Showing posts with label AS-Mongolia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AS-Mongolia. Show all posts
July 25, 2016
2665 MONGOLIA - A lama boy
Buddhism in Mongolia derives much of its recent characteristics from Tibetan Buddhism (of the Gelug and Kagyu lineages), which combines elements of the Mahayana and the Tantric schools with traditional Tibetan rituals of curing and exorcism, sharing the common Buddhist goal of individual release from suffering and the cycles of rebirth. Westerners use for Tibetan Buddhism the term "lamaism" (literally, "doctrine of the lamas": lama jiao) to distinguish it from a then traditional Chinese form (fo jiao).
Etichete:
AS - ASIA,
AS-Mongolia,
MONGOLIA,
Places of worship
Locaţia:
Mongolia
April 12, 2016
1036, 2456 MONGOLIA - The Traditional Naadam festival (UNESCO ICH)
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1036 Camp of Naadam in Mongolia |
Posted on 17.03.2014, 12.04.2016
Naadam (literally "games") is a traditional festival in Mongolia (but also in China, in areas in which live Mongols), termed locally Eriin gurvan naadam (the three games of men), which exist, probably, for centuries. The biggest festival (Naadam of the Country) is held in the capital Ulan Bator during the National Holiday from July 11-13, in the National Sports Stadium. It begins with an elaborate ceremony featuring dancers, athletes, horse riders, and musicians, after that follows the competitions in the three games, directly linked with the lifestyles of the Mongols: Bökh (Mongolian wrestling), horse racing and archery.
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2456 Bökh (Mongolian wrestling) |
Bökh (which means "durability") is the most important of the Mongolian culture's historic "Three Manly Skills". Genghis Khan considered it to be an important way to keep his army in good physical shape and combat ready. There are several different versions: Mongolian, Buryatian, Oirat and Inner Mongolian. The goal of a match is to get your opponent to touch his upper body, knee or elbow to the ground. There are no weight classes, age limits, or time limits in a match. The rank of a wrestler can only be attained during the Naadam festival, and is determined by the number of rounds won, being held for life.
Etichete:
AS - ASIA,
AS-Mongolia,
MONGOLIA,
UNESCO ICH
Locaţia:
Mongolia
January 24, 2016
1312, 2240 MONGOLIA - Women in traditional clothes
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1312 Two young mongolian women in traditional clothes |
Posted on 23.10.2014, 24.01.2016
Mongolian dress has changed little since the days of the empire, because it is supremely well-adapted to the conditions of life on the steppe. The deel, or kaftan, is the Mongolian traditional garment worn both on workdays as well on special days. Each ethnic group has its own deel design distinguished by cut, color, and trimming. Before the revolution, all social strata had their own manner of dressing. The deel is a long, loose gown cut in one piece with the sleeves; it has a high collar and widely overlaps at the front. It is girdled with a sash, which isn't simply adornment, but serves as a soft corset facilitating long riders on horse back.
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2240 A mongolian women in traditional clothes |
The deels always close on the wearer's right and traditionally have five fastenings. Modern deels often have decoratively cut overflaps, small round necklines, and sometimes contain a Mandarin collar, which starts at the neckline and rise vertically few centimeters. The deel has wide, cup-shaped sleeves nicknamed "hooves", which protect the hands from the cold and from injures while doing hard work. There are basically three types of deels, each worn during a particular season. The Dan Deel is made of light, thinks bright materials and is worn by women during the late spring and summer. The Terleg is a slightly more padded version worn by both men and women. The winter deel is serious, padded tunic lined with sheep skin, or layers of row cotton.
Etichete:
AS - ASIA,
AS-Mongolia,
MONGOLIA
Locaţia:
Mongolia
August 28, 2015
1857 MONGOLIA - The Nine Base White Banners
The state banner flown by the Mongols, the "Yöson Khölt tsagaan tug" or the "Nine Base White Banners", is composed of nine flag poles decorated with the tail hair of 1000 white stallions from all over the country, hanging from a round surface with a flame or trident-like shape on the top. It was a peacetime emblem used exclusively by the Khans in front of their yurt, while a black banner was for wartime. The central banner is larger in size than the rest and is placed in the center of the other eight. The modern Mongolian Nine White banners are kept in the Government Palace in Ulaanbaatar.
Etichete:
AS - ASIA,
AS-Mongolia,
Maps & flags,
MONGOLIA
Locaţia:
Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
June 6, 2015
1633 MONGOLIA - Kids
Throughout the Mongolian countryside, the population is mostly nomadic, living in a type of transportable home known as an yurt. About 46% of the population of the country practices nomadic pastoralism, an economy that is ideally suited to the landscape and climate of Mongolia and one that has persisted at least since the Bronze Age. According to ancient tradition, the Mongolians refer to their five major groups of livestock as the five "snouts": sheep, goats, cattle, horses, and camels. Interestingly, the ratios of the five major types of livestock have remained essentially the same since the 13th century. Mongolians have always maintained very close ties to the land and their animals.
Etichete:
AS - ASIA,
AS-Mongolia,
Fauna,
MONGOLIA
Locaţia:
Mongolia
December 26, 2014
1379 MONGOLIA - Tsaatan people
The Tsaatan (named also Dukha, Dukhans or Duhalar) are a small Tuvan (Tozhu Tuvans) Turkic community of reindeer herders living in northern Mongolia. The North Taiga band was organized under the Qing Dynasty as part of Uriyankhai banner. With Mongolian independence in 1911, the banner became part of independent Tuva, which was annexed by the Russians in 1944, leaving only North Taiga band on the Mongolian side of the frontier. The South Taiga group of the Tsaatan and other Uriankhais fled over the frontier from Tuva to avoid conscription in the 1930s. At first, the Mongolian government repeatedly deported them back to Tuva, but in 1956 finally gave them citizenship and resettled them at Tsagaan Nuur Lake on the Shishigt River. Only 44 Tsaatan families remained, totaling somewhere between 200 and 400 people.
Etichete:
AS - ASIA,
AS-Mongolia,
Fauna,
MONGOLIA
Locaţia:
Chöwsgöl-Aimag, Mongolia
April 28, 2014
1071 MONGOLIA - A child jockey to a horse racing
Nowhere are horses more central to daily life than in Mongolia. Mongolia is known as the land of the horse, and Mongols have a reputation for being the best horsemen on Earth. Over the centuries, using chariots as well as mounted warriors, nomadic armies of Mongols struck south of the Great Wall and into the heart of Europe. The legendary thirteenth-century warrior Genghis Khan established an empire that extended from Hungary to Korea and from Siberia to Tibet. Known in Europe as “Hell’s Horsemen,” Mongols could ride up to 80 miles a day, across deserts and mountains considered - until the arrival of these mounted armies - to be impassable.
Etichete:
AS - ASIA,
AS-Mongolia,
MONGOLIA,
stamps (complete series)
Locaţia:
Mongolia
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