols grazing livestock, by Roy Chapman Andrews photographs in 1921

The traditional Mongol family was patriarchal, patrilineal and patrilocal. Wives were brought for each of the sons, while daughters were married off to other clans. Wife-taking clans stood in a relation of inferiority to wife-giving clans. Thus wife-giving clans were considered "elder" or "bigger" in relation to wife-taking clans, who were considered "younger" or "smaller".[84][85] This distinction, symbolized in terms of "elder" and "younger" or "bigger" and "smaller", was carried into the clan and family as well, and all members of a lineage were terminologically distinguished by generation and age, with senior superior to junior.

In the traditional Mongolian family, each son received a part of the family herd as he married, with the elder son receiving more than the younger son. The youngest son would remain in the parental tent caring for his parents, and after their death he would inherit the parental tent in addition to his own part of the herd. This inheritance system was mandated by law codes such as the Yassa, created by Genghis Khan.[86] Likewise, each son inherited a part of the family's camping lands and pastures, with the elder son receiving more than the younger son. The eldest son inherited the farthest camping lands and pastures, and each son in turn inherited camping lands and pastures closer to the family tent until the youngest son inherited the camping lands and pastures immediately surrounding the family tent. Family units would often remain near each other and in close cooperation, though extended families would inevitably break up after a few generations. It is probable that the Yasa simply put into written law the principles of customary law.

It is apparent that in many cases, for example in family instructions, the yasa tacitly accepted the principles of customary law and avoided any interference with them. For example, Riasanovsky said that killing the man or the woman in case of adultery is a good illustration. Yasa permitted the institutions of polygamy and concubinage so characteristic of southerly nomadic peoples. Children born of concubines were legitimate. Seniority of children derived their status from their mother. Eldest son received more than the youngest after the death of father. But the latter inherited the household of the father. Children of concubines also received a share in the inheritance, in accordance with the instructions of their father (or with custom).

— Nilgün Dalkesen, Gender roles and women's status in Central Asia and Anatolia between the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries[87]

After the family, the next largest social units were the subclan and clan. These units were derived from groups claiming patrilineal descent from a common ancestor, ranked in order of seniority (the "conical clan"). By the Chingissid era this ranking was symbolically expressed at formal feasts, in which tribal chieftains were seated and received particular portions of the slaughtered animal according to their status.[88] The lineage structure of Central Asia had three different modes. It was organized on the basis of genealogical distance, or the proximity of individuals to one another on a graph of kinship; generational distance, or the rank of generation in relation to a common ancestor, and birth order, the rank of brothers in relation to each another.[89] The paternal descent lines were collaterally ranked according to the birth of their founders, and were thus considered senior and junior to each other. Of the various collateral patrilines, the senior in order of descent from the founding ancestor, the line of eldest sons, was the most noble. In the steppe, no one had his exact equal; everyone found his place in a system of collaterally ranked lines of descent from a common ancestor.[90] It was according to this idiom of superiority and inferiority of lineages derived from birth order that legal claims to superior rank were couched.[91]

The Mongol kinship is one of a particular patrilineal type classed as Omaha, in which relatives are grouped together under separate terms that crosscut generations, age, and even sexual difference. Thus, oe uses different terms for a man's father's sister's children, his sister's children, and his daughter's children. A further attribute is strict terminological differentiation of siblings according to seniority.

The division of Mongolian society into senior elite lineages and subordinate junior lineages was waning by the twentieth century. During the 1920s, the Communist regime was established. The remnants of the Mongolian aristocracy fought alongside the Japanese and against Chinese, Soviets and Communist Mongols during World War II, but were defeated.

The anthropologist Herbert Harold Vreeland visited three Mongol communities in 1920 and published a highly detailed book with the results of his fieldwork, Mongol community and kinship structure.[92]

Royal family

 
Mural of a Mongol family, Yuan dynasty
 
The Mughal Emperor Babur and his heir Humayun. The word Mughal is derived from the Persian word for Mongol.

The royal clan of the Mongols is the Borjigin clan descended from Bodonchar Munkhag (c. 850–900). This clan produced Khans and princes for Mongolia and surrounding regions until the early 20th century. All the Great Khans of the Mongol Empire, including its founder Genghis Khan, were of the Borjigin clan. The royal family of Mongolia was called the Altan Urag (Golden Lineage) and is synonymous with Genghisid. After the fall of the Northern Yuan Dynasty in 1635 the Dayan Khanid aristocracy continued the Genghisid legacy in Mongolia until 1937 when most were killed during the Stalinist purges. The four hereditary Khans of the Khalkha (Tüsheet Khan, Setsen Khan, Zasagt Khan and Sain Noyan Khan) were all descended from Dayan Khan (1464–1543) through Abtai Sain Khan, Sholoi Khan, Laikhur Khan and Tumenkhen Sain Noyan respectively. Dayan Khan was himself raised to power by Queen Mandukhai the Wise (c.1449–1510) during the crisis of the late 15th century when the line of Kublai Khan, the grandson of Genghis Khan, was on the verge of dying out.

Dayan Khan's ancestry is as follows. His father was Bayanmunkh Jonon (1448–1479) the son of Kharkhutsag Taij (?–1453), the son of Agbarjin Khan (1423–1454), the son of Ajai Taij (1399–1438), the son or younger brother of Elbeg Nigülesügchi Khan (1361–1399), the son of Uskhal Khan (1342–1388), the younger brother of Biligtü Khan (1340–1370) and the son of Toghon Temur Khan (1320–1370), the son of Khutughtu Khan (1300–1329), the son of Külüg Khan (1281–1311), the son of Darmabala (1264–1292), the son of Crown Prince Zhenjin (1243–1286), the son of Kublai Khan (1215–1294), the son of Tolui (1191–1232), the son of Genghis Khan (1162–1227). Okada (1994) noted that according to the Korean Veritable Records Taisun Khan, the brother of Agbarjin Khan, sent a Mongolian letter to Korea on May 9, 1442, where he named Kublai Khan as his ancestor.[93] This, along with the direct Mongol account of the Erdeniin Tobchi as well as indirect indications from three different Mongolian chronicles noted in Okada, establishes the Kublaid descent of Elbeg Nigülesügchi Khan. Buyandelger (2000) noted that the year of birth of Elbeg Nigülesügchi Khan as well as the meaning of his name is the same as that of Maidarabala (买的里八剌) the son of Biligtü Khan's secondary consort Empress Kim (daughter of Kim Yunjang 金允藏). Further noting that Maidarabala was sent back to Mongolia in 1374 after being held hostage in Beiping (Beijing) for 3 years Buyandelger identified Maidarabala with Elbeg Nigülesügchi Khan.[94] This does not change the Kublaid descent of Elbeg Nigülesügchi Khan and only changes his paternity from Uskhal Khan to his brother Biligtü Khan.

The Khongirad was the main consort clan of the Borjigin and provided numerous Empresses and consorts. There were five minor non-Khonggirad inputs from the maternal side which passed on to the Dayan Khanid aristocracy of Mongolia and Inner Mongolia. The first was the Keraite lineage added through Kublai Khan's mother Sorghaghtani Beki which linked the Borjigin to the Nestorian Christian tribe of Cyriacus Buyruk Khan. The second was the Turkic Karluk lineage added through Toghon Temur Khan's mother Mailaiti which linked the Borjigin to Bilge Kul Qadir Khan (840–893) of the Kara-Khanid Khanate and ultimately to the Lion-Karluks as well as the Ashina tribe of the 6th century Göktürks. The third was the Korean lineage added through Biligtü Khan's mother Empress Gi (1315–370) which linked the Borjigin to the Haengju Gi clan and ultimately to King Jun of Gojeoson (262–184 BC) and possibly even further to King Tang of Shang (1675–1646 BC) through Jizi. The fourth was the Esen Taishi lineage added through Bayanmunkh Jonon's mother Tsetseg Khatan which linked the Borjigin more firmly to the Oirats. The fifth was the Aisin-Gioro lineage added during the Qing Dynasty. To the west, Genghisid Khans received daughters of the Byzantine emperor in marriage, such as when the Byzantine princess Maria Palaiologina married to Abaqa Khan (1234–1282), while there were also connections with European royalty through Russia, where, for example, Prince Gleb (1237–1278) married Feodora Sartaqovna the daughter of Sartaq Khan, a great-grandson of Genghis Khan.

The Dayan Khanid aristocracy still held power during the Bogd Khanate of Mongolia (1911–1919) and the Constitutional Monarchy period (1921–1924). They were accused of collaboration with the Japanese and executed in 1937 while their counterparts in Inner Mongolia were severely persecuted during the Cultural Revolution. Ancestral shrines of Genghis Khan were destroyed by the Red Guards during the 1960s and the Horse-Tail Banner of Genghis Khan disappeared. The Rinchen family in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia is a Dayan Khanid branch from Buryatia. Members of this family include the scholar Byambyn Rinchen (1905–1977), geologist Rinchen Barsbold (1935–?), diplomat Ganibal Jagvaral and Amartuvshin Ganibal (1974–?) the President of XacBank. There are many other families with aristocratic ancestry in Mongolia and it is often noted that most of the common populace already has some share of Genghisid ancestry. Mongolia, however, has remained a republic since 1924 and there has been no discussion of introducing a constitutional monarchy.

Historical population

Year Population Notes
1 AD 1–2,000,000?
1000 2,500,000? 750,000 Khitans
1200 2,600,000? 1,5–2,000,000 Mongols
1600 2,300,000? 77,000[95][96] Buryats; 600,000 Khalkhas
1700 2,600,000? 600,000 Khalkhas; 1,100,000? Oirats: 600,000 Zunghars, 200–250,000? Kalmyks, 200,000 Upper Mongols[40]
1800 2,000,000? 600,000 Khalkhas; 440,000? Oirats: 120,000 Zunghars, 120,000? Upper Mongols
1900 2,300,000? 283,383[97] Buryats (1897); 500,000? Khalkhas (1911); 380,000 Oirats: 70,000? Mongolian Oirats (1911), 190,648 Kalmyks (1897), 70,000? Dzungarian and Inner Mongolian Oirats, 50,000 Upper Mongols;[40] 1,500,000? Southern Mongols (1911)
1927 2,100,000? 600,000 Mongolians[98] — 230,000? Buryats: 15,000? Mongolian Buryats, 214,957 Buryats in Russia (1926); 500,000? Khalkhas (1927); 330,000? Oirats: 70,000 Mongolian Oirats, 128,809 Kalmyks (1926)
1956 2,500,000? 228,647 Buryats: 24,625 Mongolian Buryats (1956), 135,798 Buryats of the (Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic; 1959), 23,374 Agin-Buryats (1959), 44,850 Ust-Orda Buryats (1959); 639,141 Khalkhas (1956); 240,000? Oirats: 77,996 Mongolian Oirats (1956), 100,603 Kalmyks (1959), 1,462,956 Mongols in China (1953)
1980 4,300,000? 317,966? Buryats: 29,802 Mongolian Buryats (1979), 206,860 Buryatian Buryats (1979), 45,436 Usta-Orda Buryats (1979), 35,868 Agin-Buryats (1979); 1,271,086 Khalkhas; 398,339 Oirats: 127,328 Mongolian Oirats (1979), 140,103 Kalmyks (1979), 2,153,000 Southern Mongols (1981)[99][100]
1990 4,700,000? 376,629 Buryats: 35,444 Mongolian Buryats (1989), 249,525 Buryatian Buryats (1989), 49,298 Usta-Orda Buryats (1989), 42,362 Agin-Buryats (1989); 1,654,221 Khalkhas; 470,000? Oirats: 161,803 Mongolian Oirats (1989), 165,103 Kalmyks (1989), 33,000 Upper Mongols (1987);[101]
2010 5–9,200,000?[102] 500,000? Buryats (45–75,000 Mongolian Buryats, 10,000 Hulunbuir Buryats); 2,300,000 Khalkhas (including Dariganga, Darkhad, Eljigin and Sartuul); 638,372 Oirats: 183,372 Kalmyks, 205,000 Mongolian Oirats, 90–100, 000 Upper Mongols, 2010 — 140,000 Xinjiang Oirats; 2013 — 190,000? Xinjiang Oirats: 100,000? Torghuts (Kalmyks), 40–50,000? Olots, 40,000? other Oirats: mainly Khoshuts; 1,5–4,000,000? 5,700,000? Southern Mongols[99]
 
This map shows the boundary of the 13th-century Mongol Empire and location of today's Mongols in modern Mongolia, Russia and China.

