history of Mongolia
history of Mongolia, a survey of the important events and people in the history of Mongolia from ancient times to the present. Mongolia is located between Russia to the north and China to the south, deep within the interior of eastern Asia far from any ocean. A united Mongolian state of nomadic tribes was formed in the early 13th century ce by Genghis Khan, and his successors controlled a vast empire that included much of China, Russia, Central Asia, and the Middle East. The Mongol empire eventually collapsed and split, and parts of Mongolia came under China and Russia’s influence from the 17th century to the 20th century. The Mongolian People’s Republic was proclaimed in November 1924, and the Mongolian capital, centred on the main monastery of the Bogd Gegeen, was renamed Ulaanbaatar (“Red Hero”).
The Mongols constitute one of the principal ethnographic divisions of Asian peoples. Their traditional homeland is centred in Mongolia—a vast plateau in Central Asia now divided politically into an autonomous region of China (Inner Mongolia) and the independent country Mongolia (historically called Outer Mongolia)—which lies at the eastern end of what was throughout history a great corridor of migration between northeastern China (historically called Manchuria) and Hungary. Physical anthropologists in the 19th century introduced the terms Mongol and Mongolian as descriptive of “racial type” even though the Mongols exhibited a wide range of physical characteristics. Today the Mongols are recognized as a group of peoples bound together by a common language and a common nomadic tradition.
The geographic origin of the Mongols themselves is the northeastern corner of present-day Mongolia. To the east the ancient tribal history is mostly that of peoples speaking Manchu-Tungus languages (including the ancestors of the Manchu and of the Evenki) and to the west that of the Xiongnu (Mongolian Khünnü), or eastern Huns, and their Turkic-speaking successors, whom the Mongols eventually displaced and in part absorbed. As a result of later wars and migrations, Mongols are now found in Mongolia; in southern Siberia and the Caspian Sea region of Russia; and, in China, in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region (constituting a large portion of northeastern China) and parts of the Hui Autonomous Region of Ningxia, the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang (the former East Turkistan), the northern part of the Tibet Autonomous Region, and some neighbouring provinces.
Ethnography and early tribal history of Mongolia
All Mongols recognize their kinship to one another in varying degrees through legend, written history, and especially language. Dialects vary from east to west more than from north to south, but few are unintelligible to other Mongols. The Khalkh (Khalkha) dialect of Mongolian dates from about the 17th century. The great chronicle The Secret History of the Mongols (mid-13th century) preserves a premodern version of the language (Middle Mongol) in a Chinese transcription.
The Mongols have always been nomads; however, nomadism is the seasonal movement of livestock and camps from one pasture to another, not unfettered wandering. Legend and folklore show that among the premodern Mongols the common people considered livestock to be private property and land to be collective property. Traditional society was based on blood relationship traced through the common male ancestor who gave his name to the clan, though evidence exists of a more ancient system of matrilineal descent. Marriage was forbidden between members of the same clan, giving rise to complicated marriage alliances (and also feuds) among the clans. As clans grew, the most successful families tended to arrogate to themselves claims to ancestry and territory. Weak clans fell to a subordinate but not servile status: they owned their own cattle and had their own headmen but paid tribute to the ruling clan and moved, camped, pastured, and fought under its orders.
Every man who could ride and bear arms was both a herdsman and a soldier according to the need of the moment. Raiding to capture cattle, women, and prisoners was a recognized method of property accumulation. At least by the time of Genghis Khan in the 13th century (and possibly far older), a decimal form of military organization was adopted, with units of 10, 100, 1,000, and 10,000. Commanders of large units were assigned territories from which they drew the tribute to the supreme khan and mustered their quotas of troops.
The first mention in the Chinese chronicles of peoples who can be identified with Mongolia dates to the historically shadowy times of the Shang dynasty in the 2nd millennium bce. The first inhabitants of whom there is certainty, however, are the Xiongnu, about the 5th or 4th century bce. The Xiongnu are thought by the Mongols to be their remote ancestors. The Xiongnu created a great tribal empire in Mongolia while China was being unified as an imperial state under the Qin (221–206 bce) and Han (206 bce–220 ce) dynasties. After several centuries of war with the Chinese, complicated by civil wars among themselves, the Xiongnu confederation broke up. Some of the southern tribes surrendered to the Chinese and were settled within China, where they were eventually absorbed. Some of the northern tribes migrated westward, where descendants—together with the members of other tribes—appeared in Europe in the 5th century ce as the Huns of Attila. By then, of course, these people were considerably more mixed ethnically.
