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Monday, 11 December 2006 |
Complete Grammar (and Study Book) of the Mongolian language, featuring
Cyrillic script, Classical script (as used in Inner Mongolia) and
English explanations. 448 pages, good quality paperback. Ideal for
learners and researchers of Mongolian.
Awarded as "Best Academic Book of the Year 1997" by the Ministry of Education of Mongolia.
Buy Mongolian Grammar Study Book Online
ISBN 9992904453
Ulaanbaatar 2005
Paperback, 448 pages
It contains 5 parts:
1. Introduction with general information about the Mongolian language, the alphabets and the word structure.
2. Lexicology with word building, special parts like idioms and indigenous Mongolian vocabulary
3. Morphology, covering all the different parts of speech.
4. Syntax, covering sentence structure, parts of a sentence and punctuation.
5. Appendix with many helpful tables, lists and word index.

This book provides the learner with:
* very detailed table of contents, both in Mongolian and English language
* many example sentences of everyday life
* explanations of necessary linguistic terms
* literal translation for analytical understanding
* helpful comparison and overview tables
* insights in Mongolian cultural heritage
* hints for using colloquial language
* necessary rules
This is the third completely revised version. Only 500 copies available.
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Saturday, 06 May 2006 |
A new guide book was launched tracking the special places in the life of the world famous spiritual and worldy leader of Mongolia, who became especially famous for his impressive works of art.
 Guide to Locales Connected With The Life of Zanabazar : First Bogd Gegeen Of Mongolia
Zanabazar (1635-1723) was the son of the Tüsheet Khan, one of the rulers of seventeenth-century Mongolia, and a distant descendant of Chingis Khan, founder of the Mongol Empire. His spiritual propensities were apparent almost from birth and in 1639, while still a small boy, he was recognized as the head of the Sakya sect of Buddhism in Mongolia. He later traveled to Tibet where he was recognized as the 16th incarnation of Javsandamba and converted to the Gelug sect of Tibetan Buddhism by the 5th Dalai Lama. As the head of the Gelug sect in Mongolia he introduced many new innovations, including the Maitreya Ceremony, and initiated the construction of numerous new temples and monasteries. A renowned polymath, Zanabazar composed new prayers, scriptures, and music, and invented the Soyombo alphabet, but he is probably best known for his incomparable sculptures, which rank among the greatest works of Buddhist art ever created. These include White Tara, the Twenty-One Taras, the five Transcendental Buddhas, Sitasamara, Vajradhara, and many more. The Guide to Locales Connected with the Life of Zanabazar contains detailed information on fourteen places in Mongolia associated with Zanabazar and on seven museums and temples where his artworks can now be viewed. GPS coordinates are provided for countryside locations. The Guide will be of interest to pilgrims, tourists, and armchair travelers alike.
The Book is available in two versions:
Both are available online at Amazon
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Monday, 01 May 2006 |
Amsterdam, Holland April 30, 2006 -- Amateur photographer Remy Lang has released his first photo book on Mongolia: "Tsagaan Sar - Mongolian New Year".
The book contains photos he took during Tsagaan Sar (Buddhist New Year) in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia in February 2005 and is divided into two sections. The first section consists of photos of all the in-laws Remy Lang encountered during the three-day long celebrations. The second section is an impression of the festivities.
Normal price is $19.99 but for a limited time only "Tsagaan Sar - Mongolian New Year" is available for the special introduction price of just $17.99.
http://www.lulu.com/content/114880.
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Sunday, 23 April 2006 |
Financial Times (London, England)
April 22, 2006 Saturday By LUDOVIC HUNTER-TILNEY
KUBLAI KHAN: The Mongol King who Remade China
by John Man
Bantam Press Pounds 20, 383 pages
Thanks to Coleridge, Kublai Khan is widely remembered for a stately pleasure dome conjured from the mists of an opium-assisted dream. It is not much of a memorial for a Mongolian warlord, Genghis Khan's favourite grandson, who was once the leader of an empire that stretched over one-fifth of the world's inhabited land area.
Rather than lounging around in Xanadu, Kublai wrestled with the intricacies of governing 13th-century Asia as well as scouting out new countries to invade. He had a yearning for conquest, to extend his dominion that ended in failure when he attempted to follow his defeat of China by invading Japan.
In Kublai Khan, John Man gives a lively account of his life, portrayed as a study in vaunting ambition and its corollary, discontent: "How could he not be, if he was to be true to his grandfather's mission - to set the bounds of empire wider still and wider, until all the world acknowledged the fact of Mongol supremacy?" Although some of the book's parallels are over-egged ("As CEO, Kublai was committed to Mongolia Inc."), it brings the last of the great Khan's empire-building feats into focus. Be first to comment this article |
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Tuesday, 11 April 2006 |
dannyreviews.com - Important Works of Art from the Collections of the Zanabazar Museum of Fine Arts, Bogd Khan Palace Museum, and Choijin-Lama Temple Museum.
Most museums in Mongolia charge an additional fee — often ten times the normal entry fee — for those wanting to take photographs. Rather than taking low quality photos through dirty glass when visiting Ulaanbaatar museums, I used the money to buy Mongolia: Museum Highlights.
This covers fifty odd items from the three leading Ulaanbaatar museums, with colour photographs on the right hand pages facing description and commentary on the left. The items included are bronze figures, paintings on cotton, silk appliqué, wood and paper maché masks and figures, clothing, and vessels, with a small number of other forms — petroglyphs, a sword, earthenware.
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Mongolia Websites
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The Mongol Uls Mongolia Network provides information about different aspects of Mongolia, including culture, religion, language and other traditions.
Mongol Uls is the Mongolian word for Mongolia. |
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