Geographic distribution

Today, the majority of Mongols live in the modern states of Mongolia, China (mainly Inner Mongolia and Xinjiang), Russia, Kyrgyzstan and Afghanistan.

The differentiation between tribes and peoples (ethnic groups) is handled differently depending on the country. The Tumed, Chahar, Ordos, Barga, Altai Uriankhai, Buryats, Dörböd (Dörvöd, Dörbed), Torguud, Dariganga, Üzemchin (or Üzümchin), Bayads, Khoton, Myangad (Mingad), Eljigin, Zakhchin, Darkhad, and Olots (or Öölds or Ölöts) are all considered as tribes of the Mongols.

Subgroups

The Eastern Mongols are mainly concentrated in Mongolia, including the Khalkha, Eljigin Khalkha, Darkhad, Sartuul Khalkha, and Dariganga (Khalkha).

The Southern or Inner Mongols mainly are concentrated in Inner Mongolia, China. They comprise the Abaga Mongols, Abaganar, Aohans, Asud, Baarins, Chahar, Durved, Gorlos, Kharchin, Hishigten, Khorchin, Huuchid, Jalaid, Jaruud, Muumyangan, Naiman (Southern Mongols), Onnigud, Ordos, Sunud, Tümed, Urad, and Uzemchin.

Sister groups

The Buryats are mainly concentrated in their homeland, the Buryat Republic, a federal subject of Russia. They are the major northern subgroup of the Mongols.[103] The Barga Mongols are mainly concentrated in Inner Mongolia, China, along with the Buryats and Hamnigan.

The Western Oirats are mainly concentrated in Western Mongolia:

  • 184,000 Kalmyks (2010) — Kalmykia, Russia
  • 205,000 Mongolian Oirats (2010)
  • 140,000 Oirats (2010) — Xinjiang region, China
  • 90,000 Upper Mongols (2010) — Qinghai region, China. The Khoshuts are the major subgroup of the Upper Mongols, along with the Choros, Khalkha and Torghuts.
  • 12,000 Sart Kalmyks (Zungharian descents) (2012) — Kyrgyzstan. Religion: Sunni Islam.

Altai Uriankhai, Baatud, Bayad, Chantuu, Choros, Durvud, Khoshut, Khoid, Khoton, Myangad, Olots, Sart Kalmyks (mainly Olots), Torghut, Zakhchin.

Mongolia

 
Mongol women in traditional dress

In modern-day Mongolia, Mongols make up approximately 95% of the population, with the largest ethnic group being Khalkha Mongols, followed by Buryats, both belonging to the Eastern Mongolian peoples. They are followed by Oirats, who belong to the Western Mongolian peoples.

Mongolian ethnic groups: Baarin, Baatud, Barga, Bayad, Buryat, Selenge Chahar, Chantuu, Darkhad, Dariganga Dörbet Oirat, Eljigin, Khalkha, Hamnigan, Kharchin, Khoid, Khorchin, Hotogoid, Khoton, Huuchid, Myangad, Olots, Sartuul, Torgut, Tümed, Üzemchin, Zakhchin.

China

 
Strong Mongol men at August games. Photo by Wm. Purdom, 1909

The 2010 census of the People's Republic of China counted more than 7 million people of various Mongolic groups. The 1992 census of China counted only 3.6 million ethnic Mongols.[citation needed] The 2010 census counted roughly 5.8 million ethnic Mongols, 621,500 Dongxiangs, 289,565 Mongours, 132,000 Daurs, 20,074 Baoans, and 14,370 Yugurs.[citation needed] Most of them live in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, followed by Liaoning. Small numbers can also be found in provinces near those two.

There were 669,972 Mongols in Liaoning in 2011, making up 11.52% of Mongols in China.[104] The closest Mongol area to the sea is the Dabao Mongol Ethnic Township (大堡蒙古族乡) in Fengcheng, Liaoning. With 8,460 Mongols (37.4% of the township population)[citation needed] it is located 40 km (25 mi)from the North Korean border and 65 km (40 mi)from Korea Bay of the Yellow Sea. Another contender for closest Mongol area to the sea would be Erdaowanzi Mongol Ethnic Township (二道湾子蒙古族乡) in Jianchang County, Liaoning. With 5,011 Mongols (20.7% of the township population)[citation needed] it is located around 65 km (40 mi)from the Bohai Sea.

Other peoples speaking Mongolic languages are the Daur, Sogwo Arig, Monguor people, Dongxiangs, Bonans, Sichuan Mongols and eastern part of the Yugur people. Those do not officially count as part of the Mongol ethnicity, but are recognized as ethnic groups of their own. The Mongols lost their contact with the Mongours, Bonan, Dongxiangs, Yunnan Mongols since the fall of the Yuan dynasty. Mongolian scientists and journalists met with the Dongxiangs and Yunnan Mongols in the 2000s.[citation needed]

Inner Mongolia: Southern Mongols, Barga, Buryat, Dörbet Oirat, Khalkha, Dzungar people, Eznee Torgut.

Xinjiang province: Altai Uriankhai, Chahar, Khoshut, Olots, Torghut, Zakhchin.

Qinghai province: Upper Mongols: Choros, Khalkha Mongols, Khoshut, Torghut.

Russia

Two Mongolic ethnic groups are present in Russia; the 2010 census found 461,410 Buryats and 183,400 Kalmyks.[105]

Elsewhere

Smaller numbers of Mongolic peoples exist in Western Europe and North America. Some of the more notable communities exist in South Korea, the United States, the Czech Republic and the United Kingdom.

Gallery

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Sood, Amy (18 February 2022). "This photo was taken from a movie scene depicting the Mongolian queen's execution". AFP. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  2. ^ Demographics of Mongolia
  3. ^ Excluding Daurs (Demographics of China)
  4. ^ "Number of foreigners in Korea up for 1st time in 20 months".
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h "2020 Population and housing census of Mongolia". National Statistical Office of Mongolia. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on December 6, 2016.
  7. ^ "T13 Cizinci podle typu pobytu a pohlaví - 25 nejčastějších státních občanství k 30. 6. 2020". czso.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  8. ^ "Canada Census Profile 2021". Census Profile, 2021 Census. Statistics Canada Statistique Canada. 7 May 2021. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
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  • Bumochir, D. (2014). "Institutionalization of Mongolian shamanism: from primitivism to civilization". Asian Ethnicity. 15 (4): 473–91. doi:10.1080/14631369.2014.939331. S2CID 145329835.
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  • Schlehe, Judith (2004). "Shamanism in Mongolia and in New Age Movements". In Rasuly-Paleczek, Gabriele (ed.). Central Asia on Display: Proceedings of the VIIth Conference of the European Society for Central Asian Studies. Vol. 1. Vienna: LIT Verlag. pp. 283–96. ISBN 3-8258-8309-4.

Primary sources

External links

  • "Evidence that a West-East admixed population lived in the Tarim Basin as early as the early Bronze Age" Li et al. BMC Biology 2010, 8:15.
  • Ethnic map of Mongolia