In Mongolia the Xiongnu were succeeded both by Turkic-speaking peoples and by others identified by some scholars as Mongols, or Mongol speakers. There is a lack of convincing archaeological or historical evidence that these groups came to Mongolia from some distant region to fill a void left by the Xiongnu departure. Probably they were there all the time as the subjects of the Xiongnu, until the breakup of that confederation gave them the opportunity to assert themselves. Among the peoples who have been considered possibly Mongol, the most important tribal groups are the Sienpi (Xianbi), who may however have been Tungus-speakers rather than Mongol, recorded in Han dynasty annals, and the Juan-juan (Rouran, or Geougen) of the 4th to 6th centuries. The latter have been identified by some scholars with the Avars, who migrated into Europe along the plains of the Danube River and were nearly annihilated in Hungary by Charlemagne in the late 8th century.
According to a legend recorded by the Chinese, the Turks of Mongolia, whose name is recognizable under its Chinese transcription Tujue, were a subject tribe ruled by the Juan-juan. The Turks overthrew their masters and soon were in control of all of Mongolia, centring their power in the Orkhon (Orhon) River valley in the northern part of the country. The Orkhon Turks were contemporaries of the Tang dynasty (618–907) in China, and their fortunes rose and fell in counterpoint to periods of Tang strength and weakness. Agriculture became an element in the economy, and the Uyghurs, who came to power after the fall of the Orkhon Turks, entered history as an oasis-centred people.
The name Mongol first appears in a tribal list recorded under the Tang dynasty. It then vanishes, to reappear only in the 11th century, when the Khitan (Khitai, from which comes the word Cathay) ruled in northeastern and northern China and controlled most of Mongolia. The Khitan, who established the Liao dynasty of China (907–1125), were themselves a Mongol people, but their homeland was in northeastern China rather than in what is now Mongolia. Like other Chinese dynasties, the Liao exercised its power in Mongolia by playing the tribes against one another. Liao sources record the existence of a somewhat mysterious tribal power known in Mongol tradition as Khamag Mongol Uls (“Nation of All the Mongols”), which did not, however, include all of the population who spoke the Mongol language.
When the Khitan fell, their power in China was taken over and extended by the Juchen (Jürched), a Tungus people based farther north in northeastern China. They took the Chinese name of Jin (“Golden”). In their tribal policy they switched their favour from “All the Mongols” to the Tatars (known in the West as Tartars, from a medieval pun on tartarus, Latin for “hell”). Although Mongols, the Tatars were not part of the tribal league of All the Mongols, centred in the Onon and Kherlen (Kerulen) valleys in the eastern half of northern Mongolia; the Tatars lived to the east and south of them.
On the whole, though chastened occasionally by punitive expeditions, All the Mongols had been transfrontier allies or auxiliaries of the Khitan-Liao. A contingent (large for that time) of 50,000 Mongols fought on the Khitan side in the last battles of the Khitan empire. Presumably, this was one reason why the Juchen-Jin transferred their favour to the Tatars, nearer to their frontier. Such alternations, between using the more-distant and using the nearer transfrontier and frontier tribes, were frequent in the policies of dynasties in China, and this one had the desired effect of creating a feud between Mongols and Tatars.
Before the era of Genghis Khan, a defeated Khitan army had migrated westward at the fall of their Liao dynasty. It was led by a prince of the Khitan imperial line but must have included heterogeneous tribal elements. Moving westward through Mongolia, it reached what is now Kazakhstan and created a new and briefly powerful empire, the Karakhitai. It ruled primarily over Turkic-speaking peoples, made up of nomads and city dwellers in the oases, and the Khitan nucleus had the opportunity to apply its knowledge of how to deal with nomads and administer a bureaucracy.
The rise of Genghis Khan
Such was the setting in Mongolia when Genghis Khan (his given name was Temüüjin) was born, about 1162 (the date favoured by contemporary Mongol scholars). Temüüjin came from a clan that had a tradition of power and rule: he was the great-grandson of Khabul (Qabul) Khan, who had been the greatest ruler of All the Mongols. Temüüjin inherited a feud against the Juchen-Jin dynasty and another against the Tatars, who had betrayed a collateral ancestor of his to the Juchen. His own father was poisoned by Tatars. He also inherited feuds among the ruling clans of All the Mongols and a feud with the powerful Merkit (Mergid) tribe, from whom his father had stolen his mother.
