The Awards of Mongolia: a Survey in a Broad Historical Context

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Awards of Mongolia: a Survey in a Broad Historical Context THE AWARDS OF MONGOLIA: A SURVEY IN A BROAD HISTORICAL CONTEXT ED HAYNES The geography of Mongolia has conditioned much of with the intent of, as the slogan of the day put it, “leaping its history: it is small, underdeveloped, landlocked, and from feudalism to socialism” (i.e. skipping capitalism). often considered an obscure country located between Throughout the 20th century, especially as the threat of two giants, Russia/the Soviet Union and China. Clearly, rising Japanese militarism and expansionism became if Mongolia was to survive as an independent political increasingly clear, relations between Mongolia and the entity, it needed to find a basis for friendship with one of Soviet Union became closer. The fact that Mongolia these neighbors which would protect it from the ambitions avoided absorption is a minor miracle and Mongolia of the other. At the beginning of the 20th Century, China remained independent, though closely allied. These was collapsing but still held onto the firm policy that close relations were reflected in Mongolia’s phaleristic Mongolia was a part of China. While Russia was far from development as much as in political and economic healthy, it seemed to be willing to extend a more benign spheres. While there is a close parallelism in the hand of friendship to the first generation of Mongolian underlying system, the Mongolian designs were separate nationalists. and distinct and the specimens presented below should reinforce that point. Many of the higher Mongolian To cement these relations, the Order of the Vajra awards were also manufactured in the Soviet Union. (sometimes translated as the “Order of the Precious Rod”) was created for Mongolian nobility and foreign As restructuring proceeded in the Soviet Union in the (almost entirely Russian) friends. The order had a 1980s, Mongolia underwent a similar process. By 1990, complex structure, with three classes and twelve grades the Mongolian People’s Revolutionary Party began to within these classes. For example, the badge of the third loosen its control over the Mongolian State and society, class, fourth grade is shown in Figure 1. The order was and in July 1990 the first multi-party elections were abolished after the revolution in Mongolia. With the held. In February 1992 the name of the country was Russian Revolution of 1917 the situation became clearer changed from the Mongolian People’s Republic to simply for her southern neighbor, and in 1921 Mongolia became Mongolia. Unlike the situation during the transition from the second country to launch a socialist transformation the Soviet Union back to Russia, the older Mongolian awards were not abolished and continue to be awarded to this day, though a restructuring is often discussed. TITLES Titles had a long and rich history in Mongolia, dating back at least to the time of Chengis Khan (13th century C.E.). For example, the title of Baatar or “Hero” was traditionally awarded to great warriors and military leaders. The relocation of this practice into a Soviet-style system of titles was, therefore, comparatively simple. In 1936, the new Mongolian state had formally enshrined the award of the title “Hero” by law, though it would be four more years before it would be represented by any medal. In 1941 the Hero of Mongolia “Badge of the Hero” (Figure 2) (though this specimen has unfortunate repairs that look far worse in the scan than in reality) was established. This first variety was only awarded six times before it was replaced with a second variety, more “Soviet” in design, in 1946. In 1956 the Hero of Labor Gold Soyombo Medal (Figure 3) was added to the Figure 1: The obverse (left) and reverse of the Third Class, Fourth Mongolian awards system. While there is no equivalent Grade of the Order of the Vajra. 