mongols, confused, with, mongolic, peoples, information, population, mongolia, demographics, mongolia, this, article, about, east, asian, ethnic, group, other, uses, disambiguation, mongolian, Монголчууд, ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯᠴᠤᠳ, moŋğolçuud, ˈmɔɴ, ɢɔɬ, ʃot, east, asian, eth. Not to be confused with Mongolic peoples For information on the population of Mongolia see Demographics of Mongolia This article is about the East Asian ethnic group For other uses see Mongols disambiguation The Mongols Mongolian Mongolchuud ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯᠴᠤᠳ Moŋgolcuud ˈmɔɴ ɢɔɬ t ʃot are an East Asian ethnic group native to Mongolia and to Inner Mongolia in China The Mongols are the principal member of the large family of Mongolic peoples The Oirats in Western Mongolia as well as the Buryats and Kalmyks of Russia are classified either as distinct ethno linguistic groups or subgroups of Mongols MongolsMongolchuud Moŋgolcuud ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯᠴᠤᠳImage of a Mongolian lady incorrectly identified as Genepil Queen consort of Mongolia 1 Total populationc 10 11 millionRegions with significant populations Mongolia 3 046 882 2 Other significant population centers China6 290 204 3 South Korea37 963 4 United States19 170 5 Kyrgyzstan12 000 6 Czech Republic10 236 7 Canada9 090 8 Japan8 772 5 Kazakhstan7 218 5 Australia5 538 5 Germany3 972 5 Sweden3 951 5 France3 102 5 Russia2 986 9 Turkey2 716 5 Austria2 579 10 LanguagesMongolianReligionPredominantly Tibetan Buddhism 11 12 13 Minority Mongolian shamanism Tengrism 14 Eastern Orthodox Church ProtestantismRelated ethnic groupsOther Mongolic peoplesThe Mongols are bound together by a common heritage and ethnic identity Their indigenous dialects are collectively known as the Mongolian language The ancestors of the modern day Mongols are referred to as Proto Mongols Contents 1 Definition 2 History 2 1 In the Chinese classics 2 2 Mongol Empire 2 3 Northern Yuan 2 4 Qing era Mongols 2 5 Post Qing era 3 Language 4 Religion 5 Military 6 Kinship and family life 7 Royal family 8 Historical population 9 Geographic distribution 9 1 Subgroups 9 2 Sister groups 9 3 Mongolia 9 4 China 9 5 Russia 9 6 Elsewhere 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Citations 12 2 Secondary sources 12 3 Primary sources 13 External linksDefinitionBroadly defined the term includes the Mongols proper also known as the Khalkha Mongols Buryats Oirats the Kalmyk people and the Southern Mongols The latter comprises the Abaga Mongols Abaganar Aohans Baarins Chahars Eastern Dorbets Gorlos Mongols Jalaids Jaruud Kharchins Khishigten Khorchins Khuuchid Muumyangan Naimans Onnigud Ordos Sunud Tumed Urad and Uzemchins 15 The designation Mongol briefly appeared in 8th century records of Tang China to describe a tribe of Shiwei It resurfaced in the late 11th century during the Khitan ruled Liao dynasty After the fall of the Liao in 1125 the Khamag Mongols became a leading tribe on the Mongolian Plateau However their wars with the Jurchen ruled Jin dynasty and the Tatar confederation had weakened them In the thirteenth century the word Mongol grew into an umbrella term for a large group of Mongolic speaking tribes united under the rule of Genghis Khan 16 History Asia in 500 showing the Rouran Khaganate and its neighbors including the Northern Wei and the Tuyuhun Khanate all of them were established by Proto Mongols Mongol man with a hat Yuan dynasty Mongol wearing a hat 14th c Main article History of Mongolia See also Genetic history of East Asians In various times Mongolic peoples have been equated with the Scythians the Magog and the Tungusic peoples Based on Chinese historical texts the ancestry of the Mongolic peoples can be traced back to the Donghu a nomadic confederation occupying eastern Mongolia and Manchuria The Donghu neighboured the Xiongnu whose identity is still debated today Although some scholars maintain that they were proto Mongols they were more likely a multi ethnic group of Mongolic and Turkic tribes 17 It has been suggested that the language of the Huns was related to the Xiongnu 18 The Donghu however can be much more easily labeled proto Mongol since the Chinese histories trace only Mongolic tribes and kingdoms Xianbei and Wuhuan peoples from them although some historical texts claim a mixed Xiongnu Donghu ancestry for some tribes e g the Khitan 19 20 In the Chinese classics Yuan dynasty Mongol rider See also Timeline of Mongols prior to the Mongol Empire The Donghu are mentioned by Sima Qian as already existing in Inner Mongolia north of Yan in 699 632 BCE along with the Shanrong Unofficial Chinese sources such as Yi Zhou Shu Lost Book of Zhou 21 and the Classic of Mountains and Seas 22 project the Donghu s activities back to the Shang dynasty 1600 1046 BCE However the Hu 胡 were not mentioned among the non Shang fang 方 border region modern term fangguo 方國 fang countries in the extant oracle bones from the Shang period 23 The Xianbei formed part of the Donghu confederation and possibly had in earlier times some independence within the Donghu confederation as well as from the Zhou dynasty During the Warring States the poem The Great Summons Chinese 大招 pinyin Da zhao in the anthology Verses of Chu mentioned small waisted and long necked Xianbei women 24 and the book Discourses of the States states that during the reign of King Cheng of Zhou reigned 1042 1021 BCE they came to participate at a meeting of Zhou subject lords at Qiyang 岐阳 now Qishan County but were only allowed to perform the fire ceremony under the supervision of Chu since they were not vassals 诸侯 by enfeoffment and establishment The Xianbei chieftain was appointed joint guardian of the ritual torch along with Chu viscount Xiong Yi 25 These early Xianbei came from the nearby Zhukaigou culture 2200 1500 BCE in the Ordos Desert where maternal DNA corresponds to the Mongol Daur people and the Tungusic Evenks The Zhukaigou Xianbei part of the Ordos culture of Inner Mongolia and northern Shaanxi had trade relations with the Shang Liu Song dynasty commentator Pei Yin 裴駰 in his Jixie 集解 quoted Eastern Han dynasty scholar Fu Qian 服虔 s assertion that Shanrong 山戎 and Beidi 北狄 are ancestors of the present day Xianbei 鮮卑 26 27 Again in Inner Mongolia another closely connected core Mongolic Xianbei region was the Upper Xiajiadian culture 1000 600 BCE where the Donghu confederation was centered After the Donghu were defeated by Xiongnu king Modu Chanyu the Xianbei and Wuhuan survived as the main remnants of the confederation Tadun Khan of the Wuhuan died 207 AD was the ancestor of the proto Mongolic Kumo Xi 28 The Wuhuan are of the direct Donghu royal line and the New Book of Tang says that in 209 BCE Modu Chanyu defeated the Wuhuan instead of using the word Donghu The Xianbei however were of the lateral Donghu line and had a somewhat separate identity although they shared the same language with the Wuhuan In 49 CE the Xianbei ruler Bianhe Bayan Khan raided and defeated the Xiongnu killing 2000 after having received generous gifts from Emperor Guangwu of Han The Xianbei reached their peak under Tanshihuai Khan reigned 156 181 who expanded the vast but short lived Xianbei state 93 234 Three prominent groups split from the Xianbei state as recorded by the Chinese histories the Rouran claimed by some to be the Pannonian Avars the Khitan people and the Shiwei a subtribe called the Shiwei Menggu is held to be the origin of the Genghisid Mongols 29 Besides these three Xianbei groups there were others such as the Murong Duan and Tuoba Their culture was nomadic their religion shamanism or Buddhism and their military strength formidable There is still no direct evidence that the Rouran spoke Mongolic languages although most scholars agree that they were Proto Mongolic 30 The Khitan however had two scripts of their own and many Mongolic words are found in their half deciphered writings Geographically the Tuoba Xianbei ruled the southern part of Inner Mongolia and northern China the Rouran Yujiulu Shelun was the first to use the title khagan in 402 ruled eastern Mongolia western Mongolia the northern part of Inner Mongolia and northern Mongolia the Khitan were concentrated in eastern part of Inner Mongolia north of Korea and the Shiwei were located to the north of the Khitan These tribes and kingdoms were soon overshadowed by the rise of the First Turkic Khaganate in 555 the Uyghur Khaganate in 745 and the Yenisei Kirghiz states in 840 The Tuoba were eventually absorbed into China The Rouran fled west from the Gokturks and either disappeared into obscurity or as some say invaded Europe as the Avars under their Khan Bayan I Some Rouran under Tatar Khan migrated east founding the Tatar confederation who became part of the Shiwei The Khitans who were independent after their separation from the Kumo Xi of Wuhuan origin in 388 continued as a minor power in Manchuria until one of them Abaoji 872 926 established the Liao dynasty 916 1125 Mongol Empire Main articles Mongol Empire and Northern Yuan A portrait of Kublai Khan by Araniko 1245 1306 Mongol huntsmen Ming dynasty The destruction of Uyghur Khaganate by the Kirghiz resulted in the end of Turkic dominance in Mongolia According to historians Kirghiz were not interested in assimilating newly acquired lands instead they controlled local tribes through various manaps tribal leaders The Khitans occupied the areas vacated by the Turkic Uyghurs bringing them under their control The Yenisei Kirghiz state was centered on Khakassia and they were expelled from Mongolia by the Khitans in 924 Beginning in the 10th century the Khitans under the leadership of Abaoji prevailed in several military campaigns against the Tang dynasty s border guards and the Xi Shiwei and Jurchen nomadic groups 31 Remnants of the Liao dynasty led by Yelu Dashi fled west through Mongolia after being defeated by the Jurchen led Jin dynasty and founded the Qara Khitai Western Liao dynasty in 1124 while still maintaining control over western Mongolia In 1218 Genghis Khan incorporated the Qara Khitai after which the Khitan passed into obscurity Some remnants surfaced as the Qutlugh Khanid dynasty 1222 1306 in Iran and the Dai Khitai in Afghanistan With the expansion of the Mongol Empire the Mongolic peoples settled over almost all Eurasia and carried on military campaigns from the Adriatic Sea to Indonesian Java and from Japan to Palestine Gaza They simultaneously became Padishahs of Persia Emperors of China and Great Khans of the Mongols and one Al Adil Kitbugha became Sultan of Egypt The Mongolic peoples of the Golden Horde established themselves to govern Russia by 1240 32 By 1279 they conquered the Song dynasty and brought all of China proper under the control of the Yuan dynasty 32 from Chinggis up high down to the common people all are shaven in the style pojiao As with small boys in China they leave three locks one hanging from the crown of their heads When it has grown some they clip it the strands lower on both sides they plait to hang down on the shoulders 33 Zhao Gong With the breakup of the empire the dispersed Mongolic peoples quickly adopted the mostly Turkic cultures surrounding them and were assimilated forming parts of Afghanistan s Hazaras Azerbaijanis Uzbeks Karakalpaks Tatars Bashkirs Turkmens Uyghurs Nogays Kyrgyzs Kazakhs Caucasaus peoples Iranian peoples and Moghuls linguistic and cultural Persianization also began to be prominent in these territories Some Mongols assimilated into the Yakuts after their migration to northern Siberia and about 30 of Yakut words have Mongol origin However remnants of the Yuan imperial family retreated north to Mongolia in 1368 retaining their language and culture There were 250 000 Mongols in southern China and many Mongols were massacred by the rebel army The survivors were trapped in southern China and eventually assimilated The Dongxiangs Bonans