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  2. Religion in Mongolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_in_Mongolia

    Religion in Mongolia has been traditionally dominated by the schools of Mongolian Buddhism and by Mongolian shamanism, the ethnic religion of the Mongols. Historically, through their Mongol Empire the Mongols were exposed to the influences of Christianity ( Nestorianism and Catholicism ) and Islam , although these religions never came to dominate.

  3. Mongolian shamanism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongolian_shamanism

    Mongolian shamanism, known as the Böö Mörgöl (Бөө мөргөл [pɵː ˈmɵrkʊ̆ɬ]) in Mongolian and more broadly called the Mongolian folk religion [1] or occasionally Tengerism, [2] [note 2] refers to the animistic and shamanic ethnic religion that has been practiced in Mongolia and its surrounding areas (including Buryatia and Inner Mongolia) at least since the age of recorded history.

  4. Religion in the Mongol Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_in_the_Mongol_Empire

    The Mongols' passion for religious tolerance appealed to writers of the eighteenth century. "The Catholic inquisitors of Europe", wrote Edward Gibbon in a celebrated passage, "who defended nonsense by cruelty, might have been confounded by the example of a barbarian, who anticipated the lessons of philosophy and established by his laws a system ...

  5. Culture of Mongolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Mongolia

    The culture of Mongolia has been shaped by the country's nomadic tradition and its position at the crossroads of various empires and civilizations. Mongolian culture is influenced by the cultures of the Mongolic , Turkic , and East Asian peoples, as well as by the country's geography and its history of political and economic interactions with ...

  6. Mongol mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongol_mythology

    Tung-ak is the patron god of tribal chiefs and the ruler of the lesser spirits of Mongol mythology Erlik Khan is the King of the Underworld. Daichi Tengri is the red god of war to whom enemy soldiers were sometimes sacrificed during battle campaigns.

  7. Buddhism in Mongolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhism_in_Mongolia

    The party apparently thought that Buddhism no longer posed a challenge to its dominance and that—because Buddhism had played so large a part in the history of Mongolia and traditional arts and culture, total extirpation of knowledge about the religion and its practices would cut modern Mongols off from much of their past to the detriment of ...

  8. Tengrism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tengrism

    Tengrism formed from the various Turkic and Mongolic folk religions, which had a diverse number of deities, spirits and gods. Turkic folk religion was based on Animism and similar to various other religious traditions of Siberia, Central Asia and Northeast Asia. Ancestor worship played an important part in Tengrism. [44]

  9. Khotons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khotons

    According to local tradition, the ancestors of the Khotons arrived in the area in the late 17th century as merchants and eventually settled and assimilated with the Alasha Mongols. [4] Occasional later migrants from Xinjiang and some Hui from nearby regions who were incorporated into the Khotons helped to maintain and increase their community ...