Munkhtsetseg natsagdorj biography
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List of Mongolians
See also: Category:Mongolian idrott wrestlers
See also: Mongolian wrestling
- Oleg Alekseev (1953–2015), Buryat wrestler, won a gold medal at the 1979 European Wrestling Championships.
- Tömöriin Artag (1943–1993), wrestler, won a bronze medal at the 1968 Summer Olympics.
- Aduuchiin Baatarkhüü (b. 1956), wrestler, won a silver medal at the 1978 Asian Games and the 1990 Asian Games, and a silver medal at the 1989 Asian Championships.
- Aldar Balzhinimayev (b. 1993), wrestler, won a gold medal at the 2010 Summer ungdom Olympics.
- Khaltmaagiin Battulga (b. 1963), politician and sambo wrestler, won two silver medals (1986, 1990) and a gold medal (1983) at the World Sambo Championships.
- Khorloogiin Bayanmönkh (b. 1944), wrestler, 1975 World Champion, won several silver medals at the World Championships, and a silver medal at the 1972 Summer Olympics.
- Altantsetsegiin Battsetseg (b. 1994), wrestler, won a bronze medal at the 2018 Asian Games.
- Baatarzorigyn Battsetse
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Education
In the early days of Mongolian history, education was primarily provided by the religious and royal institutions. Buddhist monks gave basic education to boys in classes set up within the compounds of monasteries, while children of the royal household and from families of the nobility were educated in order to serve in the court and be hereditary.
After the victory of 1921 People’s Revolution was increased recognition of the need for educated people for the development of the country. As a result, the Mongolian education system was modernized and made more accessible to the general public. It| was strongly influenced by the former Soviet Union system and in which two educational paths were stipulated: the academic and the vocational
Before socialism in Mongolia, literacy was widespread in monasteries and for government officials. Informal skills were learnt at home and passed on through the family. Some childr
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The Ties and Contacts between Ancient Mongolian Nomads and other Asian Civilizations
1 Introduction
Like other countries of the world, nomadic Mongolians are people with the longest period of history. The ancestors of the ethnic Mongolians were not only an ancient people, but also a part of the world’s population, and went to history as they had a strong influence on the world civilization and make up the population of the world. Therefore, a center of the ancestral gene pool of mankind was formed tens of thousands of years ago in Central Asia or in particular in the center of Mongolia, beginning the Orkhon Valley. Mongolians’ ancestors established their state more than 2200 years ago, set their territory and borders, and the ethnic Mongolian was formed and developed. Mongolians called the nomadic civilization that our ancestors had developed a unique way of life suitable for the land and climate where they live. Nomadic civilization is defined as the most simple, profound content