Yugur and Monguor people were invaded by the Ming dynasty Northern Yuan The Northern Yuan dynasty and Turco Mongol residual states and domains by the 15th century After the fall of the Yuan dynasty in 1368 the Mongols continued to rule the Northern Yuan dynasty in northern China and the Mongolian steppe However the Oirads began to challenge the Eastern Mongols under the Borjigin monarchs in the late 14th century and Mongolia was divided into two parts Western Mongolia Oirats and Eastern Mongolia Khalkha Inner Mongols Barga Buryats The earliest written references to the plough in Middle Mongolian language sources appear towards the end of the 14th c 34 In 1434 Eastern Mongol Taisun Khan s 1433 1452 prime minister Western Mongol Togoon Taish reunited the Mongols after killing Eastern Mongol king Adai Khorchin Togoon died in 1439 and his son Esen Taish became ruler of Northern Yuan dynasty Esen later unified the Mongol tribes The Ming dynasty attempted to invade the Northern Yuan in the 14 16th centuries however the Ming dynasty was defeated by the Oirat Southern Mongol Eastern Mongol and united Mongol armies Esen s 30 000 cavalries defeated 500 000 Chinese soldiers in 1449 Within eighteen months of his defeat of the titular Khan Taisun in 1453 Esen himself took the title of Great Khan 1454 1455 of the Great Yuan 35 The Khalkha emerged during the reign of Dayan Khan 1479 1543 as one of the six tumens of the Eastern Mongolic peoples They quickly became the dominant Mongolic clan in Mongolia proper 36 37 He reunited the Mongols again In 1550 Altan Khan led a Khalkha Mongol raid on Beijing The Mongols voluntarily reunified during Eastern Mongolian Tumen Zasagt Khan rule 1558 1592 for the last time the Mongol Empire united all Mongols before this Eastern Mongolia was divided into three parts in the 17th century Outer Mongolia Khalkha Inner Mongolia Inner Mongols and the Buryat region in southern Siberia The last Mongol khagan was Ligdan in the early 17th century He got into conflicts with the Manchus over the looting of Chinese cities and managed to alienate most Mongol tribes In 1618 Ligdan signed a treaty with the Ming dynasty to protect their northern border from the Manchus attack in exchange for thousands of taels of silver By the 1620s only the Chahars remained under his rule Qing era Mongols Map showing wars between Qing Dynasty and Dzungar Khanate A Dzungar soldier called Ayusi from the high Qing era by Giuseppe Castiglione 1755 The Battle of Oroi Jalatu in 1755 between the Qing that ruled China at the time and Mongol Dzungar armies The fall of the Dzungar Khanate See also Mongolia under Qing rule The Chahar army was defeated in 1625 and 1628 by the Inner Mongol and Manchu armies due to Ligdan s faulty tactics The Qing forces secured their control over Inner Mongolia by 1635 and the army of the last khan Ligdan moved to battle against Tibetan Gelugpa sect Yellow Hat sect forces The Gelugpa forces supported the Manchus while Ligdan supported Kagyu sect Red Hat sect of Tibetan Buddhism Ligden died in 1634 on his way to Tibet By 1636 most Inner Mongolian nobles had submitted to the Qing dynasty founded by the Manchus Inner Mongolian Tengis noyan revolted against the Qing in the 1640s and the Khalkha battled to protect Sunud Western Mongol Oirats and Eastern Mongolian Khalkhas vied for domination in Mongolia since the 15th century and this conflict weakened Mongol strength In 1688 the Western Mongol Dzungar Khanate s king Galdan Boshugtu attacked Khalkha after murder of his younger brother by Tusheet Khan Chakhundorj main or Central Khalkha leader and the Khalkha Oirat War began Galdan threatened to kill Chakhundorj and Zanabazar Javzandamba Khutagt I spiritual head of Khalkha but they escaped to Sunud Inner Mongolia Many Khalkha nobles and folks fled to Inner Mongolia because of the war Few Khalkhas fled to the Buryat region and Russia threatened to exterminate them if they did not submit but many of them submitted to Galdan Boshugtu In 1683 Galdan s armies reached Tashkent and the Syr Darya and crushed two armies of the Kazakhs After that Galdan subjugated the Black Khirgizs and ravaged the Fergana Valley From 1685 Galdan s forces aggressively pushed the Kazakhs While his general Rabtan took Taraz and his main force forced the Kazakhs to migrate westwards 38 In 1687 he besieged the City of Turkistan Under the leadership of Abul Khair Khan the Kazakhs won major victories over the Dzungars at the Bulanty River in 1726 and at the Battle of Anrakay in 1729 39 The Khalkha eventually submitted to Qing rule in 1691 by Zanabazar s decision thus bringing all of today s Mongolia under the rule of the Qing dynasty but Khalkha de facto remained under the rule of Galdan Boshugtu Khaan until 1696 The Mongol Oirat s Code a treaty of alliance against foreign invasion between the Oirats and Khalkhas was signed in 1640 however the Mongols could not unite against foreign invasions Chakhundorj fought against Russian invasion of Outer Mongolia until 1688 and stopped Russian invasion of Khovsgol Province Zanabazar struggled to bring together the Oirats and Khalkhas before the war Galdan Boshugtu sent his army to liberate Inner Mongolia after defeating the Khalkha s army and called Inner Mongolian nobles to fight for Mongolian independence Some Inner Mongolian nobles Tibetans Kumul Khanate and some Moghulistan s nobles supported his war against the Manchus however Inner Mongolian nobles did not battle against the Qing There were three khans in Khalkha and Zasagt Khan Shar Western Khalkha leader was Galdan s ally Tsetsen Khan Eastern Khalkha leader did not engage in this conflict While Galdan was fighting in Eastern Mongolia his nephew Tseveenravdan seized the Dzungarian throne in 1689 and this event made Galdan impossible to fight against the Qing Empire The Russian and Qing Empires supported his action because this coup weakened Western Mongolian strength Galdan Boshugtu s army was defeated by the outnumbering Qing army in 1696 and he died in 1697 The Mongols who fled to the Buryat region and Inner Mongolia returned after the war Some Khalkhas mixed with the Buryats The Buryats fought against Russian invasion since the 1620s and thousands of Buryats were massacred The Buryat region was formally annexed to Russia by treaties in 1689 and 1727 when the territories on both the sides of Lake Baikal were separated from Mongolia In 1689 the Treaty of Nerchinsk established the northern border of Manchuria north of the present line The Russians retained Trans Baikalia between Lake Baikal and the Argun River north of Mongolia The Treaty of Kyakhta 1727 along with the Treaty of Nerchinsk regulated the relations between Imperial Russia and the Qing Empire until the mid nineteenth century It established the northern border of Mongolia Oka Buryats revolted in 1767 and Russia completely conquered the Buryat region in the late 18th century Russia and Qing were rival empires until the early 20th century however both empires carried out united policy against Central Asians The Qing Empire conquered Upper Mongolia or the Oirat s Khoshut Khanate in the 1720s and 80 000 people were killed 40 By that period Upper Mongolian population reached 200 000 The Dzungar Khanate conquered by the Qing dynasty in 1755 1758 because of their leaders and military commanders conflicts Some scholars estimate that about 80 of the Dzungar population were destroyed by a combination of warfare and disease during the Qing conquest of the Dzungar Khanate in 1755 1758 41 Mark Levene a historian whose recent research interests focus on genocide 42 has stated that the extermination of the Dzungars was arguably the eighteenth century genocide par excellence 43 The Dzungar population reached 600 000 in 1755 About 200 000 250 000 Oirats migrated from western Mongolia to Volga River in 1607 and established the Kalmyk Khanate The Torghuts were led by their Tayishi Hoo Orlog Russia was concerned about their attack but the Kalmyks became a Russian ally and a treaty to protect the southern Russian border was signed between the Kalmyk Khanate and Russia In 1724 the Kalmyks came under control of Russia By the early 18th century there were approximately 300 000 350 000 Kalmyks and 15 000 000 Russians citation needed The Tsardom of Russia gradually chipped away at the autonomy of the Kalmyk Khanate These policies for instance encouraged the establishment of Russian and German settlements on pastures the Kalmyks used to roam and feed their livestock In addition the Tsarist government imposed a council on the Kalmyk Khan thereby diluting his authority while continuing to expect the Kalmyk Khan to provide cavalry units to fight on behalf of Russia The Russian Orthodox church by contrast pressured Buddhist Kalmyks to adopt Orthodoxy In January 1771 approximately 200 000 170 000 44 Kalmyks began the migration from their pastures on the left bank of the Volga River to Dzungaria Western Mongolia through the territories of their Bashkir and Kazakh enemies The last Kalmyk khan Ubashi led the migration to restore Mongolian independence Ubashi Khan sent his 30 000 cavalries to the Russo Turkish War in 1768 1769 to gain weapon before the migration The Empress Catherine the Great ordered the Russian army Bashkirs and Kazakhs to exterminate all migrants and the Empress abolished the Kalmyk Khanate 44 45 46 47 48 The Kyrgyzs attacked them near Balkhash Lake About 100 000 150 000 Kalmyks who settled on the west bank of the Volga River could not cross the river because the river did not freeze in the winter of 1771 and Catherine the Great executed influential nobles of them After seven months of travel only one third 66 073 44 of the original group reached Dzungaria Balkhash Lake western border of the Qing Empire 49 The Qing Empire transmigrated the Kalmyks to five different areas to prevent their revolt and influential leaders of the Kalmyks died soon killed by the Manchus Russia states that Buryatia voluntarily merged with Russia in 1659 due to Mongolian oppression and the Kalmyks voluntarily accepted Russian rule in 1609 but only Georgia voluntarily accepted Russian rule 50 51 In the early 20th century the late Qing government encouraged Han Chinese colonization of Mongolian lands under the name of New Policies or New Administration xinzheng As a result some Mongol leaders especially those of Outer Mongolia decided to seek Mongolian independence After the Xinhai Revolution the Mongolian Revolution on 30 November 1911 in Outer Mongolia ended an over 200 year rule of the Qing dynasty Post Qing era With the independence of Outer Mongolia the Mongolian army controlled Khalkha and Khovd regions modern day Uvs Khovd and Bayan Olgii provinces but Northern Xinjiang the Altai and Ili regions of the Qing Empire Upper Mongolia Barga and Inner Mongolia came under control of the newly formed Republic of China On February 2 1913 the Bogd Khanate of Mongolia sent Mongolian cavalries to liberate Inner Mongolia from China Russia refused to sell weapons to the Bogd Khanate and the Russian czar Nicholas II referred to it as Mongolian imperialism Additionally the United Kingdom urged Russia to abolish Mongolian independence as it was concerned that if Mongolians gain independence then Central Asians will revolt 10 000 Khalkha and Inner Mongolian cavalries about 3 500 Inner Mongols defeated 70 000 Chinese soldiers and controlled almost all of Inner Mongolia however the Mongolian army retreated due to lack of weapons in 1914 400 Mongol soldiers and 3 795 Chinese soldiers died in this war The Khalkhas Khovd Oirats Buryats Dzungarian Oirats Upper Mongols Barga Mongols most Inner Mongolian and some Tuvan leaders sent statements to support Bogd Khan s call of Mongolian reunification In reality however most of them were too prudent or irresolute to attempt joining the Bogd Khan regime 52 Russia encouraged Mongolia to become an autonomous region of China in 1914 Mongolia