26 JOMSA Figure 2: The badge of a Hero of Mongolia. Figure 4: The People’s Title. so that Brezhnev could be awarded something new that no one had ever gotten before (and that he didn’t already have). ORDERS AND MEDALS Figure 3: The Badge of a Hero of Labor. motherhood award, there is a motherhood order and it is discussed below. Figure 5: The Sukhbaatar Order. There are also series of titles and prizes mostly awarded Roughly paralleling the Soviet awards system, Mongolia for cultural achievements, for example the Choibalsan possesses a series of orders and medals. The highest Prize (1945, renamed as the State Prize in 1962), the title award until 2005, the Sukhbaatar Order (Figure 5) of “People’s ___” awarded in a range of areas such as commemorates the founder of the modern Mongolian performing arts and teaching (from 1941)(Figure 4), and a State, much as the Order of Lenin does in the Soviet separate prize for writers, the D. Natsadorj Literary Prize. Union. Created in 1945, it recalls the founder of the nation, Damdin Sükhbaatar (1893-1923). Military A unique title, the Honorary Freeman of the Mongolian gallantry and achievement is recognized by the Order of People’s Republic Golden Star Medal, was created the Red Banner of Military Valor (Figure 6) created in for award to the Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev to 1926; this example, the second variety, was awarded from commemorate his visit to Mongolia in 1974. It has never 1940-45. Subsequent awards are indicated by the addition been awarded since and was, in essence, a one-time award of the number 2, 3, or 4 in the lower area of the badge. Vol. 66, No. 1 (January-February 2015) 27 these awards. As a predominately nomadic society with traditionally low levels of nutrition and sanitation, population growth was important to the Mongolian State. In 1957 the Order of Mother Heroine was created in two classes, the first class being awarded for giving birth to eight children (Figure 9) and the second class for five children. Figure 6: The Order of the Red Banner of Labor Valor. Figure 9: The Order of Mother Heroine, 1st Class. After the democratic transformation, new orders were Figure 7: The Order of Combat Merit. created. In 2002 the Order of Chengis Khan was created in three classes, but to date only the highest class has Labor achievement is recognized by the Order of the been awarded, ex officio to the Mongolian president. In Red Banner of Labor Valor, also established in 1926. A 1991, the older Order of the Vajra was recreated. It had lesser degree of military achievement is rewarded with been abolished with the revolution and was resurrected the Order of Combat Merit (Figure 7) established in 1945. as a diplomatic award for non-Mongolians (for example, General state service, both civilian and military, receives President Ferenc Mádl of Hungary and United States the Order of the Polar Star (Figure 8) (this is the 1940-41 Secretary of State James Baker have been among the type). From 1947 to 1959, these high State orders were recipients of this order). also awarded to reward military and civilian long service. This was patterned on Soviet practice of the same time and, in the eyes of many, served to cheapen the value of Figure 10: The Honorary Medal of Figure 8: The Order of the Polar Star. Combat. 28 JOMSA.
Recommended publications
  • Penalties and Rewards in Soviet Law
    Washington Law Review Volume 25 Number 2 5-1-1950 Penalties and Rewards in Soviet Law George C. Guins Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/wlr Part of the Comparative and Foreign Law Commons Recommended Citation George C. Guins, Far Eastern Section, Penalties and Rewards in Soviet Law, 25 Wash. L. Rev. & St. B.J. 206 (1950). Available at: https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/wlr/vol25/iss2/6 This Far Eastern Section is brought to you for free and open access by the Law Reviews and Journals at UW Law Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Washington Law Review by an authorized editor of UW Law Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. FAR EASTERN SECTION PENALTIES AND REWARDS IN SOVIET LAW GEORGE C. GUINS* T HE SOVIET system and practice of penalties and rewards have sev- eral peculiarities which are undoubtedly bound up with Soviet socialism. Long before the Revolution of 1917, the eminent Russian scholar L. J. Petrazicki pointed out that with a transition to socialism there would be greater emphasis on the system of compulsion and rewards.' When the government becomes the supreme monopolist and arbitrator of all earnings and prices, when the livelihood of all its citizens is placed in direct dependence on the state, the stimuli of acquisition, gain, and risk lose their power. The incentive to work is derived from disin- terested devotion to national and humanitarian causes, or from antici- pation of favors from the powers that be. Lofty ideals and altruistic psychological motives are, however, not common among the masses.