Temüüjin was orphaned in his teens. His family fell on bad times, and power among the Mongols passed to other clans. Even in such apparently primitive practices as camp raiding and horse thieving, he skillfully used ancient customs: marriage alliances; putting himself under the patronage of a stronger prince; making an alliance with Jamuka (later his dangerous rival) by the oath of anda, under which men became as if blood brothers; and recruiting nökhör (“companions”). Unlike the institution of anda, which created a fictitious kinship and harboured the possibility of deadly rivalry, a man who became a nökhör forswore all loyalties of kinship and tribe and declared himself solely “the man” of his chosen leader. Genghis Khan later fell out with his anda, but he was never betrayed by a nökhör, and his most brilliant generals were nökhör.
By 1206 Temüüjin’s success in tribal warfare caused him to be proclaimed ruler of All the Mongols with the rank of khan and the title of Genghis (Chinggis)—a word deriving probably from the Turkic tengiz, meaning “ocean”; although this explanation has not convinced all Mongol scholars, it is consistent with the belief that the ocean symbolized breadth and depth of wisdom. (Later the equivalent Mongol word dalai was applied to the supreme lama of Tibet.) Previous nomads had invaded China, but none had yet ruled the whole of it, chiefly because they had invaded prematurely, leaving other nomads on their flanks and in their rear. Genghis Khan, however, first united all the tuurgatan (“people of the felt-walled tents”), probing far back, away from China, to make sure that he controlled all potential nomadic rivals.
His first move was to bring under control the major tribal groups to the west of him in Mongolia, the Naiman and Kereit (Kerait) with whom he had been alternately in alliance and rivalry, as well as the tribes fringing the northern Mongolia-Siberia frontier. He then turned toward the eastern half of northern China (then ruled by the Jin dynasty), south almost to the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang). In the northwestern corner of China and the western extension of Inner Mongolia there was a small state, that of the Xi (Western) Xia. Its rulers were Tangut from Tibet, and under them there were Turkish and Sogdian merchants who exploited the caravan trade; the cultivators of the oases were Turks and Chinese. China south of the Yangtze was ruled by the Nan (Southern) Song dynasty (1127–1279). Although they had lost North China, the Nan Song were expanding southward toward Indochina, bringing rich new land under cultivation. Among all these states there was an interplay of diplomacy, alliances made and broken, and open warfare.
Between 1207 and 1215 the armies of Genghis Khan probed deep into North China. Genghis Khan made good use of the Khitan in northern and northeastern China, whose Liao dynasty the Jin had overthrown and who were now discontented subjects of the Jin. In 1215 the Jin capital Zhongdu (modern Beijing), from which the Jin emperor had withdrawn southward, was taken and sacked. Realizing, however, that it was premature to commit his main strength to the conquest of China, Genghis Khan withdrew to Mongolia, leaving one of his best generals, Mugali, to ravage and weaken the country. He himself turned westward. When he had defeated the Naiman, the last of the powerful tribes in Mongolia proper, the son of the last ruler of that tribe, Küchlüg, fled to Karakhitai and married the daughter of its last ruler, whom he then overthrew. In that variegated kingdom, which included Semirechie in Russian Turkistan and the Kashgar (Kashi) oasis in Chinese Turkistan (present-day Xinjiang), Küchlüg favoured the Buddhist minority and persecuted Islam, the majority religion. This situation made it easy for the Mongols to defeat him. The Mongol general Jebe proclaimed freedom of religion and forbade massacre and plunder. This policy indicates that the Mongols did not massacre out of sheer savagery but only when they thought it necessary to break the power of an opponent.
Taking over the lands of the Karakhitai opened the way for Genghis Khan to Khwārezm, the land of the oases along the Amu Darya (ancient Oxus River) in what are now Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. This gave him an alternative to China, and it also secured him against the danger of any other nomadic power organizing, on his flank and rear, a military striking force backed by agricultural and urban resources. With this task accomplished, he turned back toward China, leaving further campaigning into Russia and the eastern fringes of Europe to his generals and sons. He would not, however, commit his main forces in China until he had dealt with the wealthy Tangut state of Xi Xia, and it was on this successful campaign in 1227 that he died.
