fbpx
Wikipedia

Ulaanbaatar

Ulaanbaatar (/ˌlɑːn ˈbɑːtər/; Mongolian: Улаанбаатар, pronounced [ʊˌɮaːn‿ˈbaːʰtə̆r] , lit. "Red Hero"), previously anglicized as Ulan Bator, is the capital and most populous city of Mongolia. With a population of 1.6 million, it is the coldest capital city in the world by average yearly temperature.[5] The municipality is located in north central Mongolia at an elevation of about 1,300 metres (4,300 ft) in a valley on the Tuul River. The city was founded in 1639 as a nomadic Buddhist monastic centre, changing location 28 times, and was permanently settled at its modern location in 1778.

Ulaanbaatar
Улаанбаатар
ᠤᠯᠠᠭᠠᠨᠪᠠᠭᠠᠲᠤᠷ[a]
City centre with Sükhbaatar Square
Ugsarmal panel buildings built in the socialist era
Naadam ceremony at the National Sports Stadium
Nickname(s): 
УБ (UB), Нийслэл (capital), Хот (city)
Ulaanbaatar
Location of Ulaanbaatar in Mongolia
Ulaanbaatar
Ulaanbaatar (Asia)
Coordinates: 47°55′13″N 106°55′02″E / 47.92028°N 106.91722°E / 47.92028; 106.91722
Country Mongolia
Monastic center established1639
Final location1778
Named Ulaanbaatar1924
Government
 • TypeCouncil–Manager
 • BodyCitizens' Representatives Khural of the Capital City
 • Governor of the Capital City and Mayor of UlaanbaatarKhishgeegiin Nyambaatar (MPP)[2]
Area
 • Total470.4 km2 (181.63 sq mi)
Elevation
1,350 m (4,429 ft)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total1,672,627[1]
 • Density311/km2 (807/sq mi)
GDP
 • TotalMNT 34,008 billion
US$ 10.9 billion (2022)
 • Per capitaMNT 21,692,300
US$ 6,945 (2022)
Time zoneUTC+08:00 (H)
Postal code
210 xxx
Area code+976 (0)11
HDI (2018)0.810[4]very high · 1st
License plateУБ, УН
ISO 3166-2MN-1
ClimateBSk
Websitewww.ulaanbaatar.mn

During its early years, as Örgöö (anglicized as Urga), it became Mongolia's preeminent religious centre and seat of the Jebtsundamba Khutuktu, the spiritual head of the Gelug lineage of Tibetan Buddhism in Mongolia. Following the regulation of Qing-Russian trade by the Treaty of Kyakhta in 1727, a caravan route between Beijing and Kyakhta opened up, along which the city was eventually settled. With the collapse of the Qing dynasty in 1911, the city was a focal point for independence efforts, leading to the proclamation of the Bogd Khanate in 1911 led by the 8th Jebtsundamba Khutuktu, or Bogd Khan, and again during the communist revolution of 1921. With the proclamation of the Mongolian People's Republic in 1924, the city was officially renamed Ulaanbaatar and declared the country's capital. Modern urban planning began in the 1950s, with most of the old ger districts replaced by Soviet-style flats. In 1990, Ulaanbaatar was the site of large demonstrations that led to Mongolia's transition to democracy and a market economy. Since 1990, an influx of migrants from the rest of the country has led to an explosive growth in its population, a major portion of whom live in ger districts, which has led to harmful air pollution in winter.

Governed as an independent municipality, Ulaanbaatar is surrounded by Töv Province, whose capital Zuunmod lies 43 kilometres (27 mi) south of the city. With a population of just over 1.6 million as of December 2022, it contains almost half of the country's total population.[6] As the country's primate city, it serves as its cultural, industrial and financial heart and the center of its transport network.[7]

Names and etymology edit

The city at its establishment in 1639 was referred to as Örgöö (Mongolian: ᠥᠷᠭᠦᠭᠡ; Өргөө, lit.'Palace'). This name was eventually adapted as Urga[8] in the West. By 1651, it began to be referred to as Nomiĭn Khüree (Mongolian: ᠨᠣᠮ ‍ᠤᠨ ᠬᠦᠷᠢᠶᠡᠨ; Номын хүрээ, lit.'Khüree of Wisdom'), and by 1706 it was referred to as Ikh Khüree (Mongolian: ᠶᠡᠬᠡ ᠬᠦᠷᠢᠶᠡᠨ; Их хүрээ, lit.'Great Khüree'). The Chinese equivalent, Dà Kùlún (Chinese: 大庫倫, Mongolian: Да Хүрээ), was rendered into Western languages as Kulun or Kuren.

Other names include Bogdiin Khuree (Mongolian: ᠪᠣᠭᠳᠠ ᠶᠢᠨ ᠬᠦᠷᠢᠶᠡᠨ; Богдын хүрээ, lit.'The Bogd's Khüree'), or simply Khüree (Mongolian: ᠬᠦᠷᠢᠶᠡᠨ; Хүрээ, romanized: Küriye), itself a term originally referring to an enclosure or settlement.

Upon independence in 1911, with both the secular government and the Bogd Khan's palace present, the city's name was changed to Niĭslel Khüree (Mongolian: ᠨᠡᠶᠢᠰᠯᠡᠯ ᠬᠦᠷᠢᠶᠡᠨ; Нийслэл Хүрээ, lit.'Capital Khüree').

When the city became the capital of the new Mongolian People's Republic in 1924, its name was changed to Ulaanbaatar (lit.'Red Hero').

In the Western world, Ulaanbaatar continued to be generally known as Urga or Khuree until 1924, and afterward as Ulan Bator (a spelling derived from the Russian Улан-Батор). This form was defined two decades before the Mongolian name got its current Cyrillic spelling and transliteration (1941–1950); however, the name of the city was spelled Ulaanbaatar koto during the decade in which Mongolia used the Latin alphabet.

History edit

Prehistory edit

Human habitation at the site of Ulaanbaatar dates from the Lower Paleolithic, with a number of sites on the Bogd Khan, Buyant-Ukhaa and Songinokhairkhan mountains, revealing tools which date from 300,000 years ago to 40,000–12,000 years ago. These Upper Paleolithic people hunted mammoth and woolly rhinoceros, the bones of which are found abundantly around Ulaanbaatar.[citation needed]

Before 1639 edit

 
Roof tiles recovered from Wang Khan's 12th-century palace in Ulaanbaatar

A number of Xiongnu-era royal tombs have been discovered around Ulaanbaatar, including the tombs of Belkh Gorge near Dambadarjaalin monastery and tombs of Songinokhairkhan. Located on the banks of the Tuul River, Ulaanbaatar has been well within the sphere of Turco-Mongol nomadic empires throughout history.

Wang Khan, Toghrul of the Keraites, a Nestorian Christian monarch whom Marco Polo identified as the legendary Prester John, is said to have had his palace here (the Black Forest of the Tuul River) and forbade hunting in the holy mountain Bogd Uul. The palace is said to be where Genghis Khan stayed with Yesui Khatun before attacking the Tangut in 1226.[citation needed]

During the Mongol Empire (1206-1368) and Northern Yuan dynasty (1368-1635) the main, natural route from the capital region of Karakorum to the birthplace and tomb of the Khans in the Khentii mountain region (Ikh Khorig) passed through the area of Ulaanbaatar. The Tuul River naturally leads to the north-side of Bogd Khan Mountain, which stands out as a large island of forest positioned conspicuously at the south-western edge of the Khentii mountains. As the main gate and stopover point on the route to and from the holy Khentii mountains, the Bogd Khan Mountain saw large amounts of traffic going past it and was protected from early times. Even after the Northern Yuan period it served as the location of the annual and triannual Assembly of Nobles (Khan Uuliin Chuulgan).

Mobile monastery edit

Founded in 1639 as a yurt monastery as Örgöö (lit.'palace-yurt'), the settlement was first located at Lake Shireet Tsagaan nuur (75 kilometres (47 miles) directly east of the imperial capital Karakorum) in what is now Burd sum, Övörkhangai, around 230 kilometres (143 miles) south-west from the present site of Ulaanbaatar, and was intended by the Mongol nobles to be the seat of Zanabazar, the first Jebtsundamba Khutughtu. Zanabazar returned to Mongolia from Tibet in 1651, and founded seven aimags (monastic departments) in Urga, later establishing four more.[9]

As a mobile monastery-town, Örgöö was often moved to various places along the Selenge, Orkhon and Tuul rivers, as supply and other needs would demand. During the Dzungar wars of the late 17th century, it was even moved to Inner Mongolia.[10] As the city grew, it moved less and less.[11]

The movements of the city can be detailed as follows: Shireet Tsagaan Nuur (1639), Khoshoo Tsaidam (1640), Khentii Mountains (1654), Ogoomor (1688), Inner Mongolia (1690), Tsetserlegiin Erdene Tolgoi (1700), Daagandel (1719), Usan Seer (1720), Ikh Tamir (1722), Jargalant (1723), Eeven Gol (1724), Khujirtbulan (1729), Burgaltai (1730), Sognogor (1732), Terelj (1733), Uliastai River (1734), Khui Mandal (1736), Khuntsal (1740), Udleg (1742), Ogoomor (1743), Selbe (1747), Uliastai River (1756), Selbe (1762), Khui Mandal (1772) and Selbe (1778).[citation needed]

In 1778, the city moved from Khui Mandal and settled for good at its current location, near the confluence of the Selbe and Tuul rivers, and beneath Bogd Khan Uul, at that time also on the caravan route from Beijing to Kyakhta.[12]

One of the earliest Western mentions of Urga is the account of the Scottish traveller John Bell in 1721:

What they call the Urga is the court, or the place where the prince (Tusheet Khan) and high priest (Bogd Jebtsundamba Khutugtu) reside, who are always encamped at no great distance from one another. They have several thousand tents about them, which are removed from time to time. The Urga is much frequented by merchants from China and Russia, and other places.[13]

By Zanabazar's death in 1723, Urga was Mongolia's preeminent monastery in terms of religious authority. A council of seven of the highest-ranking lamas (Khamba Nomon Khan, Ded Khamba and five Tsorj) made most of the city's religious decisions. It had also become Outer Mongolia's commercial center. From 1733 to 1778, Urga moved around the vicinity of its present location. In 1754, the Erdene Shanzodba Yam ^ of Urga was given authority to supervise the administrative affairs of the Bogd's subjects. It also served as the city's chief judicial court. In 1758, the Qianlong Emperor appointed the Khalkha Vice General Sanzaidorj as the first Mongol amban of Urga, with full authority to "oversee the Khuree and administer well all the Khutugtu's subjects".[14]

In 1761, a second amban was appointed for the same purpose, a Manchu one. A quarter-century later, in 1786, a decree issued in Peking gave right to the Urga ambans to decide the administrative affairs of Tusheet Khan and Setsen Khan territories. With this, Urga became the highest civil authority in the country. Based on Urga's Mongol governor Sanzaidorj's petition, the Qianlong Emperor officially recognized an annual ceremony on Bogd Khan Mountain in 1778 and provided the annual imperial donations. The city was the seat of the Jebtsundamba Khutugtus, two Qing ambans, and a Chinese trade town grew "four trees" 4.24 km (2.63 mi) east of the city center at the confluence of the Uliastai and Tuul rivers.[citation needed]

 
Detail of 19th-century painting of Urga (Ulaanbaatar): in the center the movable square temple of Bat Tsagaan, built in 1654, besides numerous other temples

By 1778, Urga may have had as many as ten thousand monks, who were regulated by a monastic rule, Internal Rule of the Grand Monastery or Yeke Kuriyen-u Doto'adu Durem. For example, in 1797 a decree of the 4th Jebtsundamba forbade "singing, playing with archery, myagman, chess, usury and smoking"). Executions were forbidden where the holy temples of the Bogd Jebtsundama could be seen, so capital punishment took place away from the city.[citation needed]

In 1839, the 5th Bogd Jebtsundamba moved his residence to Gandan Hill, an elevated position to the west of the Baruun Damnuurchin markets. Part of the city was moved to nearby Tolgoit. In 1855, the part of the camp that moved to Tolgoit was brought back to its 1778 location, and the 7th Bogd Jebtsundamba returned to the Zuun Khuree. The Gandan Monastery flourished as a center of philosophical studies.[citation needed]

 
The Russian Consulate of Urga (Ulaanbaatar) and the Holy Trinity Church, both built in 1863

Urga and the Kyakhta trade edit

Following the Treaty of Kyakhta in 1727, Urga (Ulaanbaatar) was a major point of the Kyakhta trade between Russia and China – mostly Siberian furs for Chinese cloth and later tea. The route ran south to Urga, southeast across the Gobi Desert to Kalgan, and southeast over the mountains to Peking. Urga was also a collection point for goods coming from further west. These were either sent to China or shipped north to Russia via Kyakhta, because of legal restrictions and the lack of good trade routes to the west.[citation needed]

By 1908,[15] there was a Russian quarter with a few hundred merchants and a Russian club and informal Russian mayor. East of the main town was the Russian consulate, built in 1863, with an Orthodox church, a post office and 20 Cossack guards. It was fortified in 1900 and briefly occupied by troops during the Boxer Rebellion. There was a telegraph line north to Kyakhta and southeast to Kalgan and weekly postal service along these routes.[citation needed]

Beyond the Russian consulate was the Chinese trading post called Maimaicheng, and nearby the palace of the Manchu viceroy. With the growth of Western trade at the Chinese ports, the tea trade to Russia declined, some Chinese merchants left, and wool became the main export. Manufactured goods still came from Russia, but most were now brought from Kalgan by caravan. The annual trade was estimated at 25 million rubles, nine-tenths in Chinese hands and one-tenth in Russian.[citation needed]

The Moscow trade expedition of the 1910s estimated the population of Urga at 60,000, based on Nikolay Przhevalsky's study in the 1870s.[16]

The city's population swelled during the Naadam festival and major religious festivals to more than 100,000. In 1919, the number of monks had reached 20,000, up from 13,000 in 1810.[16]

 
A 1913 panorama of the city. The large circular compound in the middle is the Zuun Khuree temple-palace complex. The Gandan temple complex is to the left. The palaces of the Bogd are to the south of the river. To the far bottom right of the painting is the Maimaicheng district. To its left are the white buildings of the Russian consulate area. Manjusri Monastery can be seen on Mount Bogd Khan Uul at the bottom-right of the painting.

Independence and Niislel Khüree edit

 
Jarlig proclaiming Ikh Khüree as Niislel (Capital) Khüree, 1912.

In 1910, the amban Sando went to quell a major fight between Gandan lamas and Chinese traders started by an incident at the Da Yi Yu shop in the Baruun Damnuurchin market district. He was unable to bring the lamas under control, and was forced to flee back to his quarters. In 1911, with the Qing dynasty in China headed for total collapse, Mongolian leaders in Ikh Khüree for Naadam met in secret on Mount Bogd Khan Uul and resolved to end 220 years of Manchu control of their country.[citation needed]

On 29 December 1911, the 8th Jebtsundamba Khutughtu was declared ruler of an independent Mongolia and assumed the title Bogd Khan.[11] Khüree as the seat of the Jebtsundamba Khutugtu was the logical choice for the capital of the new state. However, following the tripartite Kyakhta agreement of 1915, Mongolia's status was effectively reduced to mere autonomy.

In 1919, Mongolian nobles, over the opposition of the Bogd Khan, agreed with the Chinese resident Chen Yi on a settlement of the "Mongolian question" along Qing-era lines, but before this settlement could be put into effect, Khüree was occupied by the troops of Chinese warlord Xu Shuzheng, who forced the Mongolian nobles and clergy to renounce autonomy completely.[citation needed]

The city changed hands twice in 1921. First, on 4 February, a mixed Russian/Mongolian force led by White Russian warlord Roman von Ungern-Sternberg captured the city, freeing the Bogd Khan from Chinese imprisonment and killing a part of the Chinese garrison. Baron Ungern's capture of Urga was followed by the clearing out of Mongolia's small gangs of demoralized Chinese soldiers and, at the same time, looting and murder of foreigners, including a vicious pogrom that killed off the Jewish community.[17][18][19]

On 22 February 1921, the Bogd Khan was once again elevated to Great Khan of Mongolia in Urga.[20] However, at the same time that Baron Ungern was taking control of Urga, a Soviet-supported Communist Mongolian force led by Damdin Sükhbaatar was forming in Russia, and in March they crossed the border. Ungern and his men rode out in May to meet Red Russian and Red Mongolian troops, but suffered a disastrous defeat in June.[21]

In July 1921, the Communist Soviet-Mongolian army became the second conquering force in six months to enter Urga, and Mongolia came under the control of Soviet Russia. On 29 October 1924, the town was renamed Ulaanbaatar. On the session of the 1st Great People's Khuraldaan of Mongolia in 1924, a majority of delegates had expressed their wish to change the capital city's name to Baatar Khot (lit.'Hero City'). However, under pressure from Turar Ryskulov, a Kazakh Soviet activist of the Communist International, the city was named Ulaanbaatar Khot (lit.'Red-Hero City').[22]

Socialist era edit

 
Green areas were increased in the city center during the communist era.
 
