Mongolian literature, Written works produced through history in any of the Mongolian languages of present-day Mongolia, Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang, and the Russian republics of Buryatiya and Kalmykiya. Written Mongolian literature emerged in the 13th century from oral traditions, and it developed under Indo-Tibetan, Turkic, and Chinese influence. The most significant work is the anonymous Mongqolun niuča tobča’an (c. 1252), a chronicle of the deeds of Genghis Khan and of Ögödei, his son and successor. Written in prose, it features alliterative verse, myths, legends, epic fragments, songs, eulogies, dialogues, army regulations, and proverbs. Buddhist works, translated mostly from Tibetan and with the aid of extant Turkic versions, brought new forms and subjects to Mongolian literature. The monk Chosgi Odsir added a commentary to his prose translation of a long Buddhist poem, which was printed with his benediction in 1312. To his disciple Shirab Sengge belong a life of Buddha and the Altan gerel, a sermon of Buddha. Turks transmitted to the Mongols an account of the life of the Macedonian king Alexander the Great. In the 16th and 17th centuries a struggle for unity among the Mongols and efforts to renew their Buddhism revived literature. Chronicles such as Erdeni-yin tobchi (1662) by Saghang Sechen, a prince, and Lubsangdandzin’s Altan tobchi united Buddhist traditions with the cult of Genghis Khan. The Mongols also embraced and adapted the Tibetan epic of Gesar Khan, probably in the late 16th century. One of the orally transmitted Mongol versions of the story of Gesar Khan’s victories over monsters and enemies was the first form of the epic to be printed in Mongol, in 1716. It became a source of inspiration for several heroic epics, including the Abai Geser Khübüün of the Buryat people. A new alphabet, known today as Clear Script, was adopted in 1648 and narrowed the gap between writing and speech. The full translation of the Tibetan Buddhist canon was completed in the 17th century and printed by order of the Qing dynasty in more than 330 volumes in the early 18th century. The Buddhist priest and poet Rabjai composed a musical drama, Saran Kököge, based on the Tibetan story of a prince confined to live as a bird preaching the Buddha’s truths. Following the Russian Revolution of 1917, Buryat literati, such as Khotsa Namsaraev, Bazar Baradin, Tsydenzhap Dondubon, and Solbone Tuya, among many others, began to publish new poetry, plays, and short stories and novellas. In Mongolia’s capital, Ulaanbaatar, in 1934 the revolutionary leaders Darijawiin Losol, Gelegdorjiin Demid, and Khorloghiyin Choibalsan published their voluminous Mongol arad-un ündüsün-ü khubiskhal-un angkha egüschü bayigulugdagsan tobchi teüke, which describes the formation of the Mongolian People’s Revolutionary Party and its struggle against the Chinese and White Russian forces for Mongolia’s independence in 1921; the party would control the country’s government for much of the 20th century. Later editions altered and abridged the text, and the names of Choibalsan’s coauthors eventually disappeared from the title page—just as the men themselves did as a result of purges driven by Choibalsan. Until the middle of the 20th century, the Mongols and Buryats used Mongol script to write a language known as Classical, or Literary, Mongolian. The Kalmyks began to use the Cyrillic alphabet to write their language in 1925. After ephemeral experiments with romanization, separate Cyrillic orthographies were introduced in Buryatiya (1938) and Mongolia (1946). The eastern Mongols in China continued the Classical tradition, with the Oirat of Dzungaria keeping Clear Script with some modifications. Dashdorjiin Natsagdorj, one of the founders of modern literature in Mongolia, introduced new genres and subjects through such patriotic poems as “Minii nutag” and “Tüükhiin shüleg,” as well as through “Erkh chölöö khüsekhüi,” one of the poems he wrote in 1932 while in prison. His poetry advocated the adoption of Western medicine and modern health care in Mongolia. Modern historical novels began to appear in Mongolia and Buryatiya in the 1950s. Chimit Tsydendambaevich Tsydendambaev’s novel about a 19th-century Buryat scholar (1952) was among the earliest such novels in Buryatiya. Among the most prominent Mongol examples of the genre are Byambiin Rinchen’s Üüriin tuyaa (1950–55), a trilogy about Manchu rule, the theocracy, and revolution; Donrowiin Namdag’s Tsag töriin üimeen (1960); Chadraawaliin Lodoidamba’s Tungalag Tamir (1962); Shagdarjawiin Natsagdorj’s Mandukhai, which takes its title from the 15th-century Mongol queen who is its heroine; and Sengiin Erdene’s Dzanabadzar (1985), about the first reincarnate lama of northern Mongolia. Poetry underwent a renewal that was led by Choijiliin Chimed, Begdziin Yawuukhulan, Mishigiin Tsedendorj, Dendewiin Pürewdorj, Mishigiin Shirchinsüren, Renchinii Choinom, Tangadiin Galsan, and Shagdariin Dulmaa. Throughout the middle decades of the 20th century, Mongolian authorities controlled all spheres of culture, and literature had to serve the ruling party’s interests. But political repression and censorship gradually withdrew, leaving more space for individual expression. Freedom of the press emerged after the resignation of the leadership of the People’s Revolutionary Party in 1990 and the subsequent dismantling of the country’s socialist system. In the 1990s numerous suppressed works were printed, and an array of works—including those by Galsan Tschinag, Mend-Ooyo Gombojav, and Hadaa Sendoo in the 21st century—across numerous genres made the Mongolian literary palette much more colourful than ever before.
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