lost Barga Dzungaria Tuva Upper Mongolia and Inner Mongolia in the 1915 Treaty of Kyakhta In October 1919 the Republic of China occupied Mongolia after the suspicious deaths of Mongolian patriotic nobles On 3 February 1921 the White Russian army led by Baron Ungern and mainly consisting of Mongolian volunteer cavalries and Buryat and Tatar cossacks liberated the Mongolian capital Baron Ungern s purpose was to find allies to defeat the Soviet Union The Statement of Reunification of Mongolia was adopted by Mongolian revolutionist leaders in 1921 The Soviet however considered Mongolia to be Chinese territory in 1924 during a secret meeting with the Republic of China However the Soviets officially recognized Mongolian independence in 1945 but carried out various policies political economic and cultural against Mongolia until its fall in 1991 to prevent Pan Mongolism and other irredentist movements On 10 April 1932 Mongolians revolted against the government s new policy and Soviets The government and Soviet soldiers defeated the rebels in October The Buryats started to migrate to Mongolia in the 1900s due to Russian oppression Joseph Stalin s regime stopped the migration in 1930 and started a campaign of ethnic cleansing against newcomers and Mongolians During the Stalinist repressions in Mongolia almost all adult Buryat men and 22 000 33 000 Mongols 3 5 of the total population common citizens monks Pan Mongolists nationalists patriots hundreds of military officers nobles intellectuals and elite people were shot dead under Soviet orders 53 54 Some authors also offer much higher estimates up to 100 000 victims 54 Around the late 1930s the Mongolian People s Republic had an overall population of about 700 000 to 900 000 people By 1939 Soviet said We repressed too many people the population of Mongolia is only hundred thousands The proportion of victims in relation to the population of the country is much higher than the corresponding figures of the Great Purge in the Soviet Union Khorloogiin Choibalsan leader of the Mongolian People s Republic left and Georgy Zhukov consult during the Battle of Khalkhin Gol against Japanese troops 1939 The Manchukuo 1932 1945 puppet state of the Empire of Japan 1868 1947 invaded Barga and some part of Inner Mongolia with Japanese help The Mongolian army advanced to the Great Wall of China during the Soviet Japanese War of 1945 Mongolian name Liberation War of 1945 Japan forced Inner Mongolian and Barga people to fight against Mongolians but they surrendered to Mongolians and started to fight against their Japanese and Manchu allies Marshal Khorloogiin Choibalsan called Inner Mongolians and Xinjiang Oirats to migrate to Mongolia during the war but the Soviet Army blocked Inner Mongolian migrants way It was a part of a Pan Mongolian plan and few Oirats and Inner Mongols Huuchids Bargas Tumeds about 800 Uzemchins arrived Inner Mongolian leaders carried out active policy to merge Inner Mongolia with Mongolia since 1911 They founded the Inner Mongolian Army in 1929 but the Inner Mongolian Army disbanded after ending World War II The Japanese Empire supported Pan Mongolism since the 1910s but there have never been active relations between Mongolia and Imperial Japan due to Russian resistance The nominally independent Inner Mongolian Mengjiang state 1936 1945 was established with support of Japan in 1936 also some Buryat and Inner Mongol nobles founded a Pan Mongolist government with the support of Japan in 1919 World War II Zaisan Memorial Ulaan Baatar from the People s Republic of Mongolia era The Inner Mongols established the short lived Republic of Inner Mongolia in 1945 Another part of Choibalsan s plan was to merge Inner Mongolia and Dzungaria with Mongolia By 1945 Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong requested the Soviets to stop Pan Mongolism because China lost its control over Inner Mongolia and without Inner Mongolian support the Communists were unable to defeat Japan and Kuomintang Mongolia and Soviets supported Xinjiang Uyghurs and Kazakhs separatist movement in the 1930 1940s By 1945 the Soviets refused to support them after its alliance with the Chinese Communist Party and Mongolia interrupted its relations with the separatists under pressure Xinjiang Oirat s militant groups operated together the Turkic peoples but the Oirats did not have the leading role due to their small population Basmachis or Turkic and Tajik militants fought to liberate Central Asia Soviet Central Asia until 1942 On February 2 1913 the Treaty of friendship and alliance between the Government of Mongolia and Tibet was signed Mongolian agents and Bogd Khan disrupted Soviet secret operations in Tibet to change its regime in the 1920s On October 27 1961 the United Nations recognized Mongolian independence and granted the nation full membership in the organization The Tsardom of Russia Russian Empire Soviet Union capitalist and communist China performed many genocide actions against the Mongols assimilate reduce the population extinguish the language culture tradition history religion and ethnic identity Peter the Great said The headwaters of the Yenisei River must be Russian land 55 The Russian Empire sent the Kalmyks and Buryats to war to reduce the populations World War I and other wars During the 20th century Soviet scientists attempted to convince the Kalmyks and Buryats that they re not Mongols during demongolization policy 35 000 Buryats were killed during the rebellion of 1927 and around one third of the Buryat population in Russia died in the 1900s 1950s 56 57 10 000 Buryats of the Buryat Mongol Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic were massacred by Stalin s order in the 1930s 58 In 1919 the Buryats established a small theocratic Balagad state in Kizhinginsky District of Russia and it fell in 1926 In 1958 the name Mongol was removed from the name of the Buryat Mongol Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic On 22 January 1922 Mongolia proposed to migrate the Kalmyks during the Kalmykian Famine but bolshevik Russia refused 71 000 72 000 93 000 around half of the population Kalmyks died during the Russian famine of 1921 22 59 The Kalmyks revolted against the Soviet Union in 1926 1930 and 1942 1943 see Kalmykian Cavalry Corps In 1913 Nicholas II tsar of Russia said We need to prevent from Volga Tatars But the Kalmyks are more dangerous than them because they are the Mongols so send them to war to reduce the population 60 On 23 April 1923 Joseph Stalin communist leader of Russia said We are carrying out wrong policy on the Kalmyks who related to the Mongols Our policy is too peaceful 60 In March 1927 Soviet deported 20 000 Kalmyks to Siberia the tundra and Karelia The Kalmyks founded the sovereign Republic of Oirat Kalmyk on 22 March 1930 60 The Oirats state had a small army and 200 Kalmyk soldiers defeated 1 700 Soviet soldiers in Durvud province of Kalmykia but the Oirats state was destroyed by the Soviet Army in 1930 Kalmykian nationalists and Pan Mongolists attempted to migrate Kalmyks to Mongolia in the 1920s Mongolia suggested to migrate the Soviet Union s Mongols to Mongolia in the 1920s but Russia refused the suggestion Stalin deported all Kalmyks to Siberia in 1943 and around half of the 97 000 98 000 Kalmyk people deported to Siberia died before being allowed to return home in 1957 61 The government of the Soviet Union forbade teaching the Kalmyk language during the deportation The Kalmyks main purpose was to migrate to Mongolia and many Kalmyks joined the German Army Marshal Khorloogiin Choibalsan attempted to migrate the deportees to Mongolia and he met with them in Siberia during his visit to Russia Under the Law of the Russian Federation of April 26 1991 On Rehabilitation of Exiled Peoples repressions against Kalmyks and other peoples were qualified as acts of genocide Mongolian President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj right After the end of World War II the Chinese Civil War resumed between the Chinese Nationalists Kuomintang led by Chiang Kai shek and the Chinese Communist Party led by Mao Zedong In December 1949 Chiang evacuated his government to Taiwan Hundreds of thousands of Inner Mongols were massacred citation needed during the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s and China forbade Mongol traditions celebrations and the teaching of Mongolic languages during the revolution In Inner Mongolia some 790 000 people were persecuted Approximately 1 000 000 Inner Mongols were killed during the 20th century 62 citation needed In 1960 a Chinese newspaper wrote that Han Chinese ethnic identity must be Chinese minorities ethnic identity citation needed China Mongolia relations were tense from the 1960s to the 1980s as a result of the Sino Soviet split and there were several border conflicts during the period 63 Cross border movement of Mongols was therefore hindered On 3 October 2002 the Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that Taiwan recognizes Mongolia as an independent country 64 although no legislative actions were taken to address concerns over its constitutional claims to Mongolia 65 Offices established to support Taipei s claims over Outer Mongolia such as the Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission 66 lie dormant Agin Buryat Okrug and Ust Orda Buryat Okrugs merged with Irkutsk Oblast and Chita Oblast in 2008 despite Buryats resistance Small scale protests occurred in Inner Mongolia in 2011 The Inner Mongolian People s Party is a member of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization 67 and its leaders are attempting to establish a sovereign state or merge Inner Mongolia with Mongolia A Mongolic GerLanguageMain article Mongolic languages Chronological tree of the Mongolic languages Mongolian is the official national language of Mongolia where it is spoken by nearly 2 8 million people 2010 estimate 68 and the official provincial language of China s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region where there are at least 4 1 million ethnic Mongols 69 Across the whole of China the language is spoken by roughly half of the country s 5 8 million ethnic Mongols 2005 estimate 68 However the exact number of Mongolian speakers in China is unknown as there is no data available on the language proficiency of that country s citizens The use of Mongolian in China specifically in Inner Mongolia has witnessed periods of decline and revival over the last few hundred years The language experienced a decline during the late Qing period a revival between 1947 and 1965 a second decline between 1966 and 1976 a second revival between 1977 and 1992 and a third decline between 1995 and 2012 70 However in spite of the decline of the Mongolian language in some of Inner Mongolia s urban areas and educational spheres the ethnic identity of the urbanized Chinese speaking Mongols is most likely going to survive due to the presence of urban ethnic communities 71 The multilingual situation in Inner Mongolia does not appear to obstruct efforts by ethnic Mongols to preserve their language 72 73 Although an unknown number of Mongols in China such as the Tumets may have completely or partially lost the ability to speak their language they are still registered as ethnic Mongols and continue to identify themselves as ethnic Mongols 68 74 The children of inter ethnic Mongol Chinese marriages also claim to be and are registered as ethnic Mongols 75 The specific origin of the Mongolic languages and associated tribes is unclear Linguists have traditionally proposed a link to the Tungusic and Turkic language families included alongside Mongolic in the broader group of Altaic languages though this remains controversial Today the Mongolian peoples speak at least one of several Mongolic languages including Mongolian Buryat Oirat Dongxiang Tu and Bonan Additionally many Mongols speak either Russian or Mandarin Chinese