The successor states of the Mongol empire
Genghis Khan had already dealt with the problem of succession. Each of his four sons was to hold a vassal kingdom. Jöchi, the eldest, was given the land from the Yenisey River and the Aral Sea westward “as far as the hooves of Mongol horses have reached”—a wording attributed to Genghis Khan himself. The second son, Chagatai (Tsagadai), received Kashgaria (now the southern part of Xinjiang) and most of Mavrannakhar, the territory between the Amu Darya and the Syr Darya (ancient Jaxartes River). The third son, Ögödei (Ogadai), received western Mongolia and the region of Tarbagatai (now the northwestern corner of Xinjang). The youngest, Tolui, inherited the ancient Mongol homeland of eastern Mongolia. Two years later, in 1229, a great Mongol assembly confirmed the succession of Ögödei as the great khan (khagan).
These dispositions made skillful use of ancient traditions. It was the custom among prosperous families that the eldest son, on reaching manhood, was given a wife and his share of the future inheritance. He then moved away and set up his own camp, independent but still allied to his family. The other brothers followed in due order, but each one nearer to the “home camp” than his next older brother. The youngest, as “guardian of the hearth and fire,” remained with his parents until their death and received the residual heritage. It was convenient that Jöchi could in this way be placed at the greatest distance from the ancient homeland because he got on poorly with his brothers, who considered him illegitimate, conceived while his mother was the captive of a hostile tribe. The election of Ögödei as great khan over the head of his elder brother Chagatai (Jöchi had already died) did not do violence to nomadic tradition; it was quite acceptable in wartime for the dying ruler to nominate as his successor the son who was considered ablest and most acceptable to his brothers.
With this first division, further fission was inevitable. Under Batu, the successor of Jöchi, the Golden Horde began to form, which drew tribute from the Russian principalities. In this khanate the Mongols were greatly outnumbered by Turks; the Turkish language soon displaced Mongol, and Islam became the prevailing religion. Because its reservoir of nomad power was in the Kipchak Steppe, the Golden Horde is sometimes known as the Kipchak khanate. By its methods of collecting taxes and tribute, it contributed to the rise of the grand dukes of Muscovy, and it was eventually an alliance led by Moscow that broke the power of the Mongols (by then more frequently called Tatars), at the Battle of Kulikovo in 1380. The Golden Horde was still able to take and sack Moscow two years later, but its power soon disintegrated—an important factor being attacks by Timur (Tamerlane), coming from Turkistan.
To the east were the khanates of the house of Chagatai and the Il-Khans of Iran (Persia). Like the rulers of the Golden Horde, the rulers of the house of Chagatai considered themselves senior, in genealogy, to the house of Ögödei; they were frequently at odds with the great khan, with each other, and with the Il-Khans. On the other hand, the Il-Khans (the title itself implies subordination) accepted and supported the authority of the great khans. Like the Golden Horde, again, the house of Chagatai controlled wide pastures and therefore retained a strong nomadic base, while the Il-Khans, like the great khans (especially after Kublai [Khubilai] Khan moved his capital into China and founded the Yuan [Mongol] dynasty there), were directly affected by the urban influences of an old, highly developed civilization with a rich literary tradition. As in China, this situation led rather rapidly to the passage of real administrative control from Mongol hands into the hands of their subjects. The greatest of the Il-Khans was Hülegü (Khulagu, Hulagu)—a brother of Kublai Khan—who began the Il-Khan tradition of supporting the Yuan dynasty against the house of Chagatai and the Golden Horde.
Genghis Khan’s grandson, Godan Khan, invaded Tibet in 1240, after which he sought spiritual guidance from the Sakya Pandita, leader of the Sa-skya-pa (Sakyapa; Red Hat) school of Tibetan Buddhism. The Sakya Pandita, accompanied by his nephew, Phagspa Lama, journeyed to Godan’s camp (in what is now Gansu province, China). He and Godan created a patron-priest relationship in which the Sakya Pandita, in exchange for attending to Godan’s religious needs, was awarded temporal powers in Tibet.
