Mongolia: a Profile, Volume 1Introduction -- The natural element -- Genghis Khan -- From Genghis Khan to Tamerlane -- From Tamerlane to red Mongolia -- Painful growth -- The government -- The economy -- Industries -- Agriculture -- Transportation and communications -- The people -- The arts and recreation -- Vanishing customs -- Foreign relations -- Mongolia--today and tomorrow. |
Contents
Introduction | 3 |
The Natural Environment | 10 |
Genghis Khan | 21 |
Copyright | |
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agreement agricultural cooperatives animal husbandry army assistance aymags Baron Ungern Batu became border camels capital cattle cent Central Asia century China Chinese Choibalsan cities coal collectivization Communist conquest construction country's Darkhan death Dynasty east eastern Mongolia economic empire factory farms feet five-year plan forces Genghis Khan Gobi Desert Gobi region Golden Horde golian grain grazing lands horses important increased independence industrial production Kentei Khangai Khubsugul Khural Kobdo Kublai Kublai Khan kurultai Kyakhta lakes Lamaist lamas leaders livestock living miles military milk million Ming Dynasty modern monasteries Mongol Empire Mongolian People's Republic Moscow mountain Nadom Nalaikha nation nomadic northern Ogadai party political population power plant princes railroad revolution revolutionary River ruled rulers Russian Sayn Shanda schools Selenga sheep Siberia Soviet Union steppes Sukhe Bator Tamerlane thousand tion tons trade transportation Tsedenbal Ulan Bator Ulyassutai Urga western yurt