MONGOLIA, Country, Asia

mŏn-gōˈlēə, mŏng–, officially State of Mongolia, republic (1995 est. pop. 2,494,000), 604,247 sq mi (1,565,000 sq km), N central Asia; traditionally known as Outer Mongolia. Bordered on the west, south, and east by China, and on the north by Russia, it comprises more than half the historical region of Mongolia; the other part forms China's Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region. The capital and largest city is Ulaanbaatar (formerly Urga). The country is divided into 18 provinces and three municipalities.

Land and People

A high country, its average elevation exceeds 5,100 ft (1,554 m); the central, northern, western, and southwestern areas are covered with hills, high plateaus, and mountain ranges, reaching 15,266 ft (4,653 m) at Tavan Bogd Uul (Tabun Bogdo) in the Altai Mts. Much of the Gobi desert lies to the south and east; at no point is the elevation less than c.1,800 ft (550 m). Numerous beautiful lakes fill the depressions between the mountains; the largest, Uvs Nuur, or Ubsu Nur (c.1,300 sq mi/3,370 sq km) is saltwater. The main rivers are in the north and include the Selenga (Selenge Mörön), with its long tributary the Orkhon (Orhon), which flows into Lake Baykal in Russia; and the Kerulen. Navigability is limited—the rivers are swift and rough; they freeze in the winter, and many dry up during droughts.

The country's climate is dry continental, with little rain or snow and great extremes in temperature. Winters are severe, with low temperatures and high winds that blow away the light snow cover, causing the ground to freeze to unusual depths; summers can be very hot.

The population is predominantly Khalkha Mongol. Minorities include Oirat Mongols, Kazakhs, Chinese, and Russians. Khalkha Mongolian, the official language, was until the 1940s written in the old Uigur Turkic script; it now uses the Cyrillic alphabet. Turkic, Russian, and Chinese are also spoken by some. The dominant religion has long been Lamaist Buddhism, but it was harshly repressed under the Communist regime. It was not until the waning of Communist power in the early 1990s that religious freedom reemerged. There is also a small Muslim minority. The country's major institute of higher learning is the Mongolian State Univ., at Ulaanbaatar.

Economy

The paucity of snow in Mongolia permits year-round grazing, and nomadic herding has been the major occupation for centuries. Although the number of such herders is gradually declining, animal husbandry is still the mainstay of the Mongolian economy, and Mongolia has the world's highest number of livestock per person. Sheep and goats constitute most of the livestock, followed by cattle and horses; yaks are raised in the higher altitudes, and camels are extremely important in the desert and semidesert areas. Agriculture is limited since only 1% of the land is arable. Wheat is the chief crop, followed by oats, barley, corn, millet, rye, legumes, and potatoes.

Hunting is a source of revenue; the country abounds in wildlife, and sable, fox, lynx, marmot, snow leopard, squirrel, and wolf are all trapped for their furs. Mongolia has valuable timberlands, especially in the northern mountainous area; logs are shipped down the Selenga, Orkhon, and Kerulen rivers. Mineral resources are abundant. The extensive coal deposits have been exploited since 1913. Copper, molybdenum, fluorspar, gold, iron ore, tungsten, tin, uranium, zinc, lead, silver, and salt are also mined.

Industry, which was developed with Soviet aid, is centered chiefly in Ulaanbaatar. It is based largely on the country's livestock resources, with dairy products, packed meats, leather and leather goods, and woolen textiles and related items (clothing, blankets, carpets) the chief manufactures. The building-material, copper-smelting, and lumber industries are also important. Choybalsan and Darhan near the Russian border have become industrial centers.

The country has one railroad line running north and south from the Russian border through Ulaanbaatar to the Chinese frontier, with a few spur lines to mining or industrial points. Although the number of motor vehicles is increasing, there are few paved roads and beasts of burden are still used, notably in the south, where camel caravans are common. There are also 34 airports.

In the early 1990s, Mongolia went through a transition from a planned Communist economy to a free market system and struggled with economic decline and inflation. Mongolia's main exports are copper, livestock, cashmere, wool, hides, fluorspar, and nonferrous metals; most of its foreign trade is with Russia, China, and Kazakhstan.

Government

Mongolia is governed under the constitution of 1992. The president is the head of state, and the prime minister is head of government. There is a unicameral parliament (State Great Hural). Following legislative elections, the leader of the majority party or majority coaliton is usually elected prime minister by the parliament. The president is elected by popular vote for a four-year term.