As great khan, Ögödei authorized the continuation of Mongol campaigns in Russia and the west and also in China, where the disintegration of the Jin (Juchen) dynasty in 1234 had brought the Mongols face to face with the Nan Song dynasty in the Yangtze valley. Ögödei was also able to maintain a system of imperial representatives in the appanages of his imperial kinsmen in Central Asia and Iran but was less able to control the always insubordinate Golden Horde. He died in 1241 and was succeeded, after a stormy regency under his widow, Töregene, by his son Güyük (Kuyug), who had already quarreled with his cousin Batu of the Golden Horde. Güyük died at Samarkand (now in Uzbekistan) in 1248, while preparing an attack on Batu.
A major change then occurred in the succession. At the next great assembly of the descendants of Genghis Khan, enlarged by the presence of powerful commanders and officials, the great khan chosen was not a son of the house of Ögödei but Möngke (Mungke), a son of Tolui, the “guardian of the hearth and fire” of the Mongol homeland. This choice was favoured by Batu Khan, and Möngke responded by trying to stabilize and pacify relations among the khanates. He sent his second brother, Kublai, to continue the conquest of Song China and his third brother, Hülegü, to subdue the Assassins (Nizārī Ismāʿīlīs); on this campaign Hülegü also took Baghdad, a rich and powerful city and seat of the ʿAbbāsid dynasty. Möngke was aware of the desire of some of the European Crusaders for a Mongol alliance against the Saracens, but, like Ögödei and Güyük, he would not consider this except on terms of the submission of the European rulers and the pope. He himself campaigned deep into southwestern China and there died of a fever in 1259.
The succession was then disputed between Kublai and Möngke’s youngest brother, Arigböge (Ariböx), while Hülegü supported Kublai. The dispute was more than a brawl over spoils among barbarian warriors; ideology was involved. Genghis Khan’s concept of conquest and rule had been clear: the “people of the felt-walled tents” should remain in the steppes and continue their ancient warrior way of life, drawing tribute from the world of farms, cities, and caravan trade. Kublai and Hülegü, however, preferred to become the new rulers of sedentary societies. In this respect Arigböge was closer to the concept of Genghis than was Kublai.
In 1260 Kublai was proclaimed great khan at his summer palace in Kaiping (renamed Shangdu in 1263), located north of present-day Jining, Inner Mongolia, while Arigböge was proclaimed great khan at Karakorum (Kharkhorin) in Mongolia. It took Kublai four years to settle this dispute, but Arigböge finally submitted to his brother and died in captivity. Kublai’s reign has been romanticized in the West ever since it was chronicled by the Venetian adventurer Marco Polo. Kublai Khan moved the capital from Karakorum, which had been built by Ögödei (not Genghis Khan, as is sometimes said), to a new city that he had built on the site of Zhongdu, the Jin (Juchen) capital, naming it Dadu (“Great Capital”). In 1260 Kublai appointed the Tibetan Phagspa Lama to be his “teacher of the state,” continuing the patron-priest relationship initiated by Godan Khan and the Sakya Pandita. He used foreigners (including Polo and his family) to lessen his dependence on Chinese bureaucrats, but the administrative structure remained essentially on the Chinese model. After the death of Kublai in 1294, the Yuan dynasty had a series of short-lived and weak rulers until the last, Toghon Temür Khan, was driven from Dadu by troops of the Chinese Ming dynasty in 1368.
Internecine strife
Although in the first vigour of reconquest the Chinese penetrated deeply into Mongolia and destroyed Karakorum, they never succeeded in establishing control. Mongol unity was shattered, but Mongols in different regions began to recover. Mongol fission followed several lines. In western Mongolia there arose new lines of chieftains who did not claim descent from Genghis Khan. As a group, these were the Oirat (Oyrat), also called Jungar (Dzungar or Züüngar), who at times were known by the names of individual tribes, such as the Dörvöd (Derbet) or Torguud (Torgut), when they predominated. In the centre, in both Outer and Inner Mongolia, the ruling princes claimed descent from Genghis Khan. In northeastern China were princes whose ancestor was Khasar, a brother of Genghis Khan.
