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  2. Secret History of the Mongols - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secret_History_of_the_Mongols

    The common name of the work as it is referred to today is The Secret History of the Mongols, corresponding to the edited work compiled in the late 1300s with the Chinese title Secret History of the Yuan (元秘史; Yuán mìshǐ) and the Mongolian title Mongɣol-un niɣuča tobčiyan, re-transcribed from Chinese (忙豁侖紐察脫卜察安 ...

  3. Mongolian studies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongolian_studies

    The development of Mongolian studies in China in the early years after the establishment of the People's Republic of China drew heavily on Russian works. [9] One of the first tertiary-level centres for Mongolian studies in China, the Institute of Mongolia at Inner Mongolia University, was founded in 1964. [10]

  4. Mongolic languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongolic_languages

    Within Mongolian proper, they then draw a distinction between Khalkha on the one hand and the Mongolian language in Inner Mongolia (containing everything else) on the other hand. A less common subdivision of Central Mongolic is to divide it into a Central dialect (Khalkha, Chakhar, Ordos), an Eastern dialect (Kharchin, Khorchin), a Western ...

  5. Five thousand years of Chinese civilization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_thousand_years_of...

    The "China" section of the Manchu–MongolianChinese Interlinear Trilingual Textbook published in the late Qing dynasty. According to research, the first people to put forward the idea of a 5,000-year history of Chinese civilization were Jesuit missionaries in the early Qing dynasty.

  6. Proto-Mongols - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Mongols

    From 629 to 648, a reunited China proper under the Tang dynasty (618-907) destroyed the power of the Eastern Göktürk north of the Gobi; established suzerainty over the Khitans, a semi-nomadic proto-Mongol people who lived in areas that became the modern Chinese provinces of Heilongjiang and Jilin; and formed an alliance with the Uyghurs, who ...

  7. Society of the Mongol Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Society_of_the_Mongol_Empire

    The Chinese had mastered the technology of printmaking and therefore it was relatively simple for them to print bills. Paper currency was used in China since 960 A.D., when the Song dynasty started replacing their copper coinage with paper currency. When the Mongols invaded Song China they started issuing their own Mongolian bills in 1227. This ...

  8. History of Mongolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Mongolia

    Bogd Khan failed in his efforts to get aid from Japan and the United States for regaining the independence of Mongolia from China. Later the Chinese forces were defeated by Baron Ungern, but at the same time the Mongolian People's Party (MPP) had been established. The Soviet government saw this party as instrumental for driving Ungern's troops ...

  9. Middle Mongol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_Mongol

    The term "Middle Mongol" or "Middle Mongolian" is somewhat misleading, since it is the earliest directly-attested (as opposed to reconstructed) ancestor of Modern Mongolian, and would therefore be termed "Old Mongolian" under the usual conventions for naming historical forms of languages (compare the distinction between Old Chinese and Middle ...