    [Show full text]
  • A Sentinal Appeared Carrying One of Goering's Fine Leather Cases. 'I
    A sentinal appeared carrying one of Goering’s fine leather cases. ’I felt you should see this, sir.’ He opened it to reveal the big- gest collection of pills I had ever seen in my life. There were approximately twenty thousand pills in the case that Goering claimed were for a heart ailment. He would take them by the handfull, 20 in the morning and 20 at night. They were Paracodin a German syn- thetic drug used when morphine was not available. Also found among his clothes and personal effects were several ’tiny vials of Potas- sium Cyanide’. Examined each vial had enough cyanide to bring in- stant death to a dozen men. One of these vials, Goering managed to keep concealed for over a year until he committed "suicide with it only hours before he was to be hanged. "As well as his ’secret weapons’, Herr Goering’s valuables listed on the inventory and deposited under lock and key in the Gun room, were: 1 gold Luftwaffe badge; 1 gold Luftwaffe badge with diamonds; 1 deskwatch; 1 travelling clock by Movado; I large personal toilet case; 1 gold cigarette case, inlaid with amethyst and monogrammed by Prince Paul of Yugoslavia; 1 silver pill-box; 1 gold and velvet cigar-case; 1 square watch by Cartier, set with diamonds; 1 gold chain, gold pencil and cutter; 3 keys; 1 emerald ring; 1 diamond ring; 1 ruby ring; 1 semi-precious buttons; 1 small eagle with di- amond chips; 1 diamond A/C brooch; 4 cuff-links with semi-precious stones; 1 gold pin (evergreen twig); 1 pearl stick-pin; 1 gold stick- pin with swastika of diamond chips; 1 watch fob (platinum,
    [Show full text]
  • Tax Code of the Republic of Kazakhstan, Dated 12 June 2001
    TAX CODE OF THE REPUBLIC OF KAZAKHSTAN June 12, 2001 Table of Contents PART I. GENERAL ....................................................................................................... 20 SECTION 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS ......................................................................... 20 CHAPTER 1. General Provisions ................................................................................. 20 Article 1. Relations regulated by the Tax Code ........................................................ 20 Article 2. Tax legislation of the Republic of Kazakhstan ......................................... 20 Article 3. Jurisdiction of tax legislation .................................................................... 20 Article 4. Principles of Taxation in the Republic of Kazakhstan ............................. 20 Article 5. The Principle of Obligation of Taxation ................................................... 20 Article 6. The Principle of Certainty of Taxation ..................................................... 21 Article 7. Equity Principle of Taxation ..................................................................... 21 Article 8. The Unity Principle of Tax System .......................................................... 21 Article 9. The Publicity Principle of Tax Legislation ............................................... 21 Article 10. Definitions ......................................................................................... 21 CHAPTER 2. Rights and obligations of a taxpayer and a tax agent. Representation
    [Show full text]
  • "From Ter-Petrosian to Kocharian: Leadership Change in Armenia
    UC Berkeley Recent Work Title From Ter-Petrosian to Kocharian: Leadership Change in Armenia Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0c2794v4 Author Astourian, Stephan H. Publication Date 2000 eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California University of California, Berkeley FROM TER-PETROSIAN TO KOCHARIAN: LEADERSHIP CHANGE IN ARMENIA Stephan H. Astourian Berkeley Program in Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies Working Paper Series This PDF document preserves the page numbering of the printed version for accuracy of citation. When viewed with Acrobat Reader, the printed page numbers will not correspond with the electronic numbering. The Berkeley Program in Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies (BPS) is a leading center for graduate training on the Soviet Union and its successor states in the United States. Founded in 1983 as part of a nationwide effort to reinvigorate the field, BPSs mission has been to train a new cohort of scholars and professionals in both cross-disciplinary social science methodology and theory as well as the history, languages, and cultures of the former Soviet Union; to carry out an innovative program of scholarly research and publication on the Soviet Union and its successor states; and to undertake an active public outreach program for the local community, other national and international academic centers, and the U.S. and other governments. Berkeley Program in Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies University of California, Berkeley Institute of Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 260 Stephens Hall #2304 Berkeley, California 94720-2304 Tel: (510) 643-6737 [email protected] http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~bsp/ FROM TER-PETROSIAN TO KOCHARIAN: LEADERSHIP CHANGE IN ARMENIA Stephan H.
