Although people have inhabited Mongolia since the Stone Age, Mongolia only became politically important after iron weapons entered the area in the 3rd century B.C. In general, Mongolia at this point had a similar history to the rest of the nomadic steppe that lies between Siberia Northern Russia to the North, China, and, the Middle East and Central Asia to the South. These steppes usually were inhabited by bands of nomads, sometimes united in confederations of varying sizes. These nomads usually herded animals, traded, raided more agricultural peoples and each other. However, every now and then, there would form giant nomadic confederations that threatened China, and sometimes the Middle East, Europe and beyond, but these confederations, while vast, and often destructive, rarely lasted, though they did redistribute peoples and disrupt the politics of the regions they attacked. The people in the Mongolia region usually focused their attention on nearby, wealthy China, and their occasional confederations greatly influence Chinese history. China's response is a major theme in Mongolian history. The most notable alliance of the Mongols however reached far beyond China, under the leadership of Genghis Khan, his empire and the states that emerged from it would play a major role in the history of the 13th and 14th centuries. He and his immediate successors conquered nearly all of Asia and European Russia and sent armies as far as central Europe and Southeast Asia.
In Mongolia itself, the legacy of Genghis Khan was a superior law code, a written language, and a historical pride. In addition, the foreign contact created by the Mongolian empire allowed for the spread of Mongolian genes, and the introduction of Buddhism into Mongolia. When the Mongolian empire broke up, Mongolia became part of the Yuan dynasty (1271-1368 CE), which included a unified China. The Ming Dynasty replaced it in 1368 and invaded Mongolia, leading to a Mongolian defeat, but not a Chinese conquest.
By the early 15th century, Mongolia was split between the Oirad in the Altay Mountains region and the eastern group that later came to be known as the Khalkha in the area north of the Gobi. In the mid-15th century, the Oirad dominated and briefly united Mongolia and threatened China, at one point taking a Chinese emperor captive. Eventually in the 16th century, under Dayan Khan, it ruled over a vast section of North-Central Asia from the Ural Mountains to Lake Baykal, conquering even the Khalkas. But after his death, Mongolia split into waring factions again, though most of Mongolia was unified by Altan Khan, who continued the Mongolian tradition of attacking China, though he gave up in 1571, signing a peace treaty with the Ming Dynasty that ended 3 centuries of war. Instead he concentrated on his southwest and raided Tibet, eventually becoming a convert to Tibetan Buddhism and naming the first Dalai Lama.
By the end of the 17th century the power of the khan had been greatly weakened. The Mongols were decentralized and threatened by a rising Manchuria. The last of the major khans, Ligden Khan established the pre-eminence of his faction over the Khalkha Mongols, and this prompted fear among his rivals who called upon the Manchu empire to help. The Manchus made some conquests in Eastern Mongolia, but Ligden was able to stop conquest further west. After his death, southern Mongolian resistance collapsed.
By this time the Torgut Mongols, a subset of the Oriad migrated westwards becoming the Kalmyk, entering Russian territory they were conquered by the mid-17th century.
Over the 17th century, Mongolia became increasingly Buddhist, and one faction established a protectorate over Tibet. But as the Manchus became the Qing dynasty and established a firm control over China, they expanded into Northern Mongolia.
Qing rule over the areas of Northern Mongolia that became Outer Mongolia ended in 1911, with the fall of the Qing dynasty. Outer Mongolia briefly established a theocracy in 1911, before being conquered by a Chinese warlord in 1919, and then the Russian White movement warlord Ungern von Sternberg in 1920. The Red Army backed native guerrilla units led by Damdin Sühbaatar and the MPRP (the recently-founded local communist party), which defeated the forces of Ungern von Sternberg and founded the People's Republic of Mongolia, perhaps the first Soviet satellite.
With the fall of the Soviet Union, Mongolia lost its only major source of aid, but began political reforms.
Mongolia held its first direct presidential elections on June 6, 1993.
This has been a test of the new forum software. I hope you learned something. ;)


Sumul
Wed, 04/25/2007 - 12:23pmThis smacks of plagiarism, Fazil.
Fazil
Wed, 04/25/2007 - 12:29pm<_<
>_>
Who? me?
I am as original as the contents of a mall art store!
Andersen
Wed, 04/25/2007 - 1:40pm<< INCOMING Lawsuit!!! BE PREPARED!!! >>
Fap
Wed, 04/25/2007 - 2:28pm<< YOU ARE NOT PREPARED!! >>
Beth
Wed, 04/25/2007 - 3:42pmEvery time I see the words "Be prepared!" the song from The Lion King pops into my head and starts playing. I can't help it. I think I listened to that soundtrack too much in middle school.
Sumul
Wed, 04/25/2007 - 3:56pmOh my god, that's going to start happening to me now too. THANKS.
Qyn
Thu, 04/26/2007 - 6:54amThe Lion King theme is actually the background music for the Black Temple.
Pythias
Thu, 04/26/2007 - 6:57amI think I listened to that soundtrack too much in middle school.
I listened to it last week! :)
Beth
Thu, 04/26/2007 - 9:43amBy listening to it too much in middle school I'm talking pretty non-stop listening. It was easily one of the first bits of music I owned of my very own.
And to Sumul, I'm glad I could spread the disease!
Fazil
Thu, 04/26/2007 - 9:59amWoo...Lion King is high school for me. I was pretty anti-Disney at that point, too. Still am in many ways.
Tigue (not verified)
Thu, 04/26/2007 - 12:06pmWho are you? Fap?
Fap
Thu, 04/26/2007 - 12:27pmWho are you? Fap?
what?
yori
Thu, 04/26/2007 - 2:10pmtigue is drunk
Tigue (not verified)
Sat, 04/28/2007 - 1:12pmWho are you? Fap?
what?
Oh, don't play innocent Mr.-Random-Info-Poster:
http://www.amaranthian.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1358
Fap
Sat, 04/28/2007 - 2:55pmIn journalism, the Five Ws, also known as the Five Ws (and one H) or simply the Six Ws, is a concept in news style, research, and in police investigations that most people consider to be fundamental. It is a formula for getting the "full" story on something. The maxim of the Five Ws (and one H) is that in order for a report to be considered complete it must answer a checklist of six questions, each of which comprises an interrogative word:
* who?
* what?
* where?
* when?
* why?
* how?
The principle underlying the maxim is that each question should elicit a factual answer — facts that it is necessary to include for a report to be considered complete. Importantly, none of these questions can be answered with a simple "yes" or "no". In the context of the "news style" for newspaper reporting, the Five W's are types of facts that should be contained in the "lead" (sometimes spelled lede to avoid confusion with the typographical term "leading" or similarly spelled words), or first two or three paragraphs of the story, after which more expository writing is allowed.
The "Five Ws" (and one H) were memorialized by Rudyard Kipling in his "Just So Stories" (1902), in which a poem accompanying the tale of "The Elephant's Child" opens with the lines
I keep six honest serving-men
(They taught me all I knew);
Their names are What and Why and When
And How and Where and Who.
I send them over land and sea,
I send them east and west;
But after they have worked for me,
I give them all a rest.
I let them rest from nine till five.
For I am busy then,
As well as breakfast, lunch, and tea,
For they are hungry men:
But different folk have different views:
I know a person small —
She keeps ten million serving-men,
Who get no rest at all!
She sends 'em abroad on her own affairs,
From the second she opens her eyes —
One million Hows, two million Wheres,
And seven million Whys!