Outdoor market near Gandan Hill in 1972; State Department Store in the background

During the socialist period, especially following the Second World War, most of the old ger districts were replaced by Soviet-style blocks of flats, often financed by the Soviet Union. Urban planning began in the 1950s, and most of the city today is a result of construction between 1960 and 1985.[23]

The Trans-Mongolian Railway, connecting Ulaanbaatar with Moscow and Beijing, was completed in 1956, and cinemas, theaters, museums and other modern facilities were erected. Most of the temples and monasteries of pre-socialist Khüree were destroyed following the anti-religious purges of the late 1930s. The Gandan monastery was reopened in 1944 when the U.S. Vice President Henry Wallace asked to see a monastery during his visit to Mongolia.[citation needed]

Contemporary era edit

Ulaanbaatar and chiefly Sükhbaatar Square was a major site of demonstrations that led to Mongolia's transition to democracy and market economy in 1990. Starting on 10 December 1989, protesters outside the Youth Culture Center called for Mongolia to implement perestroika and glasnost in their full sense. After months of large-scale demonstrations and hunger strikes, the governing Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party (MPRP) resigned on 9 March 1990. The provisional government announced Mongolia's first free elections, which were held in July. The MPRP won the election and resumed power.

Since Mongolia's transition to a market economy in 1990, the city has experienced further growth—especially in the ger districts, as construction of new blocks of flats had basically slowed to a halt in the 1990s. The population has more than doubled to over one million inhabitants. The rapid growth has caused a number of social, environmental and transportation problems. In recent years, construction of new buildings has gained new momentum, especially in the city center, and apartment prices have skyrocketed.[citation needed]

In 2008, Ulaanbaatar was the scene of riots after the Mongolian Democratic, Civic Will Party and Republican parties disputed the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party's victory in the parliamentary elections. A four-day state of emergency was declared, the capital was placed under a 22:00-to-08:00 curfew, and alcohol sales banned;[24] following these measures, rioting did not resume.[25] This was the first deadly riot in modern Ulaanbaatar's history.

In April 2013, Ulaanbaatar hosted the 7th Ministerial Conference of the Community of Democracies, and has also lent its name to the Ulaanbaatar Dialogue on Northeast Asian Security.

Demolition of historic buildings edit

Since 2013, a number of landmark buildings and structures have been demolished in Ulaanbaatar, despite considerable public outcry. This includes the White Gate at Nisekh in September 2013,[26] the Victims of Political Persecution Memorial Museum in October 2019,[27] the National History Museum in December 2019,[28] Buildings #3 and #6 of the National University of Mongolia,[29] and the main building of the University of Finance and Economics in 2023.[30]

The 2019 Mongolian government budget originally included items for the demolition of a number of historic neoclassical buildings in the heart of Ulaanbaatar, including the Natural History Museum, Opera and Ballet House, Drama Theatre and National Library.[31] The decision was met by a public outcry and criticism from the Union of Mongolian Architects, which demanded that the buildings be preserved and restored.[32] In January 2020, culture minister Yondonperenlein Baatarbileg denied that the government intended to demolish buildings other than the Natural History Museum, and stated that the government planned to renovate them instead.[33]

Geography edit

 
Satellite image of Ulaanbaatar, showing the city core along the Tuul River Valley with Bogd Khan Mountain dominating the south. The city's ger districts sprawl into the mountainous areas in the north.

Ulaanbaatar is located at about 1,350 metres (4,430 ft) above mean sea level, slightly east of the center of Mongolia, on the Tuul River, a sub-tributary of the Selenge, in a valley at the foot of the mountain Bogd Khan Uul. Bogd Khan Uul is a broad, heavily forested mountain rising 2,250 metres (7,380 ft) to the south of Ulaanbaatar. It forms the boundary between the steppe zone to the south and the forest-steppe zone to the north. Traditionally, Ulaanbaatar is said to be surrounded by four peaks, clockwise from west: Songino Khairkhan, Chingeltei, Bayanzurkh, and finally Bogd Khan Uul.

The forests of the mountains surrounding Ulaanbaatar are composed of evergreen pines, deciduous larches and birches, while the riverine forest of the Tuul River is composed of broad-leaved, deciduous poplars, elms and willows. Ulaanbaatar lies at roughly the same latitude as Vienna, Munich, Orléans and Seattle. It lies at roughly the same longitude as Chongqing, Hanoi and Jakarta.[citation needed]

Districts edit

 
Map of the districts of Ulaanbaatar

The city is divided into nine districts (Mongolian: дүүрэг, romanized: Düüreg): Baganuur, Bagakhangai, Bayangol, Bayanzürkh, Chingeltei, Khan-Uul, Nalaikh, Songino Khairkhan and Sükhbaatar. Each district is subdivided into khoroos, of which there are 173. Each district also serves as a constituency that elects one or more representatives into the State Great Khural, the national parliament.

Although administratively part of Ulaanbaatar, Nalaikh and Baganuur are separate cities. Bagakhangai and Baganuur are noncontiguous exclaves, the former located within the Töv Province, the latter on the border between Töv and Khentii provinces.

Climate edit

Owing to its high elevation, its relatively high latitude, its location hundreds of kilometres from any coast, and the effects of the Siberian anticyclone, Ulaanbaatar is the coldest national capital in the world,[34] with a monsoon-influenced, cold semi-arid climate (Köppen BSk, USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 3b[35]). Aside from precipitation and from a thermal standpoint, the city is on the boundary between humid continental (Dwb) and subarctic (Dwc). This is due to its 10 °C (50 °F) mean temperature for the month of May.

The city features brief, warm summers and long, bitterly cold and dry winters. The coldest January temperatures, usually at the time just before sunrise, are between −36 and −40 °C (−32.8 and −40.0 °F) with no wind, because of temperature inversion. Most of the annual precipitation of 267 millimetres (10.51 in) falls from May to September. The highest recorded annual precipitation in the city was 659 millimetres or 25.94 inches at the Khureltogoot Astronomical Observatory on Mount Bogd Khan Uul. Ulaanbaatar has an average annual temperature of 0.2 °C or 32.4 °F,[36] making it the coldest capital in the world (almost as cold as Nuuk, Greenland, but Greenland is not independent). Nuuk has a tundra climate with consistent cold temperatures throughout the year. Ulaanbaatar's annual average is brought down by its cold winter temperatures even though it is significantly warm from late April to early October.

The city lies in the zone of discontinuous permafrost, which means that building is difficult in sheltered locations that preclude thawing in the summer, but easier on more exposed ones where soils fully thaw. Suburban residents live in traditional yurts that do not protrude into the soil.[37] Extreme temperatures in the city range from −43.9 °C (−47.0 °F) in January 1957 to 39.0 °C (102.2 °F) in July 1988.[38]

Climate data for Ulaanbaatar (1991-2020, extremes 1869-present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 0.0
(32.0)
11.3
(52.3)
18.9
(66.0)
28.7
(83.7)
33.5
(92.3)
38.3
(100.9)
39.0
(102.2)
36.7
(98.1)
31.7
(89.1)
22.5
(72.5)
13.0
(55.4)
6.1
(43.0)
39.0
(102.2)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) −15.5
(4.1)
−9.4
(15.1)
−0.2
(31.6)
10.4
(50.7)
17.8
(64.0)
23.1
(73.6)
25.2
(77.4)
23.0
(73.4)
17.2
(63.0)
7.7
(45.9)
−4.8
(23.4)
−13.7
(7.3)
6.7
(44.1)
Daily mean °C (°F) −21.3
(−6.3)
−16.3
(2.7)
−6.7
(19.9)
3.0
(37.4)
10.2
(50.4)
16.5
(61.7)
19.0
(66.2)
16.6
(61.9)
10.0
(50.0)
0.9
(33.6)
−10.6
(12.9)
−19.0
(−2.2)
0.2
(32.4)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −25.6
(−14.1)
−21.7
(−7.1)
−12.6
(9.3)
−3.3
(26.1)
3.5
(38.3)
10.3
(50.5)
13.5
(56.3)
11.1
(52.0)
4.1
(39.4)
−4.5
(23.9)
−15.1
(4.8)
−22.9
(−9.2)
−5.3
(22.5)
Record low °C (°F) −43.9
(−47.0)
−42.2
(−44.0)
−37.2
(−35.0)
−26.1
(−15.0)
−16.1
(3.0)
−3.9
(25.0)
−0.2
(31.6)
−2.8
(27.0)
−13.4
(7.9)
−20.0
(−4.0)
−35.0
(−31.0)
−42.2
(−44.0)
−43.9
(−47.0)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 2
(0.1)
3
(0.1)
5
(0.2)
8
(0.3)
22
(0.9)
47
(1.9)
75
(3.0)
65
(2.6)
28
(1.1)
9
(0.4)
6
(0.2)
4
(0.2)
274
(11)
Average rainy days 0 0 0.3 3 8 14 17 15 9 2 0.1 0 68
Average snowy days 10 7 7 6 4 0.1 0 0 2 6 9 11 62
Average relative humidity (%) 74.7 69.5 57.6 44.2 42.7 50.1 58.2 60.8 56.1 56.9 68.3 75.1 62
Mean monthly sunshine hours 164.2 203.5 257.4 265.3 297.9 282.3 278.3 265.2 249.5 227.6 175.4 137.7 2,804.3
Source 1: Pogoda.ru.net[38]
Source 2: NOAA[39]
Climate data for Buyant-Ukhaa International Airport weather station (WMO identifier: 44291) (between 1991-2020)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average dew point °C (°F) −24.7
(−12.5)
−20.9
(−5.6)
−14.5
(5.9)
−9.6
(14.7)
−3.8
(25.2)
4.5
(40.1)
9.4
(48.9)
7.9
(46.2)
0.5
(32.9)
−7.6
(18.3)
−15.7
(3.7)
−22.6
(−8.7)
−8.1
(17.4)
Source: [1][40]

Cityscape edit

 
New high rise constructions in Yaarmag area

The city's inner core consists of a central district built in 1940s- and 1950s-style Soviet architecture, surrounded by and mingled with residential concrete towerblocks and large ger districts. Starting after the fall of communism, many of the towerblocks' ground floors were modified and upgraded to small shops, and many new buildings have been erected—some illegally, as some private companies erect buildings without legal licenses/permits. Since the 2010s, a construction boom has been ongoing, leading to many high-rise apartment and office blocks in the inner core as well as new settlement areas.[41]Sükhbaatar Square, in the government district, is the center of Ulaanbaatar[42] and contains in the middle a statue of revolutionary hero Damdin Sükhbaatar on horseback; and in the north side a statue of Chinggis Khan. To the north is the Government Palace, while Peace Avenue (Enkh Taivny Urgon Chuloo), the main thoroughfare through town, runs along the south side of the square.[43]

Major landmarks include the Gandantegchinlen Monastery,[44] the socialist monument complex at Zaisan Memorial with its views over the city, the Bogd Khan's Winter Palace, and the Choijin Lama Temple.[45] Mongolia's tallest building is the Shangri-La Hotel complex at 91.5 m.[46]

Important shopping districts include the 3rd Microdistrict Boulevard (simply called Khoroolol or "the District"), Peace Avenue around the State Department Store (simply called Ikh Delguur or "Great Store") and the Narantuul "Black Market" area (simply called Zakh or "the Market").

Ulaanbaatar presently has multiple cinemas, one modern ski resort, two large indoor stadiums, several large department stores and one large amusement park. Food, entertainment and recreation venues are steadily increasing in variety. International food chains such as KFC, Burger King, Pizza Hut, Round Table Pizza, Cinnabon, and hotel chains such as Ramada, Kempinski, and Shangri-La have opened branches in the city.

Parks edit

 
Gorkhi-Terelj National Park is a popular picnic and camping ground all year round.

A number of national parks and protected areas officially belong to the city. Gorkhi-Terelj National Park, a nature preserve with many tourist facilities, is approximately 70 km (43 mi) from Ulaanbaatar. The 40-metre-high (130-foot) Genghis Khan Equestrian Statue is 54 km (34 mi) east of the city. It is also close to Hustai National Park, home to reintroduced Takhi wild horses, 90 kilometres (56 miles) west of the city.

Bogd Khan Uul, which dominates the south, is a strictly protected area with a length of 31 kilometres (19 miles) and width of 3 kilometres (1.9 miles), covering an area of 67,300 hectares (166,302 acres). Nature conservation dates back to the twelfth and thirteenth centuries when the Tooril Khan of the Mongolian Ancient Keraite Aimag – who prohibited logging and hunting activities – claimed the Bogd Khan as a holy mountain.[47] The ruins of Manjusri Monastery are located on the southern flank of Bogd Khan Uul and is a popular destination for outings.

The National Amusement Park is an amusement park located in the downtown section, south of Shangri-La Hotel.[48] It is also a popular place for young people to hang out. This small amusement park features rides, games and paddle boats. Its original Artificial Lake Castle was built in 1969.

The National Garden Park (Mongolian: Үндэсний Цэцэрлэгт Хүрээлэн, romanized: Ündesnii tsetserlegt khüreelen), in the southeastern outskirts of the city,[49] opened in 2009 and has become a popular summer destination for residents. It has a total area of 55 hectares, with over 100,000 trees planted. The park is geared towards becoming an educational center for healthy, responsible living as well as environmental education.

Demographics edit

 
Ger districts against a backdrop of high-rise new buildings in Ulaanbaatar

As Mongolia's primate city, Ulaanbaatar has been the focal point for urbanization and migration from rural areas.[50] With a population of 400 thousand in 1979,[51][52][53] it has experienced rapid growth, reaching 1 million inhabitants around 2007.[54] Population growth in the 2010s averaged 2.7% a year, representing a two-fold fall from the previous decade.[55] In 2020, the city's population was recorded as 1,466,125.[55]

Two-thirds of the city's inhabitants live in ger districts, areas with inadequate infrastructure, sanitation, and public services.[50]

64.6% of the population was reported to have been born in Ulaanbaatar. The foreign-born population was recorded as 17,456 in 2020.[55]

Religion edit

Ulaanbaatar has a long tradition of Buddhism, having been initially founded and settled as a monastic center. Prominent places of worship in the city include the Gandantegchinlen Monastery and Choijin Lama Temple. In modern times, it has become a multifaith center, having added multiple Christian churches (such as the Orthodox Holy Trinity Church, as well as the Catholic Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral) and Islamic mosques.

According to the 2020 national census, 46.3% of the population over 15 years of age identified as being irreligious, while 53.7% identified as being religious, a decrease of 7.7 percentage points in religiosity since the 2010 census.[55]

Of the people identifying as religious, responses included Buddhism (89.1%), Shamanism (5.4%), Christianity (3.3%), and Islam (0.9%).[55]

Governance edit

 
Newly built city government headquarters in Yaarmag area, Khan Uul

Ulaanbaatar is treated as an independent first-level region, separate from the surrounding Töv Aimag. It is governed by the Ulaanbaatar City Council with 45 members, elected every four years.[56] The Prime Minister of Mongolia appoints the Governor of the Capital City and Mayor of Ulaanbaatar with four-year terms upon the city council's nomination.[57]

Municipal symbols edit

The official emblem of Ulaanbaatar is the garuḍa, a mythical bird in both Buddhist and Hindu scriptures, referred to as the Khangar'd (Mongolian: Хангарьд, lit.'Khan Garuda') by Mongols.