as languages of inter ethnic communication ReligionMain articles Buddhism in Mongolia and Mongolian Shamanism Buddhist temple in Buryatia Russia Timur of Mongolic origin himself had converted almost all the Borjigin leaders to Islam The original religion of the Mongolic peoples was Mongolian shamanism The Xianbei came in contact with Confucianism and Daoism but eventually adopted Buddhism However the Xianbeis and some other people in Mongolia and Rourans followed a form of shamanism 76 In the 5th century the Buddhist monk Dharmapriya was proclaimed State Teacher of the Rouran Khaganate and 3 000 families and some Rouran nobles became Buddhists In 511 the Rouran Douluofubadoufa Khan sent Hong Xuan to the Tuoba court with a pearl encrusted statue of the Buddha as a gift The Tuoba Xianbei and Khitans were mostly Buddhists although they still retained their original Shamanism The Tuoba had a sacrificial castle to the west of their capital where ceremonies to spirits took place Wooden statues of the spirits were erected on top of this sacrificial castle One ritual involved seven princes with milk offerings who ascended the stairs with 20 female shamans and offered prayers sprinkling the statues with the sacred milk The Khitan had their holiest shrine on Mount Muye where portraits of their earliest ancestor Qishou Khagan his wife Kedun and eight sons were kept in two temples Mongolic peoples were also exposed to Zoroastrianism Manicheism Nestorianism Eastern Orthodoxy and Islam from the west The Mongolic peoples in particular the Borjigin had their holiest shrine on Mount Burkhan Khaldun where their ancestor Borte Chono Blue Wolf and Goo Maral Beautiful Doe had given birth to them Genghis Khan usually fasted prayed and meditated on this mountain before his campaigns As a young man he had thanked the mountain for saving his life and prayed at the foot of the mountain sprinkling offerings and bowing nine times to the east with his belt around his neck and his hat held at his chest Genghis Khan kept a close watch on the Mongolic supreme shaman Kokochu Teb who sometimes conflicted with his authority Later the imperial cult of Genghis Khan Tengerism centered on the eight white gers and nine white banners in Ordos grew into a highly organized indigenous religion with scriptures in the Mongolian script 77 Indigenous moral precepts of the Mongolic peoples were enshrined in oral wisdom sayings now collected in several volumes the anda blood brother system and ancient texts such as the Chinggis un Bilig Wisdom of Genghis and Oyun Tulkhuur Key of Intelligence These moral precepts were expressed in poetic form and mainly involved truthfulness fidelity help in hardship unity self control fortitude veneration of nature veneration of the state and veneration of parents In 1254 Mongke Khan organized a formal religious debate in which William of Rubruck took part between Christians Muslims and Buddhists in Karakorum a cosmopolitan city of many religions The Mongolic Empire was known for its religious tolerance but had a special leaning towards Buddhism and was sympathetic towards Christianity while still worshipping Tengri The Mongolic leader Abaqa Khan sent a delegation of 13 16 to the Second Council of Lyon 1274 which created a great stir particularly when their leader Zaganus underwent a public baptism A joint crusade was announced in line with the Franco Mongol alliance but did not materialize because Pope Gregory X died in 1276 Yahballaha III 1245 1317 and Rabban Bar Sauma c 1220 1294 were famous Mongolic Nestorian Christians The Keraites in central Mongolia were Christian In Istanbul the Church of Saint Mary of the Mongols stands as a reminder of the Byzantine Mongol alliance The western Khanates however eventually adopted Islam under Berke and Ghazan and the Turkic languages because of its commercial importance although allegiance to the Great Khan and limited use of the Mongolic languages can be seen even in the 1330s In 1521 the first Mughal emperor Babur took part in a military banner milk sprinkling ceremony in the Chagatai Khanate where the Mongolian language was still used Al Adil Kitbugha reigned 1294 1296 a Mongol Sultan of Egypt and the half Mongol An Nasir Muhammad reigned till 1341 built the Madrassa of Al Nasir Muhammad in Cairo Egypt An Nasir s Mongol mother was Ashlun bint Shaktay The Mongolic nobility during the Yuan dynasty studied Confucianism built Confucian temples including Beijing Confucius Temple and translated Confucian works into Mongolic but mainly followed the Sakya school of Tibetan Buddhism under Phags pa Lama The general populace still practised Shamanism Dongxiang and Bonan Mongols adopted Islam as did Moghol speaking peoples in Afghanistan In the 1576 the Gelug school of Tibetan Buddhism became the state religion of Mongolia The Red Hat school of Tibetan Buddhism coexisted with the Gelug Yellow Hat school which was founded by the half Mongol Je Tsongkhapa 1357 1419 Shamanism was absorbed into the state religion while being marginalized in its purer forms later only surviving in far northern Mongolia Monks were some of the leading intellectuals in Mongolia responsible for much of the literature and art of the pre modern period Many Buddhist philosophical works lost in Tibet and elsewhere are preserved in older and purer form in Mongolian ancient texts e g the Mongol Kanjur Zanabazar 1635 1723 Zaya Pandita 1599 1662 and Danzanravjaa 1803 1856 are among the most famous Mongol holy men The 4th Dalai Lama Yonten Gyatso 1589 1617 a Mongol himself is recognized as the only non Tibetan Dalai Lama although the current 14th Dalai Lama is of Mongolic Monguor extraction 78 The name is a combination of the Mongolian word dalai meaning ocean and the Tibetan word bla ma meaning guru teacher mentor 1 Many Buryats became Orthodox Christians due to the Russian expansion During the socialist period religion was officially banned although it was practiced in clandestine circles Today a sizable proportion of Mongolic peoples are atheist or agnostic In the most recent census in Mongolia almost forty percent of the population reported as being atheist while the majority religion was Tibetan Buddhism with 53 79 Having survived suppression by the Communists Buddhism among the Eastern Northern Southern and Western Mongols is today primarily of the Gelugpa Yellow Hat sect school of Tibetan Buddhism There is a strong shamanistic influence in the Gelugpa sect among the Mongols 80 MilitaryMain article Mongol military tactics and organization Mongols battled against the most powerful armies and warriors in Eurasia citation needed The beating of the kettle and smoke signals were signals for the start of battle One battle formation that they used consisted of five squadrons or units The typical squadrons were divided by ranks The first two ranks were in the front These warriors had the heaviest armor and weapons The back three ranks broke out between the front ranks and attacked first with their arrows 81 The forces kept their distance from the enemy and killed them with arrow fire during which time archers did not aim at a specific target but shot their arrows at a high path into a set killing zone or target area 82 Mongolics also acquired engineers from the defeated armies They made engineers a permanent part of their army so that their weapons and machinery were complex and efficient 83 Kinship and family lifeSee also Society of the Mongol Empire Mongols grazing livestock by Roy Chapman Andrews photographs in 1921 The traditional Mongol family was patriarchal patrilineal and patrilocal Wives were brought for each of the sons while daughters were married off to other clans Wife taking clans stood in a relation of inferiority to wife giving clans Thus wife giving clans were considered elder or bigger in relation to wife taking clans who were considered younger or smaller 84 85 This distinction symbolized in terms of elder and younger or bigger and smaller was carried into the clan and family as well and all members of a lineage were terminologically distinguished by generation and age with senior superior to junior In the traditional Mongolian family each son received a part of the family herd as he married with the elder son receiving more than the younger son The youngest son would remain in the parental tent caring for his parents and after their death he would inherit the parental tent in addition to his own part of the herd This inheritance system was mandated by law codes such as the Yassa created by Genghis Khan 86 Likewise each son inherited a part of the family s camping lands and pastures with the elder son receiving more than the younger son The eldest son inherited the farthest camping lands and pastures and each son in turn inherited camping lands and pastures closer to the family tent until the youngest son inherited the camping lands and pastures immediately surrounding the family tent Family units would often remain near each other and in close cooperation though extended families would inevitably break up after a few generations It is probable that the Yasa simply put into written law the principles of customary law It is apparent that in many cases for example in family instructions the yasa tacitly accepted the principles of customary law and avoided any interference with them For example Riasanovsky said that killing the man or the woman in case of adultery is a good illustration Yasa permitted the institutions of polygamy and concubinage so characteristic of southerly nomadic peoples Children born of concubines were legitimate Seniority of children derived their status from their mother Eldest son received more than the youngest after the death of father But the latter inherited the household of the father Children of concubines also received a share in the inheritance in accordance with the instructions of their father or with custom Nilgun Dalkesen Gender roles and women s status in Central Asia and Anatolia between the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries 87 After the family the next largest social units were the subclan and clan These units were derived from groups claiming patrilineal descent from a common ancestor ranked in order of seniority the conical clan By the Chingissid era this ranking was symbolically expressed at formal feasts in which tribal chieftains were seated and received particular portions of the slaughtered animal according to their status 88 The lineage structure of Central Asia had three different modes It was organized on the basis of genealogical distance or the proximity of individuals to one another on a graph of kinship generational distance or the rank of generation in relation to a common ancestor and birth order the rank of brothers in relation to each another 89 The paternal descent lines were collaterally ranked according to the birth of their founders and were thus considered senior and junior to each other Of the various collateral patrilines the senior in order of descent from the founding ancestor the line of eldest sons was the most noble In the steppe no one had his exact equal everyone found his place in a system of collaterally ranked lines of descent from a common ancestor 90 It was according to this idiom of superiority and inferiority of lineages derived from birth order that legal claims to superior rank were couched 91 The Mongol kinship is one of a particular patrilineal type classed as Omaha in which relatives are grouped together under separate terms that crosscut generations age and even sexual difference Thus oe uses different terms for a man s father s sister s children his sister s children and his daughter s children A further attribute is strict terminological differentiation of siblings according to seniority The division of Mongolian society into senior elite lineages and subordinate junior lineages was waning by the twentieth century During the 1920s the Communist