Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ünenbayan (Jerim League representative in Beijing, Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission member) Enkhbat (恩克巴图; Kuomintang Central Oversight Committee member) Serengdongrub (Kuomintang Central Executive Committee member, Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Committee member)
Tibetan was the language of instruction, the canonical, and liturgical language, and it was used at the lower levels of education. Higher-level education was available in the major monasteries, and often many years were required to complete formal degrees, which included training in logic and debate.
The constitution guarantees free education, so private schools can use any language, but state(-recognised) schools teach in the language of the language area where it is located. For Brussels , which is an officially bilingual French–Dutch area, schools use either Dutch or French as medium.
1934 establishments in Mongolia (2 P) This page was last edited on 25 September 2019, at 13:12 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
Mengjiang, also known as Mengkiang, officially the Mengjiang United Autonomous Government, was an autonomous zone in Inner Mongolia, formed in 1939 as a puppet state of the Empire of Japan, then from 1940 being under the nominal sovereignty of the Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China (which was itself also a puppet state).
Christopher Pratt Atwood is an American scholar of Mongolian and Chinese history.Currently the Chair of the University of Pennsylvania's East Asian Languages and Civilizations Department, he has authored six books and published more than 100 articles on a wide variety of topics.
The Mongolian army took control of Khalkha and the Khovd region (modern Uvs Province, Khovd Province, and Bayan-Ölgii Province) but Northern Xinjiang (the Altai and Ili regions of the Qing Empire), Upper Mongolia, Barga, and Inner Mongolia came under control of the Republic of China. On 2 February 1913 the Bogd sent Mongolian cavalrymen to ...
Isaac Jacob Schmidt is generally regarded as the "founder" of Mongolian studies as an academic discipline. [2] Schmidt, a native of Amsterdam who emigrated to Russia on account of the French invasion, began his exposure to the Mongolic languages as a missionary of the Moravian Church among the Kalmyks, and translated the Gospel of Matthew into the Kalmyk language.