The garuḍa appears on Ulaanbaatar's emblem. In its right hand is a key, a symbol of prosperity and openness, and in its left is a lotus flower, a symbol of peace, equality and purity. In its talons it is holding a snake, a symbol of evil of which it is intolerant. On the garuḍa's forehead is the soyombo symbol, which is featured on the flag of Mongolia. The city's flag is sky blue representing the eternal sky and has the garuḍa in the center.[58]

Economy edit

The largest corporations and conglomerates of Mongolia are almost all headquartered in Ulaanbaatar. In 2017 Ulaanbaatar had five billionaires and 90 multimillionaires with net worth above 10 million dollars.[59][60] Major Mongolian companies include MCS Group, Gatsuurt LLC, Genco, MAK, Altai Trading, Tavan Bogd Group, Mobicom Corporation, Bodi, Shunkhlai, Monnis and Petrovis. While not on the level of multinational corporations, most of these companies are multi-sector conglomerates with far-reaching influence in the country.

Ulaanbaatar (Urga) has been a key location where the economic history and wealth creation of the nation has played out. Unlike the highly mobile dwellings of herders nomadizing between winter and summer pastures, Urga was set up to be a semi-permanent residence of the high lama Zanabazar. [citation needed] It stood in one location (Khoshoo Tsaidam) from 1640 to 1654, an unusually long period of 15 years, before Zanabazar moved it east to the foot of Mount Saridag in the Khentii Mountains. Here he set about building a permanent monastery town with stone buildings. Urga stayed at Mount Saridag for a full 35 years and was indeed assumed to be permanent there when Oirats suddenly invaded the region in 1688 and burnt down the city. With a major part of his life's work destroyed, Zanabazar had to take the mobile portion of Urga and flee to Inner Mongolia.[citation needed]

More than half the wealth created in Urga in the period from 1639 to 1688 is thought to have been lost in 1688. Only in 1701 did Urga return to the region and start a second period of expansion, but it had to remain mobile until the end of the 70-year-long Dzungar-Qing Wars in 1757. After settling down in its current location in 1778, Urga saw sustained economic growth, but most of the wealth went to the Buddhist clergy, nobles as well as the temporary Shanxi merchants based in the eastern and western China-towns of Urga. There were numerous companies called puus (пүүс) and temple treasuries called jas (жас), which functioned as businesses, but none of these survived the Communist period. During the Mongolian People's Republic, private property was only marginally tolerated, while most assets were state-owned. The oldest companies still operating in Ulaanbaatar date to the early MPR. Only the Gandantegchinlen Monastery has been operating non-stop for 205 years (with a 6-year gap during World War II), but whether it can be seen as a business is still debated.

As the main industrial center of Mongolia, Ulaanbaatar produces a variety of consumer goods [61] and is responsible for about two-thirds of Mongolia's total gross domestic product (GDP).[62]

The transition to a market economy in 1990 has so far correlated with an increase in GDP, leading to a shift towards service industries (which now make up 43% of the city's GDP) along with rapid urbanization and population growth.[63]

Mining is the second-largest contributor to Ulaanbaatar's GDP, at 25%. North of the city are several gold mines, including the Boroo Gold Mine, and foreign investment in the sector has allowed for growth and development. However, in light of a noticeable drop in GDP during the financial crisis of 2008, as demand for mining exports dropped,[63] there has been movement towards diversifying the economy.[62]

Culture edit

Arts edit

 
Mongolian National Song and Dance Academic Ensemble

Ulaanbaatar features a mix of traditional and western-style theatres, offering world-class performances. Many of the traditional folklore bands play regularly around the world, including in New York, London and Tokyo. The Ulaanbaatar Opera House, situated in the center of the city, hosts concerts and musical performances as well as opera and ballet performances, some in collaboration with world ballet houses such as the Boston Theatre.

The Mongolian State Grand National Orchestra was established in 1945. It has the largest orchestra of traditional instruments in the country, with a repertoire going beyond national music, encompassing dozens of international musical pieces.[64]

The Tumen Ekh Ensemble comprises artists who perform all types of Mongolian song, music and dance. They play traditional instruments, including the morin khuur (horsehead fiddle), and perform Mongolian long song, epic and eulogy songs, a shaman ritual dance, an ancient palace dance and a Tsam mask dance.[65]

The Morin Khuur Ensemble of Mongolia is part of the Mongolian State Philharmonic, based at Sükhbaatar Square. It is a popular ensemble featuring the national string instrument, the morin khuur, and performs various domestic and international works.

Monasteries edit

 
1913 color photo of Gandan Monastery

Among the notable older monasteries is the Choijin Lama Monastery, a Buddhist monastery that was completed in 1908. It escaped the destruction of Mongolian monasteries when it was turned into a museum in 1942.[66]

Another is the Gandan Monastery, which dates to the 19th century. Its most famous attraction is a 26.5-meter-high golden statue of Migjid Janraisig.[67] These monasteries are among the very few in Mongolia to escape the wholesale destruction of Mongolian monasteries under Khorloogiin Choibalsan.

Museums edit

 
Throne given to Zanabazar by his disciple the Kangxi Emperor, used by later Jebtsundamba Khutuktus in Urga

Ulaanbaatar has several museums dedicated to Mongolian history and culture. The Natural History Museum features many dinosaur fossils and meteorites found in Mongolia.[68][69]

The National Museum of Mongolia includes exhibits from prehistoric times through the Mongol Empire to the present.[70][71] The Zanabazar Museum of Fine Arts has a large collection of Mongolian art, including works of the 17th-century sculptor/artist Zanabazar, as well as Mongolia's most famous painting, One Day In Mongolia by Baldugiin "Marzan" Sharav.[72][73] The Mongolian Theatre Museum presents the history of the performing arts in Mongolia. The city's former Lenin Museum announced plans in January 2013 to convert to a museum showcasing dinosaur and other prehistoric fossils.[74]

Pre-1778 artifacts that have never left the city since its founding include the Vajradhara statue made by Zanabazar himself in 1683 (the city's main deity, kept at the Vajradhara temple); an ornate throne presented to Zanabazar by the Kangxi Emperor (before 1723); a sandalwood hat presented to Zanabazar by the Dalai Lama (c. 1663); Zanabazar's large fur coat, also presented by the Kangxi Emperor; and a great number of original statues made by Zanabazar (e.g., the Green Tara).

The Military Museum of Mongolia features two permanent exhibition halls, commemorating the war history of the country from prehistoric times to the modern era. In the first hall, one can see various tools and weapons from the Paleolithic age to the times of the Manchu empire. The second hall showcases the modern history of the Mongolian military, from the Bogd Khan period (1911–24) up until Mongolia's recent military involvement in peacekeeping operations.

The city's museum offers a view of Ulaanbaatar's history through old maps and photos. Among the permanent items is a huge painting of the capital as it looked in 1912, showing major landmarks such as Gandan Monastery and the Green Palace. Part of the museum is dedicated to special photo exhibits that change frequently. The Mongolian Railway History Museum is an open-air museum that displays six types of locomotives used during a 65-year period of Mongolian rail history.

The Puzzle Toys Museum displays a comprehensive collection of complex wooden toys that visitors can assemble.

The Victims of Political Persecution Memorial Museum – dedicated to those fallen under the Communist purge that took the lives of over 32,000 statesmen, herders, scholars, politicians and lamas in the 1930s – told about one of the most tragic periods in Mongolia's 20th-century history.[75] The small building had fallen into serious disrepair and was demolished on 7 October 2019, despite public outcry in favor of renovation.[27]

Education edit

 
Main building of the National University of Mongolia

Ulaanbaatar is home to most of Mongolia's major universities, among them the National University of Mongolia, Mongolian University of Science and Technology, Mongolian University of Life Sciences, Mongolian National University of Medical Sciences, Mongolian State University of Education, and Mongolian State University of Arts and Culture, and the University of Finance and Economics.

The American School of Ulaanbaatar and the International School of Ulaanbaatar are examples of Western-style K-12 education in English for Mongolian nationals and foreign residents.

Libraries edit

 
National Library of Mongolia
 
Ulaanbaatar Public Library in 2023

The National Library of Mongolia is located in Ulaanbaatar and includes an extensive historical collection, items in non-Mongolian languages and a special children's collection.[76]

The Metropolitan Central Library of Ulaanbaatar, sometimes also referred to as the Ulaanbaatar Public Library, is a public library with a collection of about 500,000 items. It has 232,097 annual users and a total of 497,298 loans per year. It does charge users a registration fee of 3800 to 4250 tugrik, or about US$3.29 to 3.68. The fees may be the result of operating on a budget under $176,000 per year. They also host websites on classical and modern Mongolian literature and food, in addition to providing free internet access.[76]

In 1986, the Ulaanbaatar government created a centralized system for all public libraries in the city, known as the Metropolitan Library System of Ulaanbaatar (MLSU). This system coordinates management, acquisitions, finances and policy among public libraries in the capital, in addition to providing support to school and children's libraries.[77] Other than the Metropolitan Central Library, the MLSU has four branch libraries. They are in the Chingeltei District (established in 1946), in the Khan-Uul District (established in 1948), in the Bayanzurkh District (established in 1968) and in the Songino-Khairkhan District (established in 1991). There is also a Children's Central Library, which was established in 1979.[78]

University libraries edit

  • Library of Mongolian State University of Education[79]
  • Library of the Academy of Management[80]
  • Library of the National University of Mongolia[81]
  • Institutes of the Academy of Sciences (3 department libraries)[82]
  • Library of the Institute of Language and Literature[83]
  • Library of the Institute of History[83]
  • Library of the Institute of Finance and Economics[84]
  • Library of the National University of Mongolia[85]
  • Library of the Agriculture University

Digital libraries edit

The Press Institute in Ulaanbaatar oversees the Digital Archive of Mongolian Newspapers. It is a collection of 45 newspaper titles with a particular focus on the years after the fall of communism in Mongolia.[86] The project was supported by the British Library's Endangered Archives Programme. The Metropolitan Central Library in Ulaanbaatar maintains a digital monthly news archive.[87]

Special libraries edit

An important resource for academics is the American Center for Mongolian Studies (ACMS),[88] also based in Ulaanbaatar. Its goal is to facilitate research between Mongolia and the rest of the world and to foster academic partnerships. To help achieve this end, it operates a research library with a reading room and computers for Internet access. ACMS has 1,500 volumes related to Mongolia in numerous languages that may be borrowed with a deposit. It also hosts an online library that includes special reference resources and access to digital databases,[89] including a digital book collection.[90][91]

There is a Speaking Library at School #116 for the visually impaired, funded by the Zorig Foundation, and the collection is largely based on materials donated by Mongolian National Radio. "A sizable collection of literature, know-how topics, training materials, music, plays, science broadcasts are now available to the visually impaired at the school".[92]

The Mongolia-Japan Center for Human Resources Development[93] maintains a library in Ulaanbaatar consisting of about 7,800 items. The materials in the collection have a strong focus on both aiding Mongolians studying Japanese and books in Japanese about Mongolia. It includes a number of periodicals, textbooks, dictionaries and audio-visual materials. Access to the collection does require payment of a 500 Tugrug fee, though materials are available for loan. They also provide audio-visual equipment for collection use and internet access for an hourly fee. There is an information retrieval reference service for questions that cannot be answered by their collection.[94]

Archives edit

There is a manuscript collection at the Danzan Ravjaa Museum of theological, poetic, medicinal, astrological and theatrical works. It consists of literature written and collected by the monk Danzan Ravjaa, who is famous for his poetry.

The British Library's Endangered Archives Programme funded a project to take digital images of unique literature in the collection; however, it is not clear where the images are stored today.[95]

Sport edit

 
National Sports Stadium in 2019

The National Sports Stadium is the main sporting venue, notable as the host of the yearly Naadam festival. Other venues include the multi-purpose Buyant Ukhaa Sport Palace, Steppe Arena for indoor skating, and Bökhiin Örgöö for Mongolian wrestling. Sky Resort is a popular destination for skiing and features a golf course.

Ulaanbaatar has hosted the 2019 FIBA 3x3 Under-18 World Cup[96] and the 2023 East Asian Youth Games.

Ulaanbaatar City FC is a professional football club based in the city and currently competes in Mongolian National Premier League.

Infrastructure edit

 
Bus in Ulaanbaatar

Transport edit

Ulaanbaatar serves as the country's primary road, air, and rail hub. Transport within Ulaanbaatar is conducted through private cars, public transport (buses, trolleybuses, and taxis), as well as informal taxis and minivans.[97] As of 2021, the total number of registered vehicles in the city was 662,644.[97]

Public transport edit

Buses are the main form of public transport in Ulaanbaatar. As of 2021, 950 buses from 19 companies served 105 routes and 1169 bus stops. Daily ridership is 480-500 thousand.[98] The bus fleet consists of 18 articulated buses, 1129 high capacity buses, 42 trolleybuses, 46 medium capacity buses, and 46 small capacity buses.[98]

In 2021, public transport usage totaled 147 million passengers, with 61% of the population using public transport.[98]

In July 2015, a smart card system was rolled out for bus fare payments (U Money) - previously the bus network had conductors from which tickets would be bought using cash. As of 2021, fares are 100-200₮ for children and 300-500₮ for adults.[98]

8 companies operate 372 official taxis within the city as of 2021,[98] down from 566 official taxis in 2019.[99] Usage of unofficial taxis and ride-sharing apps (UBCab) is common.

Road edit

As of 2018, the city had 875 km of paved roads within its urban boundary, and its periphery (ger districts) are disproportionally underserved by paved roads.[100] Currently there are 720,000 vehicles registered in the city.[101]

The city's traffic is concentrated around its main thoroughfares — Peace Avenue (Enkh Taivny örgön chölöö), Ikh Toiruu, Narnii Zam, and Chinggis Avenue (Chinggisiin örgön chölöö).[102]

Congestion is a major problem in Ulaanbaatar, with average peak hour driving speeds in the city being 8.9 km/h in 2021. In the same year, city residents spent an average of 2.5 hours a day stuck in traffic.[103] Recent studies predict rush hour speeds plummeting to just 5 km/hr by 2025.[104]

Rail edit

 
Ulaanbaatar railway station

The Trans-Mongolian Railway crosses the city center in a roughly east-to-west direction, with the main railway hub being Ulaanbaatar railway station.

Air edit

Ulaanbaatar is served by Chinggis Khaan International Airport, located 52 km (32 mi) south of the city in Sergelen, Töv, which functions as the country's main air hub. It replaced the former Buyant-Ukhaa International Airport in 2021[105] and features flights to destinations in Europe, Asia, and domestic aimag centers. The airport is accessible from Ulaanbaatar via highway with taxis and shuttles operating along the route.

There are 6 helipads in the city.[97]

Future proposals edit

Due to worsening congestion and growth, a number of proposals have been made to improve the city's transport infrastructure, such as the short-lived Ulaanbaatar Railbus, and the proposed subway system.

Energy edit

 
Thermal Power Plant No. 3

Ulaanbaatar's electricity is mainly supplied through thermal power plants utilizing coal, the largest being Thermal Power Plant No. 4. Aside from generating electricity, they also supply hot water throughout the city and heat buildings during the winter months from September to April. Ger districts surrounding the city are not connected to the central heating system, therefore having to rely on burning coal and other materials for heat.

In 2019, the government banned the burning of raw coal within Ulaanbaatar, instead distributing coke briquettes, claiming fuel efficiency and less smoke pollution.[106] Results have been inconclusive since the switch to briquettes,[107] though as of 2023 smoke is still a major concern in winter.[108]

Water edit

Ulaanbaatar relies entirely on groundwater recharged directly from the Tuul River. Water provisioning is managed by the Water Supply and Sewage Authority, a municipal agency.[109]

Pollution edit

 
Ger district in Ulaanbaatar with the Temple of Boddhisattva Avalokiteshvara at Gandantegchinlen Monastery in the background

Air pollution is a serious problem in Ulaanbaatar, especially in winter. Concentrations of certain types of particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5) regularly exceed WHO recommended maximum levels by more than a dozen times. They also exceed the concentrations measured in northern Chinese industrial cities. During the winter months, smoke regularly obscures vision and even lead to problems with air traffic at the former airport.[110]

Sources of the pollution are mainly the simple stoves used for heating and cooking in the city's ger districts, but also the local coal-fueled power plants. The problem is compounded by Ulaanbaatar's location in a valley between relatively high mountains, which shield the city from the winter winds and thus obstruct air circulation.[111][112]

International relations edit

Twin towns – sister cities edit

Ulaanbaatar is twinned with:[113]

Proximity to nearby urban centers abroad edit

Ulaanbaatar has close air links to cities like Seoul (1,995 kilometres or 1,240 miles from UB), Hong Kong (2,900 kilometres or 1,800 miles from UB), Tokyo (3,010 kilometres or 1,870 miles from UB) and Moscow (4,650 kilometres or 2,890 miles from UB). The Zamiin Uud-Erenhot and Altanbulag-Kyakhta border crossings are the only places where sustained interaction occurs between Mongolia and its neighbors. Other ports are much smaller.