    [Show full text]
  • Bodies That Matter”
    ★ 1 IntroduCtIon “Bodies that Matter” “Andrei! Don’t you recognize me?” whispered Meres’ev, feeling that he was beginning to tremble all over. Andrei looked for another instant at the living skeleton covered with dark, seemingly charred skin, trying to discern the merry features of his friend, and only in his eyes, enormous and almost quite round, did he catch the frank and determined Meres’ev expression that was familiar to him . —Boris Polevoi, A Story About a Real Man, 1947 What does the socialist realist hero look like? Is he strong and healthy, handsome and virile, broad shouldered and square chinned? Is he “stern,” “determined,” “shiny-eyed,” and “proud”?1 Or does he resemble a “living skeleton covered with dark, seemingly charred skin”?2 How do we begin to make sense of this double image that works like a double exposure, the one body overlaid on the other, the healthy and happy Soviet man obscur- ing the skeletal remains of this second fantasy, this “other scene” taking place in the unconscious? Fedor Gladkov’s 1925 novel Tsement (Cement), opens with Gleb Chumalov’s return home from the front to find his house empty, his wife distant, and the factory that was the heart and soul of the town aban- doned. Furious, Gleb speaks to the recalcitrant and backward Worker’s Club “Comintern,” and when words fail, he “tore off his tunic and his soiled shirt and flung them on the floor,” revealing his naked body, “knot- ted and scarred.” This wounded body appears precisely at the moment © 2008 University of Pittsburgh Press.
    [Show full text]
  • Mikhail Gorbachev's Speech in Murmansk at the Ceremonial Meeting on the Occasion of the Presentation of the Order of Lenin and the Gold Star to the City of Murmansk
    MIKHAIL GORBACHEV'S SPEECH IN MURMANSK AT THE CEREMONIAL MEETING ON THE OCCASION OF THE PRESENTATION OF THE ORDER OF LENIN AND THE GOLD STAR TO THE CITY OF MURMANSK Murmansk, 1 Oct. 1987 Indeed, the international situation is still complicated. The dangers to which we have no right to turn a blind eye remain. There has been some change, however, or, at least, change is starting. Certainly, judging the situation only from the speeches made by top Western leaders, including their "programme" statements, everything would seem to be as it was before: the same anti-Soviet attacks, the same demands that we show our commitment to peace by renouncing our order and principles, the same confrontational language: "totalitarianism", "communist expansion", and so on. Within a few days, however, these speeches are often forgotten, and, at any rate, the theses contained in them do not figure during businesslike political negotiations and contacts. This is a very interesting point, an interesting phenomenon. It confirms that we are dealing with yesterday's rhetoric, while real- life processes have been set into motion. This means that something is indeed changing. One of the elements of the change is that it is now difficult to convince people that our foreign policy, our initiatives, our nuclear-free world programme are mere "propaganda". A new, democratic philosophy of international relations, of world politics is breaking through. The new mode of thinking with its humane, universal criteria and values is penetrating diverse strata. Its strength lies in the fact that it accords with people's common sense.
    [Show full text]
  • I Am Falling Behind the Happenings
    The Diary of Anatoly S. Chernyaev 1985 Donated by A.S. Chernyaev to The National Security Archive Translated by Anna Melyakova Edited by Svetlana Savranskaya http://www.nsarchive.org Translation © The National Security Archive, 2006 The Diary of Anatoly S. Chernyaev, 1985 http://www.nsarchive.org January 4th, 1985. I am falling behind the events. And they are bustling. Before the New Year’s I was distressed for Ponomarev:1 Kosolapov asked for permission to print in Communist the conclusion we wrote for B.N. [Ponomarev] for the eight-volume International Labor Movement. In response, he received instructions from Zimyanin2 to remove the footnote that it was the conclusion—let it, he says, be just an article... This is how Zimyanin now gives orders to B.N., being lower in rank than him! But something else is the most important—he reflects the “opinion” that it is not necessary to establish the connection (for many decades into the future) between Ponomarev and this fundamental publication in an official Party organ... That is, they are preparing our B.N. for the hearse. I think he will not survive the XXYII Congress; in any case not as CC [Central Committee] Secretary. At work, almost every day brings evidence of his helplessness. His main concern right now is to vindicate at least something of his self-imagined “halo” of the creator of the third (1961) Party Program. In no way can he reconcile himself to the fact that life has torn “his creation” to pieces. He blames everything on the intrigues of either Gorbachev3 or Chernenko4; but mainly on “the curly one” (this is how he calls Chernenko’s assistant Pechenev); and also in part on Aleksandrov5 and Zagladin.6 He complains to me, seeking in me somebody to talk to, a sympathizer.