A distinct new period was opening in the region, in which all concerned understood that in order to have real power outside the Great Wall of China it was necessary to coordinate nomadic military mobility with towns inhabited by productive artisans, capable of attracting trade from China, and supplied with food by local farming. The lead was first taken by the Oirat, in the far west of Mongolia, who established control over some of the oases of East Turkistan (now in Xinjiang) and began to penetrate Tibet. This advance meant that in the regions where the imperial power and economic ascendancy of China under the Ming dynasty (1368–1644) were weakest, the Oirat drew on new resources. Both the Tibetans and the Turkic-speaking oasis people were active merchants, had a literate class whose thinking was independent of the Chinese model, and could keep the records without which an advanced state was impossible. This stage initiated the long-enduring cleavage between the Oirat and the Khalkh (Khalkha), the main body of what was later to be Outer Mongolia.
Ascendancy then passed to the Mongols of the Ordos Plateau, in the great loop of the Huang He (Yellow River), under Altan Khan (reigned 1543–83). He exploited a geographic base that enabled him to develop agriculture and trade, to challenge the Oirat in Tibet, and to pressure the Chinese. Meanwhile, the Mongols of the centre, the Khalkha in the north, and the Chahar (Chakhar) in the south had lagged behind for lack of a suitably diversified geographic base. The best that they could achieve was unification under Dayan Khan—a descendant of Kublai and grandfather of Altan Khan—who was proclaimed khan in 1470 at age five and died in 1543. After this and after the death of Altan Khan, the supremacy over the Mongols of the centre passed to the south to another descendant of Dayan, Ligdan (Legdan) Khan of the Chahar. He tried during his reign (1604–34) to build up a power comparable to that held by Altan Khan, but he was too late, because it coincided with the rise of the Manchu.
Revival of Buddhism
During this period there was a second flowering of Tibetan Buddhism (Lamaism) among the Mongols. In the reign of Kublai Khan, Buddhism—notably the Red Hat sect of southern Tibet—had been fashionable at court and among some of the Mongol aristocracy, but the people as a whole had not been converted. A number of Mongol princes saw the need for a literate class to provide a bureaucracy, but to use the Chinese language meant the risk—as had been proved during the Yuan (Mongol) dynasty in China—that the Mongol ruling class could be assimilated into Chinese society. Tibet, however, was not strong enough to dominate Mongolia, and the Tibetan monastic system had already produced able clerical bureaucrats.
In 1578 Altan Khan arranged a meeting with the high lama of the Tibetan Dge-lugs-pa (Gelugpa; Yellow Hat) school. Altan converted to that school and received the title “King of Dharma.” He conferred upon the Yellow Hat leader the title dalai (“oceanic”), the latter then adopting the name Sonam Gyatso (Bsod-nams-rgya-mtsho)—rgya-mtsho being the Tibetan equivalent of dalai. Since then, each Dalai Lama has had Gyatso as part of his name. (Furthermore, the Dalai Lama, as the head of the Yellow Hat school, also became the spiritual leader of the majority of Tibetan and Mongolian Buddhists). In addition, the two agreed that the Dalai Lama was the incarnation of Phagspa Khan and Altan the incarnation of Kublai Khan, thus restoring the Mongolian-Tibetan patron-priest relationship.
Later, in 1639, it was determined that Zanabazar, a son of the line of the Tüshētü Khans of Khalkh, was an incarnation of the Tibetan scholar Taranatha, who had taught in Mongolia for 20 years before his death there in 1634 and was believed to be an incarnation of the Javzandamba line of spiritual rulers. Zanabazar was enthroned in 1640 with the title Javzandamba khutagt and proclaimed Öndör Geegen (“High Enlightened One”) or Bogd Geegen (“Holy Enlightened One”). The significance of this is underlined by the fact that, as soon as the Manchu controlled Mongolia, they ruled that no man of the lineage of Genghis Khan could be “discovered” to be an incarnation or “living Buddha” (khutagt) and also that the reincarnation of the Javzandamba must always be discovered in Tibet. The second Javzandamba (1724–57) was the son of a Mongol nobleman, but the third through ninth Javzandambas were indeed all born in Tibet.
At the beginning of the revival of Buddhism in Mongolia, there was a great burst of translation of the scriptures from Tibetan (and Sanskrit) into Mongol. However, when the Manchu won control, they threw their support to the use of Tibetan, widening the cleavage between clerical and secular authority and bureaucracy. By the end of the Manchu regime, there were many lamas in Mongolia who were literate in Tibetan but not in their own language.