regime was established The remnants of the Mongolian aristocracy fought alongside the Japanese and against Chinese Soviets and Communist Mongols during World War II but were defeated The anthropologist Herbert Harold Vreeland visited three Mongol communities in 1920 and published a highly detailed book with the results of his fieldwork Mongol community and kinship structure 92 Royal family Mural of a Mongol family Yuan dynasty The Mughal Emperor Babur and his heir Humayun The word Mughal is derived from the Persian word for Mongol The royal clan of the Mongols is the Borjigin clan descended from Bodonchar Munkhag c 850 900 This clan produced Khans and princes for Mongolia and surrounding regions until the early 20th century All the Great Khans of the Mongol Empire including its founder Genghis Khan were of the Borjigin clan The royal family of Mongolia was called the Altan Urag Golden Lineage and is synonymous with Genghisid After the fall of the Northern Yuan Dynasty in 1635 the Dayan Khanid aristocracy continued the Genghisid legacy in Mongolia until 1937 when most were killed during the Stalinist purges The four hereditary Khans of the Khalkha Tusheet Khan Setsen Khan Zasagt Khan and Sain Noyan Khan were all descended from Dayan Khan 1464 1543 through Abtai Sain Khan Sholoi Khan Laikhur Khan and Tumenkhen Sain Noyan respectively Dayan Khan was himself raised to power by Queen Mandukhai the Wise c 1449 1510 during the crisis of the late 15th century when the line of Kublai Khan the grandson of Genghis Khan was on the verge of dying out Dayan Khan s ancestry is as follows His father was Bayanmunkh Jonon 1448 1479 the son of Kharkhutsag Taij 1453 the son of Agbarjin Khan 1423 1454 the son of Ajai Taij 1399 1438 the son or younger brother of Elbeg Nigulesugchi Khan 1361 1399 the son of Uskhal Khan 1342 1388 the younger brother of Biligtu Khan 1340 1370 and the son of Toghon Temur Khan 1320 1370 the son of Khutughtu Khan 1300 1329 the son of Kulug Khan 1281 1311 the son of Darmabala 1264 1292 the son of Crown Prince Zhenjin 1243 1286 the son of Kublai Khan 1215 1294 the son of Tolui 1191 1232 the son of Genghis Khan 1162 1227 Okada 1994 noted that according to the Korean Veritable Records Taisun Khan the brother of Agbarjin Khan sent a Mongolian letter to Korea on May 9 1442 where he named Kublai Khan as his ancestor 93 This along with the direct Mongol account of the Erdeniin Tobchi as well as indirect indications from three different Mongolian chronicles noted in Okada establishes the Kublaid descent of Elbeg Nigulesugchi Khan Buyandelger 2000 noted that the year of birth of Elbeg Nigulesugchi Khan as well as the meaning of his name is the same as that of Maidarabala 买的里八剌 the son of Biligtu Khan s secondary consort Empress Kim daughter of Kim Yunjang 金允藏 Further noting that Maidarabala was sent back to Mongolia in 1374 after being held hostage in Beiping Beijing for 3 years Buyandelger identified Maidarabala with Elbeg Nigulesugchi Khan 94 This does not change the Kublaid descent of Elbeg Nigulesugchi Khan and only changes his paternity from Uskhal Khan to his brother Biligtu Khan The Khongirad was the main consort clan of the Borjigin and provided numerous Empresses and consorts There were five minor non Khonggirad inputs from the maternal side which passed on to the Dayan Khanid aristocracy of Mongolia and Inner Mongolia The first was the Keraite lineage added through Kublai Khan s mother Sorghaghtani Beki which linked the Borjigin to the Nestorian Christian tribe of Cyriacus Buyruk Khan The second was the Turkic Karluk lineage added through Toghon Temur Khan s mother Mailaiti which linked the Borjigin to Bilge Kul Qadir Khan 840 893 of the Kara Khanid Khanate and ultimately to the Lion Karluks as well as the Ashina tribe of the 6th century Gokturks The third was the Korean lineage added through Biligtu Khan s mother Empress Gi 1315 370 which linked the Borjigin to the Haengju Gi clan and ultimately to King Jun of Gojeoson 262 184 BC and possibly even further to King Tang of Shang 1675 1646 BC through Jizi The fourth was the Esen Taishi lineage added through Bayanmunkh Jonon s mother Tsetseg Khatan which linked the Borjigin more firmly to the Oirats The fifth was the Aisin Gioro lineage added during the Qing Dynasty To the west Genghisid Khans received daughters of the Byzantine emperor in marriage such as when the Byzantine princess Maria Palaiologina married to Abaqa Khan 1234 1282 while there were also connections with European royalty through Russia where for example Prince Gleb 1237 1278 married Feodora Sartaqovna the daughter of Sartaq Khan a great grandson of Genghis Khan The Dayan Khanid aristocracy still held power during the Bogd Khanate of Mongolia 1911 1919 and the Constitutional Monarchy period 1921 1924 They were accused of collaboration with the Japanese and executed in 1937 while their counterparts in Inner Mongolia were severely persecuted during the Cultural Revolution Ancestral shrines of Genghis Khan were destroyed by the Red Guards during the 1960s and the Horse Tail Banner of Genghis Khan disappeared The Rinchen family in Ulaanbaatar Mongolia is a Dayan Khanid branch from Buryatia Members of this family include the scholar Byambyn Rinchen 1905 1977 geologist Rinchen Barsbold 1935 diplomat Ganibal Jagvaral and Amartuvshin Ganibal 1974 the President of XacBank There are many other families with aristocratic ancestry in Mongolia and it is often noted that most of the common populace already has some share of Genghisid ancestry Mongolia however has remained a republic since 1924 and there has been no discussion of introducing a constitutional monarchy Historical populationYear Population Notes1 AD 1 2 000 000 1000 2 500 000 750 000 Khitans1200 2 600 000 1 5 2 000 000 Mongols1600 2 300 000 77 000 95 96 Buryats 600 000 Khalkhas1700 2 600 000 600 000 Khalkhas 1 100 000 Oirats 600 000 Zunghars 200 250 000 Kalmyks 200 000 Upper Mongols 40 1800 2 000 000 600 000 Khalkhas 440 000 Oirats 120 000 Zunghars 120 000 Upper Mongols1900 2 300 000 283 383 97 Buryats 1897 500 000 Khalkhas 1911 380 000 Oirats 70 000 Mongolian Oirats 1911 190 648 Kalmyks 1897 70 000 Dzungarian and Inner Mongolian Oirats 50 000 Upper Mongols 40 1 500 000 Southern Mongols 1911 1927 2 100 000 600 000 Mongolians 98 230 000 Buryats 15 000 Mongolian Buryats 214 957 Buryats in Russia 1926 500 000 Khalkhas 1927 330 000 Oirats 70 000 Mongolian Oirats 128 809 Kalmyks 1926 1956 2 500 000 228 647 Buryats 24 625 Mongolian Buryats 1956 135 798 Buryats of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1959 23 374 Agin Buryats 1959 44 850 Ust Orda Buryats 1959 639 141 Khalkhas 1956 240 000 Oirats 77 996 Mongolian Oirats 1956 100 603 Kalmyks 1959 1 462 956 Mongols in China 1953 1980 4 300 000 317 966 Buryats 29 802 Mongolian Buryats 1979 206 860 Buryatian Buryats 1979 45 436 Usta Orda Buryats 1979 35 868 Agin Buryats 1979 1 271 086 Khalkhas 398 339 Oirats 127 328 Mongolian Oirats 1979 140 103 Kalmyks 1979 2 153 000 Southern Mongols 1981 99 100 1990 4 700 000 376 629 Buryats 35 444 Mongolian Buryats 1989 249 525 Buryatian Buryats 1989 49 298 Usta Orda Buryats 1989 42 362 Agin Buryats 1989 1 654 221 Khalkhas 470 000 Oirats 161 803 Mongolian Oirats 1989 165 103 Kalmyks 1989 33 000 Upper Mongols 1987 101 2010 5 9 200 000 102 500 000 Buryats 45 75 000 Mongolian Buryats 10 000 Hulunbuir Buryats 2 300 000 Khalkhas including Dariganga Darkhad Eljigin and Sartuul 638 372 Oirats 183 372 Kalmyks 205 000 Mongolian Oirats 90 100 000 Upper Mongols 2010 140 000 Xinjiang Oirats 2013 190 000 Xinjiang Oirats 100 000 Torghuts Kalmyks 40 50 000 Olots 40 000 other Oirats mainly Khoshuts 1 5 4 000 000 5 700 000 Southern Mongols 99 This map shows the boundary of the 13th century Mongol Empire and location of today s Mongols in modern Mongolia Russia and China Geographic distributionToday the majority of Mongols live in the modern states of Mongolia China mainly Inner Mongolia and Xinjiang Russia Kyrgyzstan and Afghanistan The differentiation between tribes and peoples ethnic groups is handled differently depending on the country The Tumed Chahar Ordos Barga Altai Uriankhai Buryats Dorbod Dorvod Dorbed Torguud Dariganga Uzemchin or Uzumchin Bayads Khoton Myangad Mingad Eljigin Zakhchin Darkhad and Olots or Oolds or Olots are all considered as tribes of the Mongols Subgroups The Eastern Mongols are mainly concentrated in Mongolia including the Khalkha Eljigin Khalkha Darkhad Sartuul Khalkha and Dariganga Khalkha The Southern or Inner Mongols mainly are concentrated in Inner Mongolia China They comprise the Abaga Mongols Abaganar Aohans Asud Baarins Chahar Durved Gorlos Kharchin Hishigten Khorchin Huuchid Jalaid Jaruud Muumyangan Naiman Southern Mongols Onnigud Ordos Sunud Tumed Urad and Uzemchin Sister groups The Buryats are mainly concentrated in their homeland the Buryat Republic a federal subject of Russia They are the major northern subgroup of the Mongols 103 The Barga Mongols are mainly concentrated in Inner Mongolia China along with the Buryats and Hamnigan The Western Oirats are mainly concentrated in Western Mongolia 184 000 Kalmyks 2010 Kalmykia Russia 205 000 Mongolian Oirats 2010 140 000 Oirats 2010 Xinjiang region China 90 000 Upper Mongols 2010 Qinghai region China The Khoshuts are the major subgroup of the Upper Mongols along with the Choros Khalkha and Torghuts 12 000 Sart Kalmyks Zungharian descents 2012 Kyrgyzstan Religion Sunni Islam Altai Uriankhai Baatud Bayad Chantuu Choros Durvud Khoshut Khoid Khoton Myangad Olots Sart Kalmyks mainly Olots Torghut Zakhchin Kalmyks Baatud Buzava Choros Durvud Khoid Olots Torghut Upper Mongolian Oirats Choros Khoshut Torghut Mongolia See also Demographics of Mongolia Mongol women in traditional dress In modern day Mongolia Mongols make up approximately 95 of the population with the largest ethnic group being Khalkha Mongols followed by Buryats both belonging to the Eastern Mongolian peoples They are followed by Oirats who belong to the Western Mongolian peoples Mongolian ethnic groups Baarin Baatud Barga Bayad Buryat Selenge Chahar Chantuu Darkhad Dariganga Dorbet Oirat Eljigin Khalkha Hamnigan Kharchin Khoid Khorchin Hotogoid Khoton Huuchid Myangad Olots Sartuul Torgut Tumed Uzemchin Zakhchin China Main article Mongols in China Strong Mongol men at August games Photo by Wm Purdom 1909 The 2010 census of the People s Republic of China counted more than 7 million people of various Mongolic groups The 1992 census of China counted only 3 6 million ethnic Mongols citation needed The 2010 census counted roughly 5 8 million ethnic Mongols 621 500 Dongxiangs 289 565 Mongours 132 000 Daurs 20 074 Baoans and 14 370 Yugurs citation needed Most of them live in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region followed by Liaoning Small numbers can also be found in provinces near those two There were 669 972 Mongols in Liaoning in 2011 making up 11 52 of Mongols in China 104 The closest Mongol area to the sea is the Dabao Mongol Ethnic Township 大堡蒙古族乡 in Fengcheng Liaoning With 8 460 Mongols 37 4 of the township population citation needed it is located 40 km 25 mi from the North Korean border and 65 km 40 mi from Korea Bay of the Yellow Sea Another contender for closest Mongol area to the sea would be Erdaowanzi Mongol Ethnic Township 二道湾子蒙古族乡 in Jianchang County Liaoning With 5 011 Mongols 20 7 of the township population citation needed it is located around 65 km 40 mi from the Bohai Sea Other peoples speaking Mongolic languages are the Daur Sogwo Arig Monguor people Dongxiangs Bonans Sichuan Mongols and eastern part of the Yugur people Those do not officially count as part of the Mongol ethnicity but are recognized as ethnic groups of their own The Mongols lost their contact with the Mongours Bonan Dongxiangs Yunnan Mongols since the fall of the Yuan dynasty Mongolian scientists and journalists met with the Dongxiangs and Yunnan Mongols in the 