Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Erenhot (Mongolian: ᠡᠷᠢᠶᠡᠡ ᠬᠣᠲᠠ Эрээн хот; Chinese: 二连浩特; pinyin: Èrliánhàotè, commonly shortened to Ereen or Erlian) is a county-level city under jurisdiction of the Xilingol League, Inner Mongolia, China, located in the Gobi Desert along the Sino-Mongolian border, across from the Mongolian town of Zamyn-Üüd.
The value of coal exports from Mongolia jumped to $4.5 billion in the first 9 months of 2022. [4] Significant price discrepancies between coking coal sold in Mongolia (~$70 per ton), China (~$140 a ton) and the international market (~$300 per ton) are the main source of the alleged wrongdoing.
Nevertheless, at the insistence of the Comintern representative, Soviet-Kazakhstan political figure T. R. Ryskulov, who previously had no connection to Mongolia, the city was named Ulan Bator Khoto ("City of the Red Hero"). [citation needed] After the vote, he gave a speech: Genghis Khan was a national hero, but he was a conqueror.
Hohhot, [a] formerly known as Kweisui, [b] is the capital of Inner Mongolia in the north of the People's Republic of China, [5] [6] serving as the region's administrative, economic and cultural center. [7]
A new expanded road border crossing was also completed in 2013 to relieve delays in crossing from China to Mongolia. [6] The "Zamyn-Uud" Free Economic Zone was officially created in 2004. It has an area of 900 ha and is located between Zamyn-Üüd settlement and the Chinese border. [7]
Ergun (Chinese: 额尔古纳市; Mongolian: ᠡᠷᠬᠥᠨ ᠠ ᠬᠣᠲᠠ), formerly Ergun Right Banner (Chinese: 额尔古纳右旗), is a county-level city in Hulunbuir, Inner Mongolia, containing the autonomous region's northernmost point.
Montsame (Mongolian: МОНЦАМЭ, [mɔnt͡sɑmɛ]) is the official state-owned news agency of Mongolia. Montsame is an acronym for Mongolyn Tsakhilgaan Medee (Mongolian: Монголын Цахилгаан Мэдээ, lit. 'Mongolian Electronic News'). It was founded in 1921. [1]
Bars-Hot or Kherlen Bars (Mongolian: Хэрлэн Барс) was a city built by the Khitan people in the basin of the Kherlen River in Eastern Mongolia. [1] During the Liao dynasty it was called Hedong City (Chinese: 河董城). It occupied an area of 1.6 by 1.8 kilometres and was surrounded with mud walls, which are today 4 metres thick and 1. ...