Beijing remains the closest global city to Ulaanbaatar (1,167 kilometres or 725 miles). The Ulaanbaatar-Beijing corridor is served by busy air, rail and road links.

Appearances in fiction edit

In the 1959 novel Alas, Babylon by Pat Frank, the pen name of Harry Hart Frank, the city was a relocation site for the Soviet leadership. In the novel it had a medium-wave station for communications.[116]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Transcribed as Ulaɣanbaɣatur.

References edit

  1. ^ "Хүн ам, орон сууцны 2020 оны улсын ээлжит тооллого - Нийслэлийн нэгсэн дүн". 1212.mn. Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  2. ^ E, Oyun-Erdene (2023-10-04). "Kh.Nyambaatar appointed as new Mayor of Ulaanbaatar". gogo.mn.
  3. ^ "GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT, by region, aimags and the Capital". www.1212.mn. Mongolian Statistical Information Service. Retrieved 2023-12-06.
  4. ^ Sub-national HDI. "Area Database – Global Data Lab". hdi.globaldatalab.org.
  5. ^ Sen Nag, Oishimaya (2021-01-21). "The Coldest Capital Cities In The World". WorldAtlas. Retrieved 2022-12-12.
  6. ^ (in Mongolian). Statis.ub.gov.mn. Archived from the original on 2013-12-02. Retrieved 2014-09-07.
  7. ^ (in Mongolian). Ulaanbaatar.mn. Archived from the original on 6 August 2012. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
  8. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Urga" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 795.
  9. ^ Улаанбаатар хотын хөгжлийн түүхэн замнал, хэтийн төлөв. УБ: УХГ. 1974.
  10. ^ Улаанбаатар, Ulaanbaatar 2001, pg. 9f
  11. ^ a b . Ulaanbaatar.mn. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
  12. ^ Kohn, Michael Lonely Planet Mongolia (4th edition, 2005); ISBN 1-74059-359-6, pg. 52.
  13. ^ John Bell, Travels from St. Petersburgh in Russia, to various parts of Asia (Volume 1), 1763, London, pg. 344
  14. ^ Majer, Zsuzsa & Krisztina Teleki, Monasteries and Temples of Bogdiin Khuree, Ikh Khuree or Urga, the Old Capital City of Mongolia in the First Part of the Twentieth Century 27 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Lindon Wallace Bates, The Russian Road to China, 1910
  16. ^ a b "From Khutagtiin Khuree to Niislel Khuree 2017-10-10 at the Wayback Machine, Presentation of the Director of the General Archives Authority D. Ulziibaatar", archives.gov.mn; accessed 26 March 2018.
  17. ^ Othen, Christopher. . Archived from the original on 2019-11-21. Retrieved 2020-06-01.
  18. ^ Palmer, James (2009). The Bloody White Baron. Perseus Books. ISBN 9780465014484.
  19. ^ Bisher, Jamie. White Terror: Cossack Warlords Of The Trans-Siberian. p. 276.
  20. ^ Kuzmin, S.L. History of Baron Ungern: an Experience of Reconstruction. Moscow: KMK, 2011, pp. 165–200
  21. ^ Kuzmin, pp. 250–300
  22. ^ Протоколы 1-го Великого Хуралдана Монгольской Народной Республики. Улан-Батор-Хото, 1925.(in Russian)
  23. ^ Montsame News Agency. Mongolia. 2006; ISBN 99929-0-627-8, pp. 33–34.
  24. ^ "Fatal clashes in Mongolia capital". BBC News. 2 July 2008. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
  25. ^ "Streets calm in riot-hit Mongolia". BBC News. 3 July 2008. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
  26. ^ iKon.mn, Х. Алтанзагас (2013-09-19). "Нисэхийн "Цагаан хаалга"-ыг буулгахаар боллоо". ikon.mn. Retrieved 2023-11-12.
  27. ^ a b Menarndt, Aubrey (17 October 2019). "'A crime against culture': Mongolian capital Ulan Bator set to demolish Soviet-era buildings – activists fight to save them and scent corruption". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 6 January 2022. On October 7, Mongolia's Victims of Political Persecution Memorial Museum was demolished. The museum was housed in one of Ulan Bator's oldest buildings, a small, brown wooden house in the center of the city, which stood in contrast to the high-rises surrounding it.
  28. ^ "Фото: Байгалийн түүхийн музейг нураалаа". Peak News. Retrieved 2023-11-12.
  29. ^ Ариунаа, Э. (2023-09-12). "Сурвалжлага: МУИС-ийн байрыг нурааж, 7 давхар болгон шинэчилнэ | News.MN". News.MN - Мэдээллийн эх сурвалж (in Mongolian). Retrieved 2023-11-12.
  30. ^ А.Цээсүрэн (2023-09-08). "Санхүү, эдийн засгийн их сургуулийн барилгыг нураажээ | News.MN". News.MN - Мэдээллийн эх сурвалж (in Mongolian). Retrieved 2023-11-12.
  31. ^ Ankhtuyaa, B. (18 October 2019). "A crime against culture': Ulaanbaatar set to demolish majestic Soviet-era buildings". News.mn. Retrieved 19 April 2021. As the parliament began its autumn legislative agenda, the government budget for the year revealed several line items financing the demolition of the city's Natural History Museum, Opera and Ballet House, Drama Theatre, and Central Library.
  32. ^ Baljmaa.T (13 January 2020). "Culture Minister: Three historical buildings to be renovated with MNT 6 billion". Montsame. Retrieved 19 April 2021. This has garnered public criticism, including the Union of Mongolian Architects, who claimed that those buildings hold cultural heritage and architectural values, and demanding preservation and restoration of the buildings instead of demolition.
  33. ^ Baljmaa.T (13 January 2020). "Culture Minister: Three historical buildings to be renovated with MNT 6 billion". Montsame. Retrieved 19 April 2021. Concerning the prolonged public outcry, Minister of Education, Culture Science and Sports Yo.Baatarbileg today clarified during his meeting with reporters that "Buildings of National Academic Drama Theater, National Academic Theater of Opera and Ballet of Mongolia and Central Library of Mongolia are planned to go under renovation this year with funding of MNT 2 billion from state budget for each. The official position and decision of the Ministry of Culture not to demolish them remain the same as before".
  34. ^ Montsame News Agency. Mongolia. 2006, ISBN 99929-0-627-8, pg. 35
  35. ^ . Plantsdb.gr. 15 August 1965. Archived from the original on 16 April 2014. Retrieved 25 November 2013.
  36. ^ . Hong Kong Observatory. Archived from the original on 23 October 2019. Retrieved 14 April 2010.
  37. ^ Matt Rosenberg. . About.com Education. Archived from the original on 2011-12-28. Retrieved 2006-11-11.
  38. ^ a b КЛИМАТ УЛАН-БАТОРА (in Russian). Pogoda.ru.net. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  39. ^ . World Meteorological Organization. Archived from the original on 17 July 2021. Retrieved 2 August 2023.
  40. ^ "Climate & Weather Averages at Ulan-Bator weather station". NOAA. Retrieved 10 August 2023.
  41. ^ "Mongolia's building boom traps capital residents in concrete jungle". France 24. 2023-05-10. Retrieved 2023-11-12.
  42. ^ Montsame News Agency. Mongolia, 2006; ISBN 99929-0-627-8, pg. 34
  43. ^ Kohn, pg. 52
  44. ^ "Documentation of Mongolian Monasteries" http://mongoliantemples.org/index.php/en/ 2015-12-17 at the Wayback Machine
  45. ^ "Mongolia: Museum Highlights", San Francisco, 2005, pg. 89
  46. ^ "Shangri-La Ulaanbaatar Hotel - The Skyscraper Center". www.skyscrapercenter.com. Retrieved 2023-11-12.
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-02-18. Retrieved 2015-12-11.
  48. ^ Ulaanbaatar, Google Maps. Retrieved 2022-09-14.
  49. ^ Ulaanbaatar, Google Maps. Retrieved 2022-09-13.
  50. ^ a b "Mongolia: Urban Sector Fact Sheet" (PDF). Asian Development Bank. Dec 2022. Retrieved 12 Nov 2023.
  51. ^ "City Population - Historical population figures".
  52. ^ Statistisches Bundesamt: Statistik des Auslands - Mongolei, 1985
  53. ^ Encyclopedia "Cartactual," published 01/01/85
  54. ^ BBESoft. "Статистик үзүүлэлт". Нийслэлийн Статистикийн Газар. Retrieved 2023-11-12.
  55. ^ a b c d e "Хүн ам, орон сууцны 2020 оны улсын ээлжит тооллого - Улаанбаатар нэгдсэн дүн". 1212.mn. Retrieved 29 May 2022.
  56. ^ "Түүхэн товчоо". khural.ulaanbaatar.mn. Retrieved 2023-11-12.
  57. ^ O, Erdenechimeg. "Улаанбаатар хотын 35 дахь дарга өнөөдөр томилогдоно". eagle.mn. Retrieved 2023-11-12.
  58. ^ "Хотын тухай". ulaanbaatar.mn (in Mongolian). Retrieved 2023-11-12.
  59. ^ "Foreigners have determined the 10 richest people in Mongolia". Caak.mn. Retrieved 16 September 2017.
  60. ^ "The list of 100 richest Mongolians is causing a stir on a Russian website". Ugluu.mn. 3 October 2016. Retrieved 3 October 2016.
  61. ^ "Ulaanbaatar". encyclopedia.com. The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th Edition. Retrieved 13 November 2016.
  62. ^ a b Economic Development in Mongolia. The Asia Foundation. Available here[permanent dead link]; accessed 13 November 2016.
  63. ^ a b Fan, Peilei; Chen, Jiquan; John, Ranjeet (2016-01-01). "Urbanization and environmental change during the economic transition on the Mongolian Plateau: Hohhot and Ulaanbaatar". Environmental Research. The Provision of Ecosystem Services in Response to Global Change. 144, Part B (Pt B): 96–112. Bibcode:2016ER....144...96F. doi:10.1016/j.envres.2015.09.020. PMID 26456409.
  64. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 December 2015.
  65. ^ "Official Website".
  66. ^ . Museums of Mongolia. Archived from the original on 31 May 2009.
  67. ^ Kohn, pp. 63–4
  68. ^ Museum of natural history 27 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  69. ^ Kohn, p. 60
  70. ^ Kohn, pp. 61, 66
  71. ^ "National Museum". Nationalmuseum.mn. 21 March 2012. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
  72. ^ Kohn, pg. 61
  73. ^ . Zanabazarmuseum.org. Archived from the original on 2011-09-24. Retrieved 2012-04-18.
  74. ^ Branigan, Tania. "It's goodbye Lenin, hello dinosaur as fossils head to Mongolia museum". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 January 2013.
  75. ^ "Victims of Political Persecution Memorial Museum" 2022-09-14 at the Wayback Machine, Attractions, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, Asia. Lonely Planet. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  76. ^ a b "Metropolitan Central Library of Ulaanbaatar". Nla.gov.au. 1 March 2004. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
  77. ^ The 800th Anniversary of Great Mongolian State. History 29 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  78. ^ The 800th Anniversary of Great Mongolian State. Branches 23 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  79. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-10-05. Retrieved 2021-03-21.
  80. ^ . www.aom.lib.mn. Archived from the original on 2004-10-14. Retrieved 2018-12-14.
  81. ^ "Монгол Улсын Их Сургууль". www.num.edu.mn.
  82. ^ Institutes of the Academy of Sciences (3 department libraries) 2010-11-29 at the Wayback Machine
  83. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2011-08-24. Retrieved 2011-08-22.
  84. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-08-29. Retrieved 2011-08-22.
  85. ^ . library.num.edu.mn. Archived from the original on 2011-08-26. Retrieved 2011-08-22.
  86. ^ "Digital Librarian Lends Expertise to Mongolian Project". Uwm.edu. Archived from the original on 6 August 2012. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
  87. ^ Жил бvр зохиогдож байгаа Монголын шилдэг вэб шалгаруулах уралдааны тухай 16 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  88. ^ "American Center of Mongolian Studies – ACMS". mongoliacenter.org.
  89. ^ "Library". American Center of Mongolian Studies. 25 May 2020.
  90. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 March 2010. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  91. ^ "American Center for Mongolian Studies Library Homepage. American Center for Mongolian Studies, Ulaanbaatar". Mongoliacenter.org. 7 May 2008. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
  92. ^ . Ubpost.mongolnews.mn. 8 November 2007. Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
  93. ^ Mongolia-Japan Center for Human Resources Development 2010-03-18 at the Wayback Machine
  94. ^ Library 22 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  95. ^ The treasures of Danzan Ravjaa 5 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  96. ^ "FIBA 3x3 U18 World Cup: seventh edition all set to tip off in Mongolia on June 3". Sportskeeda. 3 June 2019. Retrieved 5 December 2020.
  97. ^ a b c UNESCAP (2022). "Planning safe, sustainable, resilient, and inclusive public transport in Ulaanbaatar" (PDF). UNESCAP. Retrieved 16 Sep 2023.
  98. ^ a b c d e (PDF). UNESCAP. 9 Sep 2022. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 Feb 2023. Retrieved 16 Sep 2023.
  99. ^ Eldev-Ochir, Erdenechimeg (2019). (PDF). UNESCAP. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 Sep 2023. Retrieved 16 Sep 2023.
  100. ^ Eldev-Ochir, Erdenechimeg (2019). (PDF). UNESCAP. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 Sep 2023. Retrieved 16 Sep 2023.
  101. ^ Bernama-Xinhua (18 December 2023). "Mongolia's capital imposes odd-even car ban to reduce traffic jam". News Straits Times. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
  102. ^ (PDF). UNESCAP. 9 Sep 2022. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 Feb 2023. Retrieved 16 Sep 2023.
  103. ^ "Mongolia to intensify efforts to reduce traffic congestion in capital - Xinhua | English.news.cn". www.xinhuanet.com. Retrieved 2023-09-16.
  104. ^ Adiya, Amar (2023-11-17). "How Ulaanbaatar's Traffic Gridlock is Affecting Daily Life and What Can Be Done About It". Mongolia Weekly. Retrieved 2023-11-20.
  105. ^ "New Chinggis Khaan International Airport opens". montsame. 2021-07-04.
  106. ^ Kwong, Emily (30 July 2019). "Mongolia's Capital Banned Coal To Fix Its Pollution Problem. Will It Work?". NPR.
  107. ^ Нэргүй, Г. (2023-01-03). "Сайжруулсан түлш агаарын бохирдлыг нэмсэн, нэмээгүй | News.MN". News.MN - Мэдээллийн эх сурвалж (in Mongolian). Retrieved 2023-11-12.
  108. ^ bawadi, mohammed (2022-01-11). "Despite use of briquettes, toxic air overwhelms Ulaanbaatar". A24 News Agency. Retrieved 2023-11-12.
  109. ^ "Water Security Woes in Mongolia's Capital". thediplomat.com. Retrieved 2023-11-12.
  110. ^ "Air Pollution Puts Lives At Risk Mongolia". BORGEN. 2016-04-26. Retrieved 2021-06-02.
  111. ^ Hasenkopf, Christa. . World Policy Journal (Spring 2012). Archived from the original on 6 May 2012. Retrieved 31 May 2012.
  112. ^ The World Bank (December 2009). "Mongolia: Air Pollution in Ulaanbaatar – Initial Assessment of Current Situation and Effects of Abatement Measures" (PDF). Sustainable Development Series: Discussion Paper. Washington, D.C.: The World Bank. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  113. ^ "List of twinned cities and friendly relationship cities". khural.ulaanbaatar.mn. Retrieved 2024-04-06.
  114. ^ "Sister city relations established between Ulaanbaatar and Chongqing". montsame.mn. Retrieved 2024-04-06.
  115. ^ "Ulaanbaatar, Bishkek established sister-city relations". gogo.mn. Retrieved 2024-04-06.
  116. ^ Frank, Pat (1959). Alas, Babylon. New York: Perennial 2005 (Lippincott 1959). ISBN 978-0-06-074187-7.

