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Hungarian family awarded free trip to Mongolia PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 03 August 2007

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A lucky Hungarian family will receive a free trip to Mongolia due to their being the 50,000th people to see an exhibit in Budapest on the life of Genghis Kahn. 

Local university history student Vince Kristof Farkas, along with his sister and mother, won the trip when they entered the National Museum in Budapest on Tuesday. 

On hand to award the trip was Mongolian Ambassador in Budapest, Omboosuren Erdenechimeg, and Museum's director Tibor Kovacs. 

The exhibit opened in May and displays over 500 artifacts from 20 European countries and Mongolia. 

Of particular note are the paintings, gold artifacts, Buddhist statues and writings from the 12th century as Genghis Khan made his way across Europe.
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Mongolia Websites

Akira KAMIMURA, lecturer, faculty of Mongolian studies, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies launched an innovative website on old Mongolian manuscripts maps in cooperation with the state archive of Mongolia. It contains 16 precious maps which are stored at the state archive for academic use. The oldest map was estimated being made in 1803-1805.

A remarkable feature of this web site is that you can find manuscripts written on those maps by an advanced search function. All content of the maps has been indexed and easily accessible with the advanced search function.


For instance, if you type, "erdeni"(transcription of Mongol bichig as "erdene"), you get 24 search results and it says "erdeni" is written on 4 different maps. Then, it indicates where the search words are found on the specific places of the maps. Also, you can add search conditions among 20 items.

KAMIMURA hopes this web site helps progress on study of Mongolian history and many other related disciplines. Not only for the academic use, it is also beautiful and interesting to appreciate.