    [Show full text]
  • ¡Patria O Muerte!: José Martí, Fidel Castro, and the Path to Cuban Communism
    ¡Patria o Muerte!: José Martí, Fidel Castro, and the Path to Cuban Communism A Thesis By: Brett Stokes Department: History To be defended: April 10, 2013 Primary Thesis Advisor: Robert Ferry, History Department Honors Council Representative: John Willis, History Outside Reader: Andy Baker, Political Science 1 Acknowledgements I would like to thank all those who assisted me in the process of writing this thesis: Professor Robert Ferry, for taking the time to help me with my writing and offer me valuable criticism for the duration of my project. Professor John Willis, for assisting me in developing my topic and for showing me the fundamentals of undertaking such a project. My parents, Bruce and Sharon Stokes, for reading and critiquing my writing along the way. My friends and loved-ones, who have offered me their support and continued encouragement in completing my thesis. 2 Contents Abstract 3 Introduction 4 CHAPTER ONE: Martí and the Historical Roots of the Cuban Revolution, 1895-1952 12 CHAPTER TWO: Revolution, Falling Out, and Change in Course, 1952-1959 34 CHAPTER THREE: Consolidating a Martían Communism, 1959-1962 71 Concluding Remarks 88 Bibliography 91 3 Abstract What prompted Fidel Castro to choose a communist path for the Cuban Revolution? There is no way to know for sure what the cause of Castro’s decision to state the Marxist nature of the revolution was. However, we can know the factors that contributed to this ideological shift. This thesis will argue that the decision to radicalize the revolution and develop a relationship with the Cuban communists was the only logical choice available to Castro in order to fulfill Jose Marti’s, Cuba’s nationalist hero, vision of an independent Cuba.
    [Show full text]
  • "The Road to the Stars Is Paved by the Communists!": Soviet Propaganda and the Hero-Myth of Iurii Gagarin
    "The Road to the Stars is Paved by the Communists!": Soviet Propaganda and the Hero-Myth of Iurii Gagarin Trevor Rockwell B.A., University of Victoria, 2003 A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS in the Department of History O Trevor Sean Rockwell, 2005 All rights reserved. This thesis may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without the permission of the author. Supervisor: Dr. Serhy Y ekelchyk ABSTRACT This thesis addresses Soviet propaganda of the world's first cosmonaut, Iurii Gagarin, and the first-manned space flight, Vostok 1, which took place on April 12, 1961. This thesis compares official Soviet biographies of Gagarin's life and Communist Party resolutions of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Key documents include Gagarin's autobiography The Road to the Stars (1961), and the Third Party Program of 1961. It concludes that the Gagarin propaganda closely corresponded to Party directives. In doing so, this thesis analyzes the key themes of the propaganda and suggests how the propaganda was used to legitimize the regime of Nikita Khrushchev. Supervisor: Dr. Serhy Yekelchyk (Department of History) TABLE OF CONTENTS Abstract Table of Contents Introduction: Space Age Histories Chapter One: The Agitprop Apparatus Chapter Two: The General Line Chapter Three: Our Gagarin Chapter Four: The Road to the Stars Chapter Five: The Molding of the Rising Generation Conclusion: Immortal Gagarin Bibliography INTRODUCTION: SPACE AGE HISTORIES To put the first man in space was a highly symbolic technological milestone. Well aware of the propaganda benefits to be derived from such a feat, the USSR and the USA were, in 1961, racing to be the first.
    [Show full text]
  • General Assembly Security Council Seventy-Fifth Session Seventy-Fifth Year Agenda Items 35, 40, 70, 71, 72, 86 and 114
    United Nations A/75/625–S/2020/1161 General Assembly Distr.: General 4 December 2020 Security Council Original: English General Assembly Security Council Seventy-fifth session Seventy-fifth year Agenda items 35, 40, 70, 71, 72, 86 and 114 Protracted conflicts in the GUAM area and their implications for international peace, security and development The situation in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan Elimination of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance Right of peoples to self-determination Promotion and protection of human rights The rule of law at the national and international levels Measures to eliminate international terrorism Letter dated 18 November 2020 from the Permanent Representative of Azerbaijan to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General Further to my letter dated 5 October 2020 (A/75