Further reading edit

  • Lattimore, Owen. "Communism, Mongolian Brand", The Atlantic, September 1962. A unique, detailed historical snapshot of life in Mongolia at the height of the Cold War. Retrieved 11 August 2022.

External links edit

  • Ulaanbaatar City Hall 2012-08-06 at the Wayback Machine(Mongolia)
  • Ulaanbaatar Travel Guide
  • from A. M. Pozdneyev's Mongolia and the Mongols

ulaanbaatar, ulan, bator, redirects, here, band, ulan, bator, band, ɑː, ɑː, mongolian, Улаанбаатар, pronounced, ʊˌɮaːn, ˈbaːʰtə, hero, previously, anglicized, ulan, bator, capital, most, populous, city, mongolia, with, population, million, coldest, capital, ci. Ulan Bator redirects here For the band see Ulan Bator band Ulaanbaatar ˌ uː l ɑː n ˈ b ɑː t er Mongolian Ulaanbaatar pronounced ʊˌɮaːn ˈbaːʰte r lit Red Hero previously anglicized as Ulan Bator is the capital and most populous city of Mongolia With a population of 1 6 million it is the coldest capital city in the world by average yearly temperature 5 The municipality is located in north central Mongolia at an elevation of about 1 300 metres 4 300 ft in a valley on the Tuul River The city was founded in 1639 as a nomadic Buddhist monastic centre changing location 28 times and was permanently settled at its modern location in 1778 Ulaanbaatar Ulaanbaatarᠤᠯᠠᠭᠠᠨᠪᠠᠭᠠᠲᠤᠷ a MunicipalityCity centre with Sukhbaatar SquareGandantegchinlen MonasteryChoijin Lama TempleGer districtsUgsarmal panel buildings built in the socialist eraNational University of MongoliaNaadam ceremony at the National Sports StadiumFlagCoat of armsNickname s UB UB Nijslel capital Hot city UlaanbaatarLocation of Ulaanbaatar in MongoliaShow map of MongoliaUlaanbaatarUlaanbaatar Asia Show map of AsiaCoordinates 47 55 13 N 106 55 02 E 47 92028 N 106 91722 E 47 92028 106 91722Country MongoliaMonastic center established1639Final location1778Named Ulaanbaatar1924Government TypeCouncil Manager BodyCitizens Representatives Khural of the Capital City Governor of the Capital City and Mayor of UlaanbaatarKhishgeegiin Nyambaatar MPP 2 Area Total470 4 km2 181 63 sq mi Elevation1 350 m 4 429 ft Population 2021 Total1 672 627 1 Density311 km2 807 sq mi GDP 3 TotalMNT 34 008 billionUS 10 9 billion 2022 Per capitaMNT 21 692 300US 6 945 2022 Time zoneUTC 08 00 H Postal code210 xxxArea code 976 0 11HDI 2018 0 810 4 very high 1stLicense plateUB UNISO 3166 2MN 1ClimateBSkWebsitewww wbr ulaanbaatar wbr mnDuring its early years as Orgoo anglicized as Urga it became Mongolia s preeminent religious centre and seat of the Jebtsundamba Khutuktu the spiritual head of the Gelug lineage of Tibetan Buddhism in Mongolia Following the regulation of Qing Russian trade by the Treaty of Kyakhta in 1727 a caravan route between Beijing and Kyakhta opened up along which the city was eventually settled With the collapse of the Qing dynasty in 1911 the city was a focal point for independence efforts leading to the proclamation of the Bogd Khanate in 1911 led by the 8th Jebtsundamba Khutuktu or Bogd Khan and again during the communist revolution of 1921 With the proclamation of the Mongolian People s Republic in 1924 the city was officially renamed Ulaanbaatar and declared the country s capital Modern urban planning began in the 1950s with most of the old ger districts replaced by Soviet style flats In 1990 Ulaanbaatar was the site of large demonstrations that led to Mongolia s transition to democracy and a market economy Since 1990 an influx of migrants from the rest of the country has led to an explosive growth in its population a major portion of whom live in ger districts which has led to harmful air pollution in winter Governed as an independent municipality Ulaanbaatar is surrounded by Tov Province whose capital Zuunmod lies 43 kilometres 27 mi south of the city With a population of just over 1 6 million as of December 2022 update it contains almost half of the country s total population 6 As the country s primate city it serves as its cultural industrial and financial heart and the center of its transport network 7 Contents 1 Names and etymology 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Before 1639 2 3 Mobile monastery 2 4 Urga and the Kyakhta trade 2 5 Independence and Niislel Khuree 2 6 Socialist era 2 7 Contemporary era 2 7 1 Demolition of historic buildings 3 Geography 3 1 Districts 3 2 Climate 3 3 Cityscape 3 4 Parks 4 Demographics 4 1 Religion 5 Governance 5 1 Municipal symbols 6 Economy 7 Culture 7 1 Arts 7 2 Monasteries 7 3 Museums 8 Education 8 1 Libraries 8 2 University libraries 8 3 Digital libraries 8 4 Special libraries 8 5 Archives 9 Sport 10 Infrastructure 10 1 Transport 10 1 1 Public transport 10 1 2 Road 10 1 3 Rail 10 1 4 Air 10 1 5 Future proposals 10 2 Energy 10 3 Water 11 Pollution 12 International relations 12 1 Twin towns sister cities 12 2 Proximity to nearby urban centers abroad 13 Appearances in fiction 14 Notes 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksNames and etymology editSee also Names of Ulaanbaatar in different languages The city at its establishment in 1639 was referred to as Orgoo Mongolian ᠥᠷᠭᠦᠭᠡ Өrgoo lit Palace This name was eventually adapted as Urga 8 in the West By 1651 it began to be referred to as Nomiĭn Khuree Mongolian ᠨᠣᠮ ᠤᠨ ᠬᠦᠷᠢᠶᠡᠨ Nomyn hүree lit Khuree of Wisdom and by 1706 it was referred to as Ikh Khuree Mongolian ᠶᠡᠬᠡ ᠬᠦᠷᠢᠶᠡᠨ Ih hүree lit Great Khuree The Chinese equivalent Da Kulun Chinese 大庫倫 Mongolian Da Hүree was rendered into Western languages as Kulun or Kuren Other names include Bogdiin Khuree Mongolian ᠪᠣᠭᠳᠠ ᠶᠢᠨ ᠬᠦᠷᠢᠶᠡᠨ Bogdyn hүree lit The Bogd s Khuree or simply Khuree Mongolian ᠬᠦᠷᠢᠶᠡᠨ Hүree romanized Kuriye itself a term originally referring to an enclosure or settlement Upon independence in 1911 with both the secular government and the Bogd Khan s palace present the city s name was changed to Niĭslel Khuree Mongolian ᠨᠡᠶᠢᠰᠯᠡᠯ ᠬᠦᠷᠢᠶᠡᠨ Nijslel Hүree lit Capital Khuree When the city became the capital of the new Mongolian People s Republic in 1924 its name was changed to Ulaanbaatar lit Red Hero In the Western world Ulaanbaatar continued to be generally known as Urga or Khuree until 1924 and afterward as Ulan Bator a spelling derived from the Russian Ulan Bator This form was defined two decades before the Mongolian name got its current Cyrillic spelling and transliteration 1941 1950 however the name of the city was spelled Ulaanbaatar koto during the decade in which Mongolia used the Latin alphabet History editMain article History of Ulaanbaatar Prehistory edit Human habitation at the site of Ulaanbaatar dates from the Lower Paleolithic with a number of sites on the Bogd Khan Buyant Ukhaa and Songinokhairkhan mountains revealing tools which date from 300 000 years ago to 40 000 12 000 years ago These Upper Paleolithic people hunted mammoth and woolly rhinoceros the bones of which are found abundantly around Ulaanbaatar citation needed Before 1639 edit nbsp Roof tiles recovered from Wang Khan s 12th century palace in UlaanbaatarA number of Xiongnu era royal tombs have been discovered around Ulaanbaatar including the tombs of Belkh Gorge near Dambadarjaalin monastery and tombs of Songinokhairkhan Located on the banks of the Tuul River Ulaanbaatar has been well within the sphere of Turco Mongol nomadic empires throughout history Wang Khan Toghrul of the Keraites a Nestorian Christian monarch whom Marco Polo identified as the legendary Prester John is said to have had his palace here the Black Forest of the Tuul River and forbade hunting in the holy mountain Bogd Uul The palace is said to be where Genghis Khan stayed with Yesui Khatun before attacking the Tangut in 1226 citation needed During the Mongol Empire 1206 1368 and Northern Yuan dynasty 1368 1635 the main natural route from the capital region of Karakorum to the birthplace and tomb of the Khans in the Khentii mountain region Ikh Khorig passed through the area of Ulaanbaatar The Tuul River naturally leads to the north side of Bogd Khan Mountain which stands out as a large island of forest positioned conspicuously at the south western edge of the Khentii mountains As the main gate and stopover point on the route to and from the holy Khentii mountains the Bogd Khan Mountain saw large amounts of traffic going past it and was protected from early times Even after the Northern Yuan period it served as the location of the annual and triannual Assembly of Nobles Khan Uuliin Chuulgan Mobile monastery edit Founded in 1639 as a yurt monastery as Orgoo lit palace yurt the settlement was first located at Lake Shireet Tsagaan nuur 75 kilometres 47 miles directly east of the imperial capital Karakorum in what is now Burd sum Ovorkhangai around 230 kilometres 143 miles south west from the present site of Ulaanbaatar and was intended by the Mongol nobles to be the seat of Zanabazar the first Jebtsundamba Khutughtu Zanabazar returned to Mongolia from Tibet in 1651 and founded seven aimags monastic departments in Urga later establishing four more 9 As a mobile monastery town Orgoo was often moved to various places along the Selenge Orkhon and Tuul rivers as supply and other needs would demand During the Dzungar wars of the late 17th century it was even moved to Inner Mongolia 10 As the city grew it moved less and less 11 The movements of the city can be detailed as follows Shireet Tsagaan Nuur 1639 Khoshoo Tsaidam 1640 Khentii Mountains 1654 Ogoomor 1688 Inner Mongolia 1690 Tsetserlegiin Erdene Tolgoi 1700 Daagandel 1719 Usan Seer 1720 Ikh Tamir 1722 Jargalant 1723 Eeven Gol 1724 Khujirtbulan 1729 Burgaltai 1730 Sognogor 1732 Terelj 1733 Uliastai River 1734 Khui Mandal 1736 Khuntsal 1740 Udleg 1742 Ogoomor 1743 Selbe 1747 Uliastai River 1756 Selbe 1762 Khui Mandal 1772 and Selbe 1778 citation needed In 1778 the city moved from Khui Mandal and settled for good at its current location near the confluence of the Selbe and Tuul rivers and beneath Bogd Khan Uul at that time also on the caravan route from Beijing to Kyakhta 12 One of the earliest Western mentions of Urga is the account of the Scottish traveller John Bell in 1721 What they call the Urga is the court or the place where the prince Tusheet Khan and high priest Bogd Jebtsundamba Khutugtu reside who are always encamped at no great distance from one another They have several thousand tents about them which are removed from time to time The Urga is much frequented by merchants from China and Russia and other places 13 By Zanabazar s death in 1723 Urga was Mongolia s preeminent monastery in terms of religious authority A council of seven of the highest ranking lamas Khamba Nomon Khan Ded Khamba and five Tsorj made most of the city s religious decisions It had also become Outer Mongolia s commercial center From 1733 to 1778 Urga moved around the vicinity of its present location In 1754 the Erdene Shanzodba Yam of Urga was given authority to supervise the administrative affairs of the Bogd s subjects It also served as the city s chief judicial court In 1758 the Qianlong Emperor appointed the Khalkha Vice General Sanzaidorj as the first Mongol amban of Urga with full authority to oversee the Khuree and administer well all the Khutugtu s subjects 14 In 1761 a second amban was appointed for the same purpose a Manchu one A quarter century later in 1786 a decree issued in Peking gave right to the Urga ambans to decide the administrative affairs of Tusheet Khan and Setsen Khan territories With this Urga became the highest civil authority in the country Based on Urga s Mongol governor Sanzaidorj s petition the Qianlong Emperor officially recognized an annual ceremony on Bogd Khan Mountain in 1778 and provided the annual imperial donations The city was the seat of the Jebtsundamba Khutugtus two Qing ambans and a Chinese trade town grew four trees 4 24 km 2 63 mi east of the city center at the confluence of the Uliastai and Tuul rivers citation needed nbsp Detail of 19th century painting of Urga Ulaanbaatar in the center the movable square temple of Bat Tsagaan built in 1654 besides numerous other templesBy 1778 Urga may have had as many as ten thousand monks who were regulated by a monastic rule Internal Rule of the Grand Monastery or Yeke Kuriyen u Doto adu Durem For example in 1797 a decree of the 4th Jebtsundamba forbade singing playing with archery myagman chess usury and smoking Executions were forbidden where the holy temples of the Bogd Jebtsundama could be seen so capital punishment took place away from the city citation needed In 1839 the 5th Bogd Jebtsundamba moved his residence to Gandan Hill an elevated position to the west of the Baruun Damnuurchin markets Part of the city was moved to nearby Tolgoit In 1855 the part of the camp that moved to Tolgoit was brought back to its 1778 location and the 7th Bogd Jebtsundamba returned to the Zuun Khuree The Gandan Monastery flourished as a center of philosophical studies citation needed nbsp The Russian Consulate of Urga Ulaanbaatar and the Holy Trinity Church both built in 1863Urga and the Kyakhta trade edit Following the Treaty of Kyakhta in 1727 Urga Ulaanbaatar was a major point of the Kyakhta trade between Russia and China mostly Siberian furs for Chinese cloth and later tea The route ran south to Urga southeast across the Gobi Desert to Kalgan and southeast over the mountains to Peking Urga was also a collection point for goods coming from further west These were either sent to China or shipped north to Russia via Kyakhta because of legal restrictions and the lack of good trade routes to the west citation needed By 1908 15 there was a Russian quarter with a few hundred merchants and a Russian club and informal Russian mayor East of the main town was the Russian consulate built in 1863 with an Orthodox church a post office and 20 Cossack guards It was fortified in 1900 and briefly occupied by troops during the Boxer Rebellion There was a telegraph line north to Kyakhta and southeast to Kalgan and weekly postal service along these routes citation needed Beyond the Russian consulate was the Chinese trading post called Maimaicheng and nearby the palace of the Manchu viceroy With the growth of Western trade at the Chinese ports the tea trade to Russia declined some Chinese merchants left and wool became the main export Manufactured goods still came from Russia but most were now brought from Kalgan by caravan The annual trade was estimated at 25 million rubles nine tenths in Chinese hands and one tenth in Russian citation needed The Moscow trade expedition of the 1910s estimated the population of Urga at 60 000 based on Nikolay Przhevalsky s study in the 1870s 16 The city s population swelled during the Naadam festival and major religious festivals to more than 100 000 In 1919 the number of monks had reached 20 000 up from 13 000 in 1810 16 nbsp A 1913 panorama of the city The large circular compound in the middle is the Zuun Khuree temple palace complex The Gandan temple complex is to the left The palaces of the Bogd are to the south of the river To the far bottom right of the painting is the Maimaicheng district To its left are the white buildings of the Russian consulate area Manjusri Monastery can be seen on Mount Bogd Khan Uul at the bottom right of the painting Independence and Niislel Khuree edit nbsp Jarlig proclaiming Ikh Khuree as Niislel Capital Khuree 1912 In 1910 the amban Sando went to quell a major fight between Gandan lamas and Chinese traders started by an incident at the Da Yi Yu shop in the Baruun Damnuurchin market district He was unable to bring the lamas under control and was forced to flee back to his quarters In 1911 with the Qing dynasty in China headed for total collapse Mongolian leaders in Ikh Khuree for Naadam met in secret on Mount Bogd Khan Uul and resolved to end 220 years of Manchu control of their country citation needed On 29 December 1911 the 8th Jebtsundamba Khutughtu was declared ruler of an independent Mongolia and assumed the title Bogd Khan 11 Khuree as the seat of the Jebtsundamba Khutugtu was the logical choice for the capital of the new state However following the tripartite Kyakhta agreement of 1915 Mongolia s status was effectively reduced to mere autonomy In 1919 Mongolian nobles over the opposition of the Bogd Khan agreed with the Chinese resident Chen Yi on a settlement of the Mongolian question along Qing era lines but before this settlement could be put into effect Khuree was occupied by the troops of Chinese warlord Xu Shuzheng who forced the Mongolian nobles and clergy to renounce autonomy completely citation needed The city changed hands twice in 1921 First on 4 February a mixed Russian Mongolian force led by White Russian warlord Roman von Ungern Sternberg captured the city freeing the Bogd Khan from Chinese imprisonment and killing a part of the Chinese garrison Baron Ungern s capture of Urga was followed by the clearing out of Mongolia s small gangs of demoralized Chinese soldiers and at the same time looting and murder of foreigners including a vicious pogrom that killed off the Jewish community 17 18 19 On 22 February 1921 the Bogd Khan was once again elevated to Great Khan of Mongolia in Urga 20 However at the same time that Baron Ungern was taking control of Urga a Soviet supported Communist Mongolian force led by Damdin Sukhbaatar was forming in Russia and in March they crossed the border Ungern and his men rode out in May to meet Red Russian and Red Mongolian troops but suffered a disastrous defeat in June 21 In July 1921 the Communist Soviet Mongolian army became the second conquering force in six months to enter Urga and Mongolia came under the control of Soviet Russia On 29 October 1924 the town was renamed Ulaanbaatar On the session of the 1st Great People s Khuraldaan of Mongolia in 1924 a majority of delegates had expressed their wish to change the capital city s name to Baatar Khot lit Hero City However under pressure from Turar Ryskulov a Kazakh Soviet activist of the Communist International the city was named Ulaanbaatar Khot lit Red Hero City 22 Socialist era edit nbsp Green areas were increased in the city center during the communist era nbsp Outdoor market near Gandan Hill in 1972 State Department Store in the backgroundDuring the socialist period especially following the Second World War most of the old ger districts were replaced by Soviet style blocks of flats often financed by the Soviet Union Urban planning began in the 1950s and most of the city today is a result of construction between 1960 and 1985 23 The Trans Mongolian Railway connecting Ulaanbaatar with Moscow and Beijing was completed in 1956 and cinemas theaters museums and other modern facilities were erected Most of the temples and monasteries of pre socialist Khuree were destroyed following the anti religious purges of the late 1930s The Gandan monastery was reopened in 1944 when the U S Vice President Henry Wallace asked to see a monastery during his visit to Mongolia citation needed Contemporary era edit Ulaanbaatar and chiefly Sukhbaatar Square was a major site of demonstrations that led to Mongolia s transition to democracy and market economy in 1990 Starting on 10 December 1989 protesters outside the Youth Culture Center called for Mongolia to implement perestroika and glasnost in their full sense After months of large scale demonstrations and hunger strikes the governing Mongolian People s Revolutionary Party MPRP resigned on 9 March 1990 The provisional government announced Mongolia s first free elections which were held in July The MPRP won the election and resumed power Since Mongolia s transition to a market economy in 1990 the city has experienced further growth especially in the ger districts as construction of new blocks of flats had basically slowed to a halt in the 1990s The population has more than doubled to over one million inhabitants The rapid growth has caused a number of social environmental and transportation problems In recent years construction of new buildings has gained new momentum especially in the city center and apartment prices have skyrocketed citation needed In 2008 Ulaanbaatar was the scene of riots after the Mongolian Democratic Civic Will Party and Republican parties disputed the Mongolian People s Revolutionary Party s victory in the parliamentary elections A four day state of emergency was declared the capital was placed under a 22 00 to 08 00 curfew and alcohol sales banned 24 following these measures rioting did not resume 25 This was the first deadly riot in modern Ulaanbaatar s history In April 2013 Ulaanbaatar hosted the 7th Ministerial Conference of the Community of Democracies and has also lent its name to the Ulaanbaatar Dialogue on Northeast Asian Security Demolition of historic buildings edit Since 2013 a number of landmark buildings and structures have been demolished in Ulaanbaatar despite considerable public outcry This includes the White Gate at Nisekh in September 2013 26 the Victims of Political Persecution Memorial Museum in October 2019 27 the National History Museum in December 2019 28 Buildings 3 and 6 of the National University of Mongolia 29 and the main building of the University of Finance and Economics in 2023 30 The 2019 Mongolian government budget originally included items for the demolition of a number of historic neoclassical buildings in the heart of Ulaanbaatar including the Natural History Museum Opera and Ballet House Drama Theatre and National Library 31 The decision was met by a public outcry and criticism from the Union of Mongolian Architects which demanded that the buildings be preserved and restored 32 In January 2020 culture minister Yondonperenlein Baatarbileg denied that the government intended to demolish buildings other than the Natural History Museum and stated that the government planned to renovate them instead 33 Geography edit nbsp Satellite image of Ulaanbaatar showing the city core along the Tuul River Valley with Bogd Khan Mountain dominating the south The city s ger districts sprawl into the mountainous areas in the north Ulaanbaatar is located at about 1 350 metres 4 430 ft above mean sea level slightly east of the center of Mongolia on the Tuul River a sub tributary of the Selenge in a valley at the foot of the mountain Bogd Khan Uul Bogd Khan Uul is a broad heavily forested mountain rising 2 250 metres 7 380 ft to the south of Ulaanbaatar It forms the boundary between the steppe zone to the south and the forest steppe zone to the north Traditionally Ulaanbaatar is said to be surrounded by four peaks clockwise from west Songino Khairkhan Chingeltei Bayanzurkh and finally Bogd Khan Uul The forests of the mountains surrounding Ulaanbaatar are composed of evergreen pines deciduous larches and birches while the riverine forest of the Tuul River is composed of broad leaved deciduous poplars elms and willows Ulaanbaatar lies at roughly the same latitude as Vienna Munich Orleans and Seattle It lies at roughly the same longitude as Chongqing Hanoi and Jakarta citation needed Districts edit Main article Districts of Ulaanbaatar nbsp Map of the districts of UlaanbaatarThe city is divided into nine districts Mongolian dүүreg romanized Duureg Baganuur Bagakhangai Bayangol Bayanzurkh Chingeltei Khan Uul Nalaikh Songino Khairkhan and Sukhbaatar Each district is subdivided into khoroos of which there are 173 Each district also serves as a constituency that elects one or more representatives into the State Great Khural the national parliament Although administratively part of Ulaanbaatar Nalaikh and Baganuur are separate cities Bagakhangai and Baganuur are noncontiguous exclaves the former located within the Tov Province the latter on the border between Tov and Khentii provinces Climate edit Owing to its high elevation its relatively high latitude its location hundreds of kilometres from any coast and the effects of the Siberian anticyclone Ulaanbaatar is the coldest national capital in the world 34 with a monsoon influenced cold semi arid climate Koppen BSk USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 3b 35 Aside from precipitation and from a thermal standpoint the city is on the boundary between humid continental Dwb and subarctic Dwc This is due to its 10 C 50 F mean temperature for the month of May The city features brief warm summers and long bitterly cold and dry winters The coldest January temperatures usually at the time just before sunrise are between 36 and 40 C 32 8 and 40 0 F with no wind because of temperature inversion Most of the annual precipitation of 267 millimetres 10 51 in falls from May to September The highest recorded annual precipitation in the city was 659 millimetres or 25 94 inches at the Khureltogoot Astronomical Observatory on Mount Bogd Khan Uul Ulaanbaatar has an average annual temperature of 0 2 C or 32 4 F 36 making it the coldest capital in the world almost as cold as Nuuk Greenland but Greenland is not independent Nuuk has a tundra climate with consistent cold temperatures throughout the year Ulaanbaatar s annual average is brought down by its cold winter temperatures even though it is significantly warm from late April to early October The city lies in the zone of discontinuous permafrost which means that building is difficult in sheltered locations that preclude thawing in the summer but easier on more exposed ones where soils fully thaw Suburban residents live in traditional yurts that do not protrude into the soil 37 Extreme temperatures in the city range from 43 9 C 47 0 F in January 1957 to 39 0 C 102 2 F in July 1988 38 Climate data for Ulaanbaatar 1991 2020 extremes 1869 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 0 0 32 0 11 3 52 3 18 9 66 0 28 7 83 7 33 5 92 3 38 3 100 9 39 0 102 2 36 7 98 1 31 7 89 1 22 5 72 5 13 0 55 4 6 1 43 0 39 0 102 2 Mean daily maximum C F 15 5 4 1 9 4 15 1 0 2 31 6 10 4 50 7 17 8 64 0 23 1 73 6 25 2 77 4 23 0 73 4 17 2 63 0 7 7 45 9 4 8 23 4 13 7 7 3 6 7 44 1 Daily mean C F 21 3 6 3 16 3 2 7 6 7 19 9 3 0 37 4 10 2 50 4 16 5 61 7 19 0 66 2 16 6 61 9 10 0 50 0 0 9 33 6 10 6 12 9 19 0 2 2 0 2 32 4 Mean daily minimum C F 25 6 14 1 21 7 7 1 12 6 9 3 3 3 26 1 3 5 38 3 10 3 50 5 13 5 56 3 11 1 52 0 4 1 39 4 4 5 23 9 15 1 4 8 22 9 9 2 5 3 22 5 Record low C F 43 9 47 0 42 2 44 0 37 2 35 0 26 1 15 0 16 1 3 0 3 9 25 0 0 2 31 6 2 8 27 0 13 4 7 9 20 0 4 0 35 0 31 0 42 2 44 0 43 9 47 0 Average precipitation mm inches 2 0 1 3 0 1 5 0 2 8 0 3 22 0 9 47 1 9 75 3 0 65 2 6 28 1 1 9 0 4 6 0 2 4 0 2 274 11 Average rainy days 0 0 0 3 3 8 14 17 15 9 2 0 1 0 68Average snowy days 10 7 7 6 4 0 1 0 0 2 6 9 11 62Average relative humidity 74 7 69 5 57 6 44 2 42 7 50 1 58 2 60 8 56 1 56 9 68 3 75 1 62Mean monthly sunshine hours 164 2 203 5 257 4 265 3 297 9 282 3 278 3 265 2 249 5 227 6 175 4 137 7 2 804 3Source 1 Pogoda ru net 38 Source 2 NOAA 39 Climate data for Buyant Ukhaa International Airport weather station WMO identifier 44291 between 1991 2020 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage dew point C F 24 7 12 5 20 9 5 6 14 5 5 9 9 6 14 7 3 8 25 2 4 5 40 1 9 4 48 9 7 9 46 2 0 5 32 9 7 6 18 3 15 7 3 7 22 6 8 7 8 1 17 4 Source 1 40 Cityscape edit nbsp New high rise constructions in Yaarmag areaThe city s inner core consists of a central district built in 1940s and 1950s style Soviet architecture surrounded by and mingled with residential concrete towerblocks and large ger districts Starting after the fall of communism many of the towerblocks ground floors were modified and upgraded to small shops and many new buildings have been erected some illegally as some private companies erect buildings without legal licenses permits Since the 2010s a construction boom has been ongoing leading to many high rise apartment and office blocks in the inner core as well as new settlement areas 41 Sukhbaatar Square in the government district is the center of Ulaanbaatar 42 and contains in the middle a statue of revolutionary hero Damdin Sukhbaatar on horseback and in the north side a statue of Chinggis Khan To the north is the Government Palace while Peace Avenue Enkh Taivny Urgon Chuloo the main thoroughfare through town runs along the south side of the square 43 Major landmarks include the Gandantegchinlen Monastery 44 the socialist monument complex at Zaisan Memorial with its views over the city the Bogd Khan s Winter Palace and the Choijin Lama Temple 45 Mongolia s tallest building is the Shangri La Hotel complex at 91 5 m 46 Important shopping districts include the 3rd Microdistrict Boulevard simply called Khoroolol or the District Peace Avenue around the State Department Store simply called Ikh Delguur or Great Store and the Narantuul Black Market area simply called Zakh or the Market Ulaanbaatar presently has multiple cinemas one modern ski resort two large indoor stadiums several large department stores and one large amusement park Food entertainment and recreation venues are steadily increasing in variety International food chains such as KFC Burger King Pizza Hut Round Table Pizza Cinnabon and hotel chains such as Ramada Kempinski and Shangri La have opened branches in the city Parks edit nbsp Gorkhi Terelj National Park is a popular picnic and camping ground all year round A number of national parks and protected areas officially belong to the city Gorkhi Terelj National Park a nature preserve with many tourist facilities is approximately 70 km 43 mi from Ulaanbaatar The 40 metre high 130 foot Genghis Khan Equestrian Statue is 54 km 34 mi east of the city It is also close to Hustai National Park home to reintroduced Takhi wild horses 90 kilometres 56 miles west of the city Bogd Khan Uul which dominates the south is a strictly protected area with a length of 31 kilometres 19 miles and width of 3 kilometres 1 9 miles covering an area of 67 300 hectares 166 302 acres Nature conservation dates back to the twelfth and thirteenth centuries when the Tooril Khan of the Mongolian Ancient Keraite Aimag who prohibited logging and hunting activities claimed the Bogd Khan as a holy mountain 47 The ruins of Manjusri Monastery are located on the southern flank of Bogd Khan Uul and is a popular destination for outings The National Amusement Park is an amusement park located in the downtown section south of Shangri La Hotel 48 It is also a popular place for young people to hang out This small amusement park features rides games and paddle boats Its original Artificial Lake Castle was built in 1969 The National Garden Park Mongolian Үndesnij Cecerlegt Hүreelen romanized Undesnii tsetserlegt khureelen in the southeastern outskirts of the city 49 opened in 2009 and has become a popular summer destination for residents It has a total area of 55 hectares with over 100 000 trees planted The park is geared towards becoming an educational center for healthy responsible living as well as environmental education Demographics edit nbsp Ger districts against a backdrop of high rise new buildings in UlaanbaatarAs Mongolia s primate city Ulaanbaatar has been the focal point for urbanization and migration from rural areas 50 With a population of 400 thousand in 1979 51 52 53 it has experienced rapid growth reaching 1 million inhabitants around 2007 54 Population growth in the 2010s averaged 2 7 a year representing a two fold fall from the previous decade 55 In 2020 the city s population was recorded as 1 466 125 55 Two thirds of the city s inhabitants live in ger districts areas with inadequate infrastructure sanitation and public services 50 64 6 of the population was reported to have been born in Ulaanbaatar The foreign born population was recorded as 17 456 in 2020 55 Religion edit Ulaanbaatar has a long tradition of Buddhism having been initially founded and settled as a monastic center Prominent places of worship in the city include the Gandantegchinlen Monastery and Choijin Lama Temple In modern times it has become a multifaith center having added multiple Christian churches such as the Orthodox Holy Trinity Church as well as the Catholic Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral and Islamic mosques According to the 2020 national census 46 3 of the population over 15 years of age identified as being irreligious while 53 7 identified as being religious a decrease of 7 7 percentage points in religiosity since the 2010 census 55 Of the people identifying as religious responses included Buddhism 89 1 Shamanism 5 4 Christianity 3 3 and Islam 0 9 55 Governance edit nbsp Newly built city government headquarters in Yaarmag area Khan UulUlaanbaatar is treated as an independent first level region separate from the surrounding Tov Aimag It is governed by the Ulaanbaatar City Council with 45 members elected every four years 56 The Prime Minister of Mongolia appoints the Governor of the Capital City and Mayor of Ulaanbaatar with four year terms upon the city council s nomination 57 Municipal symbols edit The official emblem of Ulaanbaatar is the garuḍa a mythical bird in both Buddhist and Hindu scriptures referred to as the Khangar d Mongolian Hangard lit Khan Garuda by Mongols The garuḍa appears on Ulaanbaatar s emblem In its right hand is a key a symbol of prosperity and openness and in its left is a lotus flower a symbol of peace equality and purity In its talons it is holding a snake a symbol of evil of which it is intolerant On the garuḍa s forehead is the soyombo symbol which is featured on the flag of Mongolia The city s flag is sky blue representing the eternal sky and has the garuḍa in the center 58 Economy editSee also Category Companies based in Ulaanbaatar The largest corporations and conglomerates of Mongolia are almost all headquartered in Ulaanbaatar In 2017 Ulaanbaatar had five billionaires and 90 multimillionaires with net worth above 10 million dollars 59 60 Major Mongolian companies include MCS Group Gatsuurt LLC Genco MAK Altai Trading Tavan Bogd Group Mobicom Corporation Bodi Shunkhlai Monnis and Petrovis While not on the level of multinational corporations most of these companies are multi sector conglomerates with far reaching influence in the country Ulaanbaatar Urga has been a key location where the economic history and wealth creation of the nation has played out Unlike the highly mobile dwellings of herders nomadizing between winter and summer pastures Urga was set up to be a semi permanent residence of the high lama Zanabazar citation needed It stood in one location Khoshoo Tsaidam from 1640 to 1654 an unusually long period of 15 years before Zanabazar moved it east to the foot of Mount Saridag in the Khentii Mountains Here he set about building a permanent monastery town with stone buildings Urga stayed at Mount Saridag for a full 35 years and was indeed assumed to be permanent there when Oirats suddenly invaded the region in 1688 and burnt down the city With a major part of his life s work destroyed Zanabazar had to take the mobile portion of Urga and flee to Inner Mongolia citation needed More than half the wealth created in Urga in the period from 1639 to 1688 is thought to have been lost in 1688 Only in 1701 did Urga return to the region and start a second period of expansion but it had to remain mobile until the end of the 70 year long Dzungar Qing Wars in 1757 After settling down in its current location in 1778 Urga saw sustained economic growth but most of the wealth went to the Buddhist clergy nobles as well as the temporary Shanxi merchants based in the eastern and western China towns of Urga There were numerous companies called puus pүүs and temple treasuries called jas zhas which functioned as businesses but none of these survived the Communist period During the Mongolian People s Republic private property was only marginally tolerated while most assets were state owned The oldest companies still operating in Ulaanbaatar date to the early MPR Only the Gandantegchinlen Monastery has been operating non stop for 205 years with a 6 year gap during World War II but whether it can be seen as a business is still debated As the main industrial center of Mongolia Ulaanbaatar produces a variety of consumer goods 61 and is responsible for about two thirds of Mongolia s total gross domestic product GDP 62 The transition to a market economy in 1990 has so far correlated with an increase in GDP leading to a shift towards service industries which now make up 43 of the city s GDP along with rapid urbanization and population growth 63 Mining is the second largest contributor to Ulaanbaatar s GDP at 25 North of the city are several gold mines including the Boroo Gold Mine and foreign investment in the sector has allowed for growth and development However in light of a noticeable drop in GDP during the financial crisis of 2008 as demand for mining exports dropped 63 there has been movement towards diversifying the economy 62 Culture editArts edit nbsp Mongolian National Song and Dance Academic EnsembleUlaanbaatar features a mix of traditional and western style theatres offering world class performances Many of the traditional folklore bands play regularly around the world including in New York London and Tokyo The Ulaanbaatar Opera House situated in the center of the city hosts concerts and musical performances as well as opera and ballet performances some in collaboration with world ballet houses such as the Boston Theatre The Mongolian State Grand National Orchestra was established in 1945 It has the largest orchestra of traditional instruments in the country with a repertoire going beyond national music encompassing dozens of international musical pieces 64 The Tumen Ekh Ensemble comprises artists who perform all types of Mongolian song music and dance They play traditional instruments including the morin khuur horsehead fiddle and perform Mongolian long song epic and eulogy songs a shaman ritual dance an ancient palace dance and a Tsam mask dance 65 The Morin Khuur Ensemble of Mongolia is part of the Mongolian State Philharmonic based at Sukhbaatar Square It is a popular ensemble featuring the national string instrument the morin khuur and performs various domestic and international works Further information Mongolian People s Central Theatre Monasteries edit nbsp 1913 color photo of Gandan MonasteryAmong the notable older monasteries is the Choijin Lama Monastery a Buddhist monastery that was completed in 1908 It escaped the destruction of Mongolian monasteries when it was turned into a museum in 1942 66 Another is the Gandan Monastery which dates to the 19th century Its most famous attraction is a 26 5 meter high golden statue of Migjid Janraisig 67 These monasteries are among the very few in Mongolia to escape the wholesale destruction of Mongolian monasteries under Khorloogiin Choibalsan Museums edit nbsp Throne given to Zanabazar by his disciple the Kangxi Emperor used by later Jebtsundamba Khutuktus in UrgaMain article List of museums in Mongolia Ulaanbaatar has several museums dedicated to Mongolian history and culture The Natural History Museum features many dinosaur fossils and meteorites found in Mongolia 68 69 The National Museum of Mongolia includes exhibits from prehistoric times through the Mongol Empire to the present 70 71 The Zanabazar Museum of Fine Arts has a large collection of Mongolian art including works of the 17th century sculptor artist Zanabazar as well as Mongolia s most famous painting One Day In Mongolia by Baldugiin Marzan Sharav 72 73 The Mongolian Theatre Museum presents the history of the performing arts in Mongolia The city s former Lenin Museum announced plans in January 2013 to convert to a museum showcasing dinosaur and other prehistoric fossils 74 Pre 1778 artifacts that have never left the city since its founding include the Vajradhara statue made by Zanabazar himself in 1683 the city s main deity kept at the Vajradhara temple an ornate throne presented to Zanabazar by the Kangxi Emperor before 1723 a sandalwood hat presented to Zanabazar by the Dalai Lama c 1663 Zanabazar s large fur coat also presented by the Kangxi Emperor and a great number of original statues made by Zanabazar e g the Green Tara The Military Museum of Mongolia features two permanent exhibition halls commemorating the war history of the country from prehistoric times to the modern era In the first hall one can see various tools and weapons from the Paleolithic age to the times of the Manchu empire The second hall showcases the modern history of the Mongolian military from the Bogd Khan period 1911 24 up until Mongolia s recent military involvement in peacekeeping operations The city s museum offers a view of Ulaanbaatar s history through old maps and photos Among the permanent items is a huge painting of the capital as it looked in 1912 showing major landmarks such as Gandan Monastery and the Green Palace Part of the museum is dedicated to special photo exhibits that change frequently The Mongolian Railway History Museum is an open air museum that displays six types of locomotives used during a 65 year period of Mongolian rail history The Puzzle Toys Museum displays a comprehensive collection of complex wooden toys that visitors can assemble The Victims of Political Persecution Memorial Museum dedicated to those fallen under the Communist purge that took the lives of over 32 000 statesmen herders scholars politicians and lamas in the 1930s told about one of the most tragic periods in Mongolia s 20th century history 75 The small building had fallen into serious disrepair and was demolished on 7 October 2019 despite public outcry in favor of renovation 27 nbsp Ruins of the Tsogchin Temple 1749 of Manjusri Monastery nbsp A building of the Dambadarjaalin Monastery 1765 in Sukhbaatar District nbsp Vajradhara Temple 1841 in the center Zuu Temple 1869 on the left connected by a passage built in 1945 1946 nbsp Winter residence of the Bogd Gegeen built in 1903 designed under Tsar Nicholas II nbsp Zanabazar s Fine Arts Museum built in 1905 by Russian merchant Gudvintsal as a trading shop nbsp Ulaanbaatar History Museum built in 1904 by a Buryat Mongol merchant nbsp Choijin Lama Temple complex built in 1904 1908 nbsp West Geser Temple built in 1919 1920 by Guve Ovogt Zakhar nbsp Residence of Prince Chin Wang Khanddorj Minister of Foreign Affairs built in 1913Education edit nbsp Main building of the National University of MongoliaUlaanbaatar is home to most of Mongolia s major universities among them the National University of Mongolia Mongolian University of Science and Technology Mongolian University of Life Sciences Mongolian National University of Medical Sciences Mongolian State University of Education and Mongolian State University of Arts and Culture and the University of Finance and Economics The American School of Ulaanbaatar and the International School of Ulaanbaatar are examples of Western style K 12 education in English for Mongolian nationals and foreign residents Libraries edit nbsp National Library of Mongolia nbsp Ulaanbaatar Public Library in 2023The National Library of Mongolia is located in Ulaanbaatar and includes an extensive historical collection items in non Mongolian languages and a special children s collection 76 The Metropolitan Central Library of Ulaanbaatar sometimes also referred to as the Ulaanbaatar Public Library is a public library with a collection of about 500 000 items It has 232 097 annual users and a total of 497 298 loans per year It does charge users a registration fee of 3800 to 4250 tugrik or about US 3 29 to 3 68 The fees may be the result of operating on a budget under 176 000 per year They also host websites on classical and modern Mongolian literature and food in addition to providing free internet access 76 In 1986 the Ulaanbaatar government created a centralized system for all public libraries in the city known as the Metropolitan Library System of Ulaanbaatar MLSU This system coordinates management acquisitions finances and policy among public libraries in the capital in addition to providing support to school and children s libraries 77 Other than the Metropolitan Central Library the MLSU has four branch libraries They are in the Chingeltei District established in 1946 in the Khan Uul District established in 1948 in the Bayanzurkh District established in 1968 and in the Songino Khairkhan District established in 1991 There is also a Children s Central Library which was established in 1979 78 University libraries edit Library of Mongolian State University of Education 79 Library of the Academy of Management 80 Library of the National University of Mongolia 81 Institutes of the Academy of Sciences 3 department libraries 82 Library of the Institute of Language and Literature 83 Library of the Institute of History 83 Library of the Institute of Finance and Economics 84 Library of the National University of Mongolia 85 Library of the Agriculture UniversityDigital libraries edit The Press Institute in Ulaanbaatar oversees the Digital Archive of Mongolian Newspapers It is a collection of 45 newspaper titles with a particular focus on the years after the fall of communism in Mongolia 86 The project was supported by the British Library s Endangered Archives Programme The Metropolitan Central Library in Ulaanbaatar maintains a digital monthly news archive 87 Special libraries edit An important resource for academics is the American Center for Mongolian Studies ACMS 88 also based in Ulaanbaatar Its goal is to facilitate research between Mongolia and the rest of the world and to foster academic partnerships To help achieve this end it operates a research library with a reading room and computers for Internet access ACMS has 1 500 volumes related to Mongolia in numerous languages that may be borrowed with a deposit It also hosts an online library that includes special reference resources and access to digital databases 89 including a digital book collection 90 91 There is a Speaking Library at School 116 for the visually impaired funded by the Zorig Foundation and the collection is largely based on materials donated by Mongolian National Radio A sizable collection of literature know how topics training materials music plays science broadcasts are now available to the visually impaired at the school 92 The Mongolia Japan Center for Human Resources Development 93 maintains a library in Ulaanbaatar consisting of about 7 800 items The materials in the collection have a strong focus on both aiding Mongolians studying Japanese and books in Japanese about Mongolia It includes a number of periodicals textbooks dictionaries and audio visual materials Access to the collection does require payment of a 500 Tugrug fee though materials are available for loan They also provide audio visual equipment for collection use and internet access for an hourly fee There is an information retrieval reference service for questions that cannot be answered by their collection 94 Archives edit There is a manuscript collection at the Danzan Ravjaa Museum of theological poetic medicinal astrological and theatrical works It consists of literature written and collected by the monk Danzan Ravjaa who is famous for his poetry The British Library s Endangered Archives Programme funded a project to take digital images of unique literature in the collection however it is not clear where the images are stored today 95 Sport edit nbsp National Sports Stadium in 2019The National Sports Stadium is the main sporting venue notable as the host of the yearly Naadam festival Other venues include the multi purpose Buyant Ukhaa Sport Palace Steppe Arena for indoor skating and Bokhiin Orgoo for Mongolian wrestling Sky Resort is a popular destination for skiing and features a golf course Ulaanbaatar has hosted the 2019 FIBA 3x3 Under 18 World Cup 96 and the 2023 East Asian Youth Games Ulaanbaatar City FC is a professional football club based in the city and currently competes in Mongolian National Premier League Infrastructure edit nbsp Bus in UlaanbaatarTransport edit Ulaanbaatar serves as the country s primary road air and rail hub Transport within Ulaanbaatar is conducted through private cars public transport buses trolleybuses and taxis as well as informal taxis and minivans 97 As of 2021 the total number of registered vehicles in the city was 662 644 97 Public transport edit See also Trolleybuses in Ulaanbaatar Buses are the main form of public transport in Ulaanbaatar As of 2021 950 buses from 19 companies served 105 routes and 1169 bus stops Daily ridership is 480 500 thousand 98 The bus fleet consists of 18 articulated buses 1129 high capacity buses 42 trolleybuses 46 medium capacity buses and 46 small capacity buses 98 In 2021 public transport usage totaled 147 million passengers with 61 of the population using public transport 98 In July 2015 a smart card system was rolled out for bus fare payments U Money previously the bus network had conductors from which tickets would be bought using cash As of 2021 fares are 100 200 for children and 300 500 for adults 98 8 companies operate 372 official taxis within the city as of 2021 98 down from 566 official taxis in 2019 99 Usage of unofficial taxis and ride sharing apps UBCab is common Road edit As of 2018 the city had 875 km of paved roads within its urban boundary and its periphery ger districts are disproportionally underserved by paved roads 100 Currently there are 720 000 vehicles registered in the city 101 The city s traffic is concentrated around its main thoroughfares Peace Avenue Enkh Taivny orgon choloo Ikh Toiruu Narnii Zam and Chinggis Avenue Chinggisiin orgon choloo 102 Congestion is a major problem in Ulaanbaatar with average peak hour driving speeds in the city being 8 9 km h in 2021 In the same year city residents spent an average of 2 5 hours a day stuck in traffic 103 Recent studies predict rush hour speeds plummeting to just 5 km hr by 2025 104 Rail edit nbsp Ulaanbaatar railway stationThe Trans Mongolian Railway crosses the city center in a roughly east to west direction with the main railway hub being Ulaanbaatar railway station Air edit Ulaanbaatar is served by Chinggis Khaan International Airport located 52 km 32 mi south of the city in Sergelen Tov which functions as the country s main air hub It replaced the former Buyant Ukhaa International Airport in 2021 105 and features flights to destinations in Europe Asia and domestic aimag centers The airport is accessible from Ulaanbaatar via highway with taxis and shuttles operating along the route There are 6 helipads in the city 97 Future proposals edit Due to worsening congestion and growth a number of proposals have been made to improve the city s transport infrastructure such as the short lived Ulaanbaatar Railbus and the proposed subway system Energy edit nbsp Thermal Power Plant No 3Ulaanbaatar s electricity is mainly supplied through thermal power plants utilizing coal the largest being Thermal Power Plant No 4 Aside from generating electricity they also supply hot water throughout the city and heat buildings during the winter months from September to April Ger districts surrounding the city are not connected to the central heating system therefore having to rely on burning coal and other materials for heat In 2019 the government banned the burning of raw coal within Ulaanbaatar instead distributing coke briquettes claiming fuel efficiency and less smoke pollution 106 Results have been inconclusive since the switch to briquettes 107 though as of 2023 smoke is still a major concern in winter 108 Water edit Ulaanbaatar relies entirely on groundwater recharged directly from the Tuul River Water provisioning is managed by the Water Supply and Sewage Authority a municipal agency 109 Pollution edit nbsp Ger district in Ulaanbaatar with the Temple of Boddhisattva Avalokiteshvara at Gandantegchinlen Monastery in the backgroundAir pollution is a serious problem in Ulaanbaatar especially in winter Concentrations of certain types of particulate matter PM10 and PM2 5 regularly exceed WHO recommended maximum levels by more than a dozen times They also exceed the concentrations measured in northern Chinese industrial cities During the winter months smoke regularly obscures vision and even lead to problems with air traffic at the former airport 110 Sources of the pollution are mainly the simple stoves used for heating and cooking in the city s ger districts but also the local coal fueled power plants The problem is compounded by Ulaanbaatar s location in a valley between relatively high mountains which shield the city from the winter winds and thus obstruct air circulation 111 112 International relations editTwin towns sister cities edit See also List of twin towns and sister cities in Mongolia Ulaanbaatar is twinned with 113 nbsp Moscow Russia 1957 nbsp Hohhot China 1991 nbsp Seoul South Korea 1995 nbsp Irkutsk Russia 1998 nbsp Denver USA 2001 nbsp Havana Cuba 2002 nbsp Ankara Turkey 2003 nbsp Oakland USA 2006 nbsp Elista Russia 2010 nbsp Gaziantep Turkey 2010 nbsp Beijing China 2014 nbsp Novosibirsk Russia 2015 nbsp Ulan Ude Russia 2015 nbsp Incheon South Korea 2017 nbsp Bangkok Thailand 2017 nbsp Astana Kazakhstan 2019 nbsp Chongqing China 2022 114 nbsp Bishkek Kyrgyzstan 2023 115 Proximity to nearby urban centers abroad edit Ulaanbaatar has close air links to cities like Seoul 1 995 kilometres or 1 240 miles from UB Hong Kong 2 900 kilometres or 1 800 miles from UB Tokyo 3 010 kilometres or 1 870 miles from UB and Moscow 4 650 kilometres or 2 890 miles from UB The Zamiin Uud Erenhot and Altanbulag Kyakhta border crossings are the only places where sustained interaction occurs between Mongolia and its neighbors Other ports are much smaller Beijing remains the closest global city to Ulaanbaatar 1 167 kilometres or 725 miles The Ulaanbaatar Beijing corridor is served by busy air rail and road links Appearances in fiction editIn the 1959 novel Alas Babylon by Pat Frank the pen name of Harry Hart Frank the city was a relocation site for the Soviet leadership In the novel it had a medium wave station for communications 116 Notes edit Transcribed as Ulaɣanbaɣatur References edit Hүn am oron suucny 2020 ony ulsyn eelzhit toollogo Nijslelijn negsen dүn 1212 mn Retrieved 2021 04 24 E Oyun Erdene 2023 10 04 Kh Nyambaatar appointed as new Mayor of Ulaanbaatar gogo mn GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT by region aimags and the Capital www 1212 mn Mongolian Statistical Information Service Retrieved 2023 12 06 Sub national HDI Area Database Global Data Lab hdi globaldatalab org Sen Nag Oishimaya 2021 01 21 The Coldest Capital Cities In The World WorldAtlas Retrieved 2022 12 12 Nijslelijn statistikijn gazar Statistik үzүүlelt 01 Hүn amyn too hүjseer ony ehend myangan hүn in Mongolian Statis ub gov mn Archived from the original on 2013 12 02 Retrieved 2014 09 07 Torijn үjlchilgeenij portal in Mongolian Ulaanbaatar mn Archived from the original on 6 August 2012 Retrieved 24 November 2013 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Urga Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 795 Ulaanbaatar hotyn hogzhlijn tүүhen zamnal hetijn tolov UB UHG 1974 Ulaanbaatar Ulaanbaatar 2001 pg 9f a b Brief history of Ulaanbaatar Ulaanbaatar mn Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 24 November 2013 Kohn Michael Lonely Planet Mongolia 4th edition 2005 ISBN 1 74059 359 6 pg 52 John Bell Travels from St Petersburgh in Russia to various parts of Asia Volume 1 1763 London pg 344 Majer Zsuzsa amp Krisztina Teleki Monasteries and Temples of Bogdiin Khuree Ikh Khuree or Urga the Old Capital City of Mongolia in the First Part of the Twentieth Century Archived 27 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine Lindon Wallace Bates The Russian Road to China 1910 a b From Khutagtiin Khuree to Niislel Khuree Archived 2017 10 10 at the Wayback Machine Presentation of the Director of the General Archives Authority D Ulziibaatar archives gov mn accessed 26 March 2018 Othen Christopher Urga February 1921 Archived from the original on 2019 11 21 Retrieved 2020 06 01 Palmer James 2009 The Bloody White Baron Perseus Books ISBN 9780465014484 Bisher Jamie White Terror Cossack Warlords Of The Trans Siberian p 276 Kuzmin S L History of Baron Ungern an Experience of Reconstruction Moscow KMK 2011 pp 165 200 Kuzmin pp 250 300 Protokoly 1 go Velikogo Huraldana Mongolskoj Narodnoj Respubliki Ulan Bator Hoto 1925 in Russian Montsame News Agency Mongolia 2006 ISBN 99929 0 627 8 pp 33 34 Fatal clashes in Mongolia capital BBC News 2 July 2008 Retrieved 26 September 2018 Streets calm in riot hit Mongolia BBC News 3 July 2008 Retrieved 26 September 2018 iKon mn H Altanzagas 2013 09 19 Nisehijn Cagaan haalga yg buulgahaar bolloo ikon mn Retrieved 2023 11 12 a b Menarndt Aubrey 17 October 2019 A crime against culture Mongolian capital Ulan Bator set to demolish Soviet era buildings activists fight to save them and scent corruption South China Morning Post Retrieved 6 January 2022 On October 7 Mongolia s Victims of Political Persecution Memorial Museum was demolished The museum was housed in one of Ulan Bator s oldest buildings a small brown wooden house in the center of the city which stood in contrast to the high rises surrounding it Foto Bajgalijn tүүhijn muzejg nuraalaa Peak News Retrieved 2023 11 12 Ariunaa E 2023 09 12 Survalzhlaga MUIS ijn bajryg nuraazh 7 davhar bolgon shinechilne News MN News MN Medeellijn eh survalzh in Mongolian Retrieved 2023 11 12 A Ceesүren 2023 09 08 Sanhүү edijn zasgijn ih surguulijn barilgyg nuraazhee News MN News MN Medeellijn eh survalzh in Mongolian Retrieved 2023 11 12 Ankhtuyaa B 18 October 2019 A crime against culture Ulaanbaatar set to demolish majestic Soviet era buildings News mn Retrieved 19 April 2021 As the parliament began its autumn legislative agenda the government budget for the year revealed several line items financing the demolition of the city s Natural History Museum Opera and Ballet House Drama Theatre and Central Library Baljmaa T 13 January 2020 Culture Minister Three historical buildings to be renovated with MNT 6 billion Montsame Retrieved 19 April 2021 This has garnered public criticism including the Union of Mongolian Architects who claimed that those buildings hold cultural heritage and architectural values and demanding preservation and restoration of the buildings instead of demolition Baljmaa T 13 January 2020 Culture Minister Three historical buildings to be renovated with MNT 6 billion Montsame Retrieved 19 April 2021 Concerning the prolonged public outcry Minister of Education Culture Science and Sports Yo Baatarbileg today clarified during his meeting with reporters that Buildings of National Academic Drama Theater National Academic Theater of Opera and Ballet of Mongolia and Central Library of Mongolia are planned to go under renovation this year with funding of MNT 2 billion from state budget for each The official position and decision of the Ministry of Culture not to demolish them remain the same as before Montsame News Agency Mongolia 2006 ISBN 99929 0 627 8 pg 35 Hardiness Zones WORLD MAP Plantsdb gr 15 August 1965 Archived from the original on 16 April 2014 Retrieved 25 November 2013 Climatological Normals of Ulan Bator Hong Kong Observatory Archived from the original on 23 October 2019 Retrieved 14 April 2010 Matt Rosenberg Coldest Capital Cities About com Education Archived from the original on 2011 12 28 Retrieved 2006 11 11 a b KLIMAT ULAN BATORA in Russian Pogoda ru net Retrieved 4 January 2015 World Meteorological Organization Climate Normals for 1991 2020 World Meteorological Organization Archived from the original on 17 July 2021 Retrieved 2 August 2023 Climate amp Weather Averages at Ulan Bator weather station NOAA Retrieved 10 August 2023 Mongolia s building boom traps capital residents in concrete jungle France 24 2023 05 10 Retrieved 2023 11 12 Montsame News Agency Mongolia 2006 ISBN 99929 0 627 8 pg 34 Kohn pg 52 Documentation of Mongolian Monasteries http mongoliantemples org index php en Archived 2015 12 17 at the Wayback Machine Mongolia Museum Highlights San Francisco 2005 pg 89 Shangri La Ulaanbaatar Hotel The Skyscraper Center www skyscrapercenter com Retrieved 2023 11 12 Biosphere Reserve Information BOGD KHAN UUL Archived from the original on 2016 02 18 Retrieved 2015 12 11 Ulaanbaatar Google Maps Retrieved 2022 09 14 Ulaanbaatar Google Maps Retrieved 2022 09 13 a b Mongolia Urban Sector Fact Sheet PDF Asian Development Bank Dec 2022 Retrieved 12 Nov 2023 City Population Historical population figures Statistisches Bundesamt Statistik des Auslands Mongolei 1985 Encyclopedia Cartactual published 01 01 85 BBESoft Statistik үzүүlelt Nijslelijn Statistikijn Gazar Retrieved 2023 11 12 a b c d e Hүn am oron suucny 2020 ony ulsyn eelzhit toollogo Ulaanbaatar negdsen dүn 1212 mn Retrieved 29 May 2022 Tүүhen tovchoo khural ulaanbaatar mn Retrieved 2023 11 12 O Erdenechimeg Ulaanbaatar hotyn 35 dah darga onoodor tomilogdono eagle mn Retrieved 2023 11 12 Hotyn tuhaj ulaanbaatar mn in Mongolian Retrieved 2023 11 12 Foreigners have determined the 10 richest people in Mongolia Caak mn Retrieved 16 September 2017 The list of 100 richest Mongolians is causing a stir on a Russian website Ugluu mn 3 October 2016 Retrieved 3 October 2016 Ulaanbaatar encyclopedia com The Columbia Encyclopedia 6th Edition Retrieved 13 November 2016 a b Economic Development in Mongolia The Asia Foundation Available here permanent dead link accessed 13 November 2016 a b Fan Peilei Chen Jiquan John Ranjeet 2016 01 01 Urbanization and environmental change during the economic transition on the Mongolian Plateau Hohhot and Ulaanbaatar Environmental Research The Provision of Ecosystem Services in Response to Global Change 144 Part B Pt B 96 112 Bibcode 2016ER 144 96F doi 10 1016 j envres 2015 09 020 PMID 26456409 Official Website Archived from the original on 22 December 2015 Official Website Choijing lama temple museum Museums of Mongolia Archived from the original on 31 May 2009 Kohn pp 63 4 Museum of natural history Archived 27 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Kohn p 60 Kohn pp 61 66 National Museum Nationalmuseum mn 21 March 2012 Retrieved 18 April 2012 Kohn pg 61 Zanazabar Museum of Fine Arts Zanabazarmuseum org Archived from the original on 2011 09 24 Retrieved 2012 04 18 Branigan Tania It s goodbye Lenin hello dinosaur as fossils head to Mongolia museum The Guardian Retrieved 27 January 2013 Victims of Political Persecution Memorial Museum Archived 2022 09 14 at the Wayback Machine Attractions Ulaanbaatar Mongolia Asia Lonely Planet Retrieved 13 September 2022 a b Metropolitan Central Library of Ulaanbaatar Nla gov au 1 March 2004 Retrieved 18 April 2012 The 800th Anniversary of Great Mongolian State History Archived 29 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine The 800th Anniversary of Great Mongolian State Branches Archived 23 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine Library of Mongolian State University of Education Archived from the original on 2012 10 05 Retrieved 2021 03 21 lib mn www aom lib mn Archived from the original on 2004 10 14 Retrieved 2018 12 14 Mongol Ulsyn Ih Surguul www num edu mn Institutes of the Academy of Sciences 3 department libraries Archived 2010 11 29 at the Wayback Machine a b Shinzhleh uhaany akademi Archived from the original on 2011 08 24 Retrieved 2011 08 22 Library of the Institute of Finance and Economics Archived from the original on 2011 08 29 Retrieved 2011 08 22 Nomyn san library num edu mn Archived from the original on 2011 08 26 Retrieved 2011 08 22 Digital Librarian Lends Expertise to Mongolian Project Uwm edu Archived from the original on 6 August 2012 Retrieved 18 April 2012 Zhil bvr zohiogdozh bajgaa Mongolyn shildeg veb shalgaruulah uraldaany tuhaj Archived 16 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine American Center of Mongolian Studies ACMS mongoliacenter org Library American Center of Mongolian Studies 25 May 2020 ACMS Digital Books Collection Archived from the original on 4 March 2010 Retrieved 22 August 2011 American Center for Mongolian Studies Library Homepage American Center for Mongolian Studies Ulaanbaatar Mongoliacenter org 7 May 2008 Retrieved 18 April 2012 Speaking Library at School No 116 Ubpost mongolnews mn 8 November 2007 Archived from the original on 20 March 2012 Retrieved 18 April 2012 Mongolia Japan Center for Human Resources Development Archived 2010 03 18 at the Wayback Machine Library Archived 22 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine The treasures of Danzan Ravjaa Archived 5 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine FIBA 3x3 U18 World Cup seventh edition all set to tip off in Mongolia on June 3 Sportskeeda 3 June 2019 Retrieved 5 December 2020 a b c UNESCAP 2022 Planning safe sustainable resilient and inclusive public transport in Ulaanbaatar PDF UNESCAP Retrieved 16 Sep 2023 a b c d e ULAANBAATAR HOTYN NIJTIJN TEEVRIJN SISTEM PDF UNESCAP 9 Sep 2022 Archived from the original PDF on 3 Feb 2023 Retrieved 16 Sep 2023 Eldev Ochir Erdenechimeg 2019 URBAN MOBILITY AND APPLICATION OF SUSTAINABLE URBAN TRANSPORT INDEX ULAANBAATAR PDF UNESCAP Archived from the original PDF on 16 Sep 2023 Retrieved 16 Sep 2023 Eldev Ochir Erdenechimeg 2019 URBAN MOBILITY AND APPLICATION OF SUSTAINABLE URBAN TRANSPORT INDEX ULAANBAATAR PDF UNESCAP Archived from the original PDF on 16 Sep 2023 Retrieved 16 Sep 2023 Bernama Xinhua 18 December 2023 Mongolia s capital imposes odd even car ban to reduce traffic jam News Straits Times Retrieved 19 December 2023 ULAANBAATAR HOTYN NIJTIJN TEEVRIJN SISTEM PDF UNESCAP 9 Sep 2022 Archived from the original PDF on 3 Feb 2023 Retrieved 16 Sep 2023 Mongolia to intensify efforts to reduce traffic congestion in capital Xinhua English news cn www xinhuanet com Retrieved 2023 09 16 Adiya Amar 2023 11 17 How Ulaanbaatar s Traffic Gridlock is Affecting Daily Life and What Can Be Done About It Mongolia Weekly Retrieved 2023 11 20 New Chinggis Khaan International Airport opens montsame 2021 07 04 Kwong Emily 30 July 2019 Mongolia s Capital Banned Coal To Fix Its Pollution Problem Will It Work NPR Nergүj G 2023 01 03 Sajzhruulsan tүlsh agaaryn bohirdlyg nemsen nemeegүj News MN News MN Medeellijn eh survalzh in Mongolian Retrieved 2023 11 12 bawadi mohammed 2022 01 11 Despite use of briquettes toxic air overwhelms Ulaanbaatar A24 News Agency Retrieved 2023 11 12 Water Security Woes in Mongolia s Capital thediplomat com Retrieved 2023 11 12 Air Pollution Puts Lives At Risk Mongolia BORGEN 2016 04 26 Retrieved 2021 06 02 Hasenkopf Christa Clearing the Air World Policy Journal Spring 2012 Archived from the original on 6 May 2012 Retrieved 31 May 2012 The World Bank December 2009 Mongolia Air Pollution in Ulaanbaatar Initial Assessment of Current Situation and Effects of Abatement Measures PDF Sustainable Development Series Discussion Paper Washington D C The World Bank Retrieved 12 May 2011 List of twinned cities and friendly relationship cities khural ulaanbaatar mn Retrieved 2024 04 06 Sister city relations established between Ulaanbaatar and Chongqing montsame mn Retrieved 2024 04 06 Ulaanbaatar Bishkek established sister city relations gogo mn Retrieved 2024 04 06 Frank Pat 1959 Alas Babylon New York Perennial 2005 Lippincott 1959 ISBN 978 0 06 074187 7 Further reading editLattimore Owen Communism Mongolian Brand The Atlantic September 1962 A unique detailed historical snapshot of life in Mongolia at the height of the Cold War Retrieved 11 August 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ulaanbaatar nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Ulaanbaatar Ulaanbaatar City Hall Archived 2012 08 06 at the Wayback Machine Mongolia Ulaanbaatar Travel Guide General information about Ulaanbaatar up to date Urga or Da Khuree from A M Pozdneyev s Mongolia and the Mongols Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ulaanbaatar amp oldid 1217894721, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.