2000s citation needed Inner Mongolia Southern Mongols Barga Buryat Dorbet Oirat Khalkha Dzungar people Eznee Torgut Xinjiang province Altai Uriankhai Chahar Khoshut Olots Torghut Zakhchin Qinghai province Upper Mongols Choros Khalkha Mongols Khoshut Torghut Russia Main articles Buryats Kalmyk people Demographics of Russia and Demographics of Siberia Two Mongolic ethnic groups are present in Russia the 2010 census found 461 410 Buryats and 183 400 Kalmyks 105 Elsewhere Main article Mongolian diaspora Smaller numbers of Mongolic peoples exist in Western Europe and North America Some of the more notable communities exist in South Korea the United States the Czech Republic and the United Kingdom Gallery Mongol Empress Zayaat Jiyatu wife of Kulug Khan 1281 1311 Genghis son Tolui with Queen Sorgaqtani Hulegu Khan ruler of the Ilkhanate 13th century Ilkhanid Mongol archer Mongol soldiers by Rashid al Din BnF MS Supplement Persan 1113 1430 1434 AD Kalmyk Mongol girl Annushka painted in 1767 A 20th century Mongol Khan Navaanneren The 4th Dalai Lama Yonten Gyatso Dolgorsurengiin Dagvadorj became the first Mongol to reach sumo s highest rank Mongol women archers during Naadam festival A Mongol musician A Mongol Wrangler Buryat Mongol shaman Kalmyks 19th century Mongol girl performing Bayad dance Buryat Mongols painted in 1840 Daur Mongol Empress Wanrong 1906 1946 also had Borjigin blood on maternal side Buryat Mongol boy during shamanic rite Concubine Wenxiu was Puyi s consort A Mongolian Buddhist monk 1913See alsoAltan Telgey American Center for Mongolian Studies Horse culture in Mongolia List of medieval Mongol tribes and clans List of modern Mongol clans List of Mongolians List of Mongol states Mongolian name Mongoloid Qara unasReferencesCitations Sood Amy 18 February 2022 This photo was taken from a movie scene depicting the Mongolian queen s execution AFP Retrieved 22 February 2022 Demographics of Mongolia Excluding Daurs Demographics of China Number of foreigners in Korea up for 1st time in 20 months a b c d e f g h 2020 Population and housing census of Mongolia National Statistical Office of Mongolia Retrieved 22 November 2021 President of Mongoli Received the Kalmyk Citizens of the Kyrgyz 2012 Archived from the original on December 6 2016 T13 Cizinci podle typu pobytu a pohlavi 25 nejcastejsich statnich obcanstvi k 30 6 2020 czso cz in Czech Retrieved 30 July 2021 Canada Census Profile 2021 Census Profile 2021 Census Statistics Canada Statistique Canada 7 May 2021 Retrieved 3 January 2023 Russian Census 2010 Bevolkerung nach Staatsangehorigkeit und Geburtsland Population by citizenship and country of birth in German Statistik Austria 3 July 2014 Retrieved 21 August 2014 National Bureau of Statistics of the People s Republic of China April 2012 Tabulation of the 2010 Population Census of the People s Republic of China China Statistics Press ISBN 978 7 5037 6507 0 Retrieved 2013 02 19 China org cn The Mongolian ethnic minority China org cn The Mongolian Ethnic Group Bira 2011 Ochir 2008 Mongolia Ethnography of Mongolia Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2007 07 22 Geng 2005 Etienne de la Vaissiere Xiongnu Encyclopaedia Iranica online Archived 2012 01 04 at the Wayback Machine 2006 Pulleyblank Edwin G 1983 The Chinese and Their Neighbors in Prehistoric and Early Historic China in The Origins of Chinese Civilization University of California Press pp 411 466 Frances Wood The Silk Road two thousand years in the heart of Asia p 48 Yi Zhou Shu Wanghui jie Archived 2021 12 03 at the Wayback Machine quote 東胡黃羆 正北空同 大夏 莎車 姑他 旦略 豹胡 代翟 匈奴 樓煩 月氏 孅犁 其龍 東胡 請令以橐駝 白玉 野馬 騊駼 駃騠 良弓為獻 Classic of Mountains and Seas Classic of the Regions Within the Seas West Archived 2021 12 03 at the Wayback Machine quote 東胡在大澤東 夷人在東胡東 translation Donghu are located east of the Great Marsh Yi people are located east of Donghu For a list of known fang countries see Anderson Matthew Mccutchen 2015 Change and Standardization in Anyang Writing and Culture in Bronze Age China Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 1589 https repository upenn edu edissertations 1589 Archived 2022 05 24 at the Wayback Machine pp 96 98 Chu Ci Da Zhao Archived 2022 03 18 at the Wayback Machine quote 小腰秀頸 若鮮卑只 translation by Gopal Sukhu 2017 And she is as small waisted and long necked a s a Xianbei woman Discourses of the States Discourses of Jin 8 Archived 2021 12 03 at the Wayback Machine quote 昔成王盟諸侯于岐陽 楚為荊蠻 置茅蕝 設望表 與鮮卑守燎 故不與盟 今將與狎主諸侯之盟 唯有德也 子務德無爭先 務德 所以服楚也 Sima Qian s Shiji ch 110 Archived 2021 07 20 at the Wayback Machine with commentaries text 服虔云 山戎蓋今鮮卑 Shiji Sanjiazhu text 一 集解服虔曰 山戎 北狄 蓋今鮮卑也 page 491 Xin Tangshu 219 6173 University of California Berkeley Project on Linguistic Analysis Journal of Chinese linguistics p 154 Thomas Hoppe Die ethnischen Gruppen Xinjiangs Kulturunterschiede und interethnische p 66 San Tan Koon 2014 08 15 Dynastic China An Elementary History The Other Press ISBN 978 983 9541 88 5 a b Jerry Bentley Old World Encounters Cross Cultural Contacts and Exchange in Pre Modern Times New York Oxford University Press 1993 136 Garcia 2012 p 325 MOLNAR ADAM THE PLOUGH AND PLOUGHING AMONG THE ALTAIC PEOPLES Central Asiatic Journal 26 no 3 4 1982 215 24 Sechin Jagchid Van Jay Symons Peace war and trade along the Great Wall Nomadic Chinese interaction through two millennia p 49 Janhunen Juha The Mongolic languages p 177 Elizabeth E Bacon Obok A Study of Social Structure in Eurasia p 82 Michael Khodarkovsky Where Two Worlds Met The Russian State and the Kalmyk Nomads 1600 1771 p 211 Country Briefings Kazakhstan The Economist 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avtsan Mongolian a b c Halimagijn emgenelt tүүhees Archived 2014 12 27 at the Wayback Machine Mongolian Regions and territories Kalmykia 29 November 2011 Inner Mongolian People s Party Mongolia China relations Library of Congress Archived from the original on 2017 08 01 Retrieved 2008 06 15 Mongolian office to ride into Taipei by end of the year Taipei Times 2002 10 11 Archived from the original on 2009 02 10 Retrieved 2009 05 28 In October 1945 the people of Outer Mongolia voted for independence gaining the recognition of many countries including the Republic of China Due to a souring of relations with the Soviet Union in the early 1950s however the ROC revoked recognition of Outer Mongolia reclaiming it as ROC territory Taiwan embassy changes anger China BBC News 2002 02 26 Retrieved 2009 05 28 The History of MTAC Mongolian amp Tibetan Affairs Commission Archived from the original on 2009 05 08 Retrieved 2009 05 07 unpo org a b c Janhunen Juha November 29 2012 1 Mongolian John 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Schaik Tibet A History PDF London and New York Yale University Press Finally the remark that Yonten Gyatso remains the only non Tibetan to have held the role of Dalai Lama p 177 presents a Monpa sixth Dalai lama and a Monguor fourteenth Dalai Lama as Tibetan although neither spoke Tibetan natively National Census 2010 Preliminary results PDF in Mongolian Heissig 1980 Per Inge Oestmoen The Mongo Military Might Archived 2012 11 27 at the Wayback Machine Cold Siberia N p 18 Jan 2002 Retrieved on 12 November 2012 Barnes Matthew 2009 The Mongol War Machine How Were the Mongols Able to Forge the Largest Contiguous Land Empire in History PiCA Archived from the original on 2013 06 12 Retrieved 2012 11 14 Jack Weatherford Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World New York Crown 2004 94 Vreeland 1962 160 Aberle 1953 23 24 THE INFLUENCE OF THE GREAT CODE YASA ON THE MONGOLIAN EMPIRE Archived from the original on June 15 2013 Dalkesen Nilgun August 2007 Gender Roles and Women s Status in Central Asia and Anatolia Between the Thirteenth and Sixteenth Centuries PDF PhD thesis Middle East Technical University hdl 11511 17218 Retrieved 30 July 2021 Adas Michael 2001 Agricultural and Pastoral Societies in Ancient and Classical History ISBN 9781566398329 Cuisenier 1975 67 Krader 1963 322 269 Lindholm Charles 1986 Kinship Structure and Political Authority The Middle East and Central Asia Comparative Studies in Society and History 28 2 334 355 doi 10 1017 S001041750001389X hdl 2144 3845 JSTOR 178975 S2CID 131825544 Mongol community and kinship structure Vreeland Herbert Harold 1920 Human Relations Area Files 1953 Okada Hidehiro 1994 Dayan Khan as a Yuan Emperor The Political Legitimacy in 15th century Mongolia Bulletin de l Ecole Francaise d Extreme Orient Tome 81 51 58 doi 10 3406 befeo 1994 2245 宝音德力根 Buyandelger 2000 15世紀中葉前的北元可汗世系及政局 Genealogy and political situation of the Northern Yuan Khans of the mid 15th century 蒙古史研究 Mongolian History Research 6 132 136 1 permanent dead link Tradicionnaya materialnaya kultura buryatskogo etnosa Predbajkalya Etnogenez i rasselenie Sredovaya kultura buryat Russian P B Abzaev Buryaty na rubezhe XX XXI vv Chislennost sostav zanyatiya Archived 2019 12 25 at the Wayback Machine Russian B Z Nanzatov PLEMENNOJ SOSTAV BURYaT V XIX VEKE Archived 2013 12 03 at the Wayback Machine Russian IRGENIJ BҮRTGELIJN TҮҮHEN TOJM Archived 2013 12 04 at the Wayback Machine Mongolian a b Tүmedhүү ӨMӨZO NY HҮN AMYN HUVIRALTYN ZURGIJG ҮZEED Archived 2018 12 01 at the Wayback Machine Southern Mongolian Liberal Union Party Mongolian Millions of Han Chinese registered as Mongol and Manchu according to Chinese policy since the 1980s There is no enough information about Chinese ethnic minorities due to the government policy Өvor Mongolyn hүn am Archived 2013 12 03 at the Wayback Machine Mongolian ethnologue com information Archived from the original on 9 December 2012 Retrieved 30 July 2022 768 000 families in Mongolia 2013 Shimamura Ippei 2014 The Roots Seekers Shamanism and Ethnicity Among the Mongol Buryats Kanagawa Japan Shumpusha ISBN 978 4 86110 397 1 Tianya network General situation of Mongols in Liaoning Archived 2014 08 26 at the Wayback Machine in Chinese Kalmyks World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples 2005 Retrieved 2008 05 18 Secondary sources Balogh Matyas 2010 Contemporary shamanisms in Mongolia Asian Ethnicity 11 2 229 38 doi 10 1080 14631361003779489 S2CID 145595446 Bira Shagdaryn 2011 Mongolyn tengerijn үzel tүүver zohiol barimt bichgүүd Mongolian Tengerism selected papers and documents in Mongolian Ulaanbaatar Sodpress ISBN 9789992955932 Bumochir D 2014 Institutionalization of Mongolian shamanism from primitivism to civilization Asian Ethnicity 15 4 473 91 doi 10 1080 14631369 2014 939331 S2CID 145329835 Garcia Chad D 2012 A New Kind of Northerner Heissig Walther 1980 1970 The religions of Mongolia Translated by G Samuel London Henley Routledge Kegan Paul ISBN 0 7103 0685 7 Ochir Taĭzhiud Ai u udaĭn 2008 Sh Choĭmaa ed Mongolchuudyn garal nershil On the origin of Mongolian family clan names and ethnonyms in Mongolian Ulaanbaatar International Institute for the Study of Nomadic Civilizations ISBN 9789992959978 OCLC 505674246 Schlehe Judith 2004 Shamanism in Mongolia and in New Age Movements In Rasuly Paleczek Gabriele ed Central Asia on Display Proceedings of the VIIth Conference of the European Society for Central Asian Studies Vol 1 Vienna LIT Verlag pp 283 96 ISBN 3 8258 8309 4 Primary sources The Secret History of the Mongols a Mongolian Epic Chronicle of the Thirteenth Century Inner Asian library Vol 1 2 Translated by Igor de Rachewiltz with a historical and philological commentary Leiden Brill 2004 1971 85 ISBN 978 90 04 15363 9 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mongols Look up Mongol in Wiktionary the free dictionary Evidence that a West East admixed population lived in the Tarim Basin as early as the early Bronze Age Li et al BMC Biology 2010 8 15 Ethnic map of Mongolia Map share of ethnic by county of China Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mongols amp oldid 1136547399, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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