Modern History

For the early history of Mongolia, see Mongols. The area was under Chinese control from 1691 until the collapse of the Manchu dynasty in China in 1911, when a group of Mongol princes ousted the Manchu governor and proclaimed an autonomous Mongolia with Jebtsun Damba Khutukhtu (the Living Buddha of Urga) as ruler. The new state was reoccupied by the Chinese in 1919. The Chinese were driven out by White Russian forces under Baron von Ungern-Sternberg in early 1921, and the Whites in turn were ousted by Red Army troops and Mongolian units under the Mongolian Communist leaders Sukhe-Bator and Khorloin Choibalsan.

Mongolia was proclaimed an independent state in July, 1921, and remained a monarchy until the Living Buddha died in 1924. The establishment (Nov., 1924) of the Communist-led Mongolian People's Republic was followed by a struggle to divest the old privileged classes of their capital (largely in the form of land and livestock) and persecution of the Lama priests; this in turn led to the Lama Rebellion of 1932, when priests led thousands of people, with some 7 million head of livestock, across the border to Inner Mongolia.

In 1936 the USSR signed a mutual aid pact with the republic, thus formalizing the existing close relations between the two countries. A constitution adopted in 1940 consolidated the power of the Communist regime. During World War II the Mongolian army joined the USSR in Manchuria in the last, brief stage of the war against Japan. In 1945 a plebiscite was held under a Sino-Soviet agreement, and the republic overwhelmingly voted for continued independence. Khorloin Choibalsan, the prime minister from 1938 until his death in 1952, was succeeded by Yumzhaggiin Tsedenbal. A new constitution came into force in 1960, and Mongolia was admitted to the United Nations in 1961.

In the ideological dispute between the Soviet Union and China, Mongolia traditionally supported the Soviet Union. Mongolia's position shifted during the 1980s, however, and it established diplomatic relations with China in 1986 and with the United States a year later. After a series of demonstrations in the late 1980s calling for freedom and human rights, the Communist party voted to relinquish its constitutional power, which led to the election by the parliament of Punsalmaagiin Ochirbat as president in 1990. In the same year a multiparty political system was also instituted, and in 1991 the country was renamed the State of Mongolia.

In 1992, Mongolia opened its first stock exchange and adopted a new democratic constitution; the Mongolian People's Revolutionary party (MPRP—the former Communists) overwhelmingly retained control of parliament in elections that year. However, Ochirbat, running as a non-Communist, won Mongolia's first free presidential election in 1993. In the first half of 1996, Mongolia was beset by wildfires that raged for more than three months and scorched 41,000 sq mi (106,000 sq km) of forest and rangeland. In the 1996 parliamentary elections, the opposition Democratic Union Coalition won a stunning upset, gaining nearly two thirds of the seats. Following a downturn in the economy, Natsagiyn Bagabandi, the candidate of the MPRP, won a decisive victory against Ochirbat in the 1997 presidential elections. Parliamentary elections in July, 2000, resulted in a nearly total win for the MPRP, which won 95% of the seats; Natsagiyn Enkhbayar became prime minister. Bagabandi was reelected in May, 2001.

Bibliography

See O. Lattimore, Nomads and Commissars: Mongolia Revisited (1962); R. A. Rupen, The Mongolian People's Republic (1966); A. M. Pozdneev, Mongolia and the Mongols (Vol. I tr. 1971); S. Akiner, ed., Mongolia Today (1989); C. R. Bawden, The Modern History of Mongolia (1989).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...science. health care, and culture in Mongolia. Alter the Communist republic was...different religions. some new to Mongolia, came to the country, There are now 328 registered places of worship in Mongolia, including 191 Buddhist temples...
...route was across the steppe--a fine flat country, and it was soon quite evident our Kirghis...startled me at first. We were on a fine level country, crossing a steppe extending far into Asia, without either fence or tree. The horses...
...of poverty in a country such as Mongolia...justice. The countries of the world will...the future. I. Mongolia: Transition to...Oriented Economy Mongolia is a landlocked country, located in the center of Asia, sandwiched between...
...who live in different countries. Below I present a brief historical overview of Mongolia to contextualize my...Historical Overview Mongolia, located in the heart of Inner Asia, is landlocked between...500 sq. km, in 1990 Mongolia had a population of...Mongolia is the only country where Mongols constitute...
...the political life of a country like Mongolia is not only real politics...Western men, it is not only Mongolia but the whole of Asia that cannot be understood...preeminent religious figure of Mongolia in the age of the Manchu empire...
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journal articles on: Mongolia Country Asia  - 441 results

