Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Mongols' logo, along with additional patches, is worn on members' "colors". [4] Other patches worn include those which indicate a member's rank within the club, the location of the chapter to which he belongs, club slogans, and "1%" emblems. [19] Mongols patches utilize a black-and-white color scheme. [30]
Colors identify the rank of members within clubs from new members, to "prospects" to full members known as "patch-holders", and usually consist of a top and bottom circumferential badge called a rocker, due to the curved shape, [7] with the top rocker stating the club name, the bottom rocker stating the location or territory, and a central logo of the club's insignia, with a fourth, smaller ...
The purpose of the switch from city patches to a state patch was to prevent law enforcement from being able to identify which city Mongols members resided in. [48] As the dominant club in the state, the Hells Angels claimed exclusive rights to the California "rocker" and took offense to the Mongols' wearing of the patch. [49]
From left to right: in Soyombo, Classical Mongolian and ʼPhags-pa. The Imperial Seal of the Mongols is a seal that was used by the Mongols. The imperial seals, bearing inscriptions in Mongolian script or other scripts, were used in the Mongol Empire, the Yuan dynasty, and the Northern Yuan dynasty, among others.
Mongolian Year 15 1937 1-5 möngö: aluminium bronze 10-20 möngö: cupronickel: 1960 1970 Mongolian Year 27 1945 coat of arms, "Бүгд Найрамдах Монгол Ард Улс" (People's Republic of Mongolia) 1970 1970 Cyrillic: Mongolian Year 35 1959 Aluminium: 1990 1990 P.R. China: Common Era, 1970, 77, 80, 81 1-5 möngö: aluminium
Sun ( ) and crescent moon symbolizes the existence of the Mongolian nation for eternity as the eternal blue sky. Mongolian symbol of the sun, crescent moon and fire derived from the Xiongnu. [citation needed] The two triangles ( ) allude to the point of an arrow or spear. They point downward to announce the defeat of interior and exterior enemies.
By the early 17th century the term Uriankhai was a general Mongolian term for all the dispersed bands to the northwest, whether Samoyedic, Turkic, or Mongol in origin. [2] In 1757 the Qing dynasty organized its far northern frontier into a series of Uriankhai banners: the Khövsgöl Nuur Uriankhai, Tannu Uriankhai ; Kemchik , Salchak , and ...
The Soyombo script was the first Mongolian script to be written horizontally from left to right, in contrast to earlier scripts that had been written vertically. As in the Tibetan and Devanagari scripts, the signs are suspended below a horizontal line, giving each line of text a visible "backbone".