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...Many parts of the country experience periodic...hooves). Much of Mongolia receives relatively...landscapes of Central Asia and the heterogeneous...collapsed in 1911, Mongolia gained autonomy...structures of the country remained much...Herding in Inner Asia. In Culture and...Modern History of Mongolia. New York: Frederick...
...Programme (UNDP) and Asia-Pacific Development...Distance Education in Mongolia, http://www...Distance Learning in Asia, http://www...localization, of the partner countries involved in the project (i.e. Mongolia, Sri Lanka, Indonesia...
...compared pasture degradation in Mongolia and Inner Mongolia (and other regions in Inner Asia) and found that even the regions of Mongolia with the highest density of livestock...debates currently under way in the country of Mongolia. For readers whose...
...industrialization since 1960, Mongolia was still a developing...nomadic pastoralism. The country is vast (half the size...characteristics which Mongolia shares with many developing countries include a high rate...external dependence. Mongolia has a pro-natalist...one of the highest in Asia. Half the population...
...Arriving at the encampment, country mourners are purified by passing...the Mergen Monastery in Inner Mongolia. (5.) In the New Guinea literature...property regimes for land-use in Mongolia. Inner Asia 3:1, 41-60. Strathern...
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...the largest landlocked country in the world -- covering...Much of the rest of Mongolia is grassland. CLIMATE...sunny days a year. As Mongolia is so far inland, its...In the 18th century, Mongolia fell under Chinese control...Mongolia LOCATION: Northern Asia, between China and Russia...
...remote areas of foreign countries. By asking a Mongolian...logical and reasonable in Mongolia, but highly unlikely in a Western country. The lesson? Check...physical realities of Mongolia. The return from the...Sanders, A. 1995. Mongolia. The Asia Pacific Review 1996...
...promises. The situation of Mongolia is that of an untold...The nomadic tribes of Mongolia had their triumphs in...ruled extensive areas of Asia and Europe. Attila...the 16th century, the country became a vassal state...next five hundred years Mongolia remained a primitive...conquered and ruled countries as far as Western Europe...
Mongolia: out in the Cold by...twentieth century, Mongolia was traditionally a...counterparts elsewhere in Asia, Mongolian women traditionally...daily basis. In 1924, Mongolia became a socialist country. The initial attempt...different from that of other countries, where since birth...
...Systems: Their Use in Mongolia. by M. Ganzorig The...Sensing is providing Mongolia with information essential...tribes in the heart of Asia, the Republic of Mongolia contains countless historic...current boundaries of the country extend for 2405 km...
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...predicted that the landlocked country will try "to diversify...watcher of developments in Mongolia, also praised this weeks...first election in which Mongolia fielded an effective...reformer, promised to steer Mongolia on a free-market course...Kirsten Edmondson, an Asia program officer for the...
...train troops from that country and other Asia-Pacific nations in...training in Ulan Bator, Mongolia. The first team of...peacekeepers will be from the Asia-Pacific region, said...medics will travel to Mongolia. They will help train...between the participating countries militaries, while preparing...
...pluralism in his country, a vast plateau...human population. Mongolia in May was named...aid to developing countries that have adopted...maps still show his country as part of China...country that show Mongolia at the height of...stretching through Asia and into Europe...China," he said. Mongolia also is interested...
...Khan Heirs Find Peace; Mongolia Aids U.N. Missions...WASHINGTON TIMES ULAN BATOR, Mongolia -- Eight centuries...hordes swept across Asia subduing all in their...wanted to visit other countries, he explained. Politicians...makes good sense for a country of just 2.6 million...is a good thing for Mongolia, said Oyun Sanjaasuren...
...the capital. He said Mongolia, sandwiched between...interest, and that means Mongolia can be a very neutral...those parties, he said. Mongolia is very happy to share...others in our region. The country, considered one of the...democratic in Central Asia, can help others make...
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encyclopedia articles on: Mongolia Country Asia  - 7 results

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MONGOLIA , country, Asia mon-go le , mong , republic (2005 est. pop. 2,791...604,247 sq mi (1,565,000 sq km), N central Asia; historically known as Outer Mongolia. Bordered on the west, south, and east by China and...
MONGOLIA , region, Asia , Asian region (c.906,000 sq mi/2,346...Wall of China on the south. It now comprises the country of Mongolia (traditionally known as Outer Mongolia) and the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region of China...
...and explorer in central and E Asia. He made five major expeditions...East (1867 68) and four to Mongolia, Xinjiang, and Tibet (1870...of these regions. He wrote Mongolia, and the Tangut Country (tr. 1876) and From Kulja...
...561,000 sq km), E Asia. The most populous...north by Russia and Mongolia, on the west by Tajikistan...Heilongjiang, Inner Mongolia, and Qinghai, which...is still a developing country with a relatively low...irrigated areas in Inner Mongolia and Gansu, and sheltered...mineral-producing countries. Coal is the most abundant...
...in Sri Lanka and SE Asia, and the Mahayana in China, Mongolia, Korea, and Japan...disappeared from its country of origin, India...Buddhism came to SE Asia in the first five centuries...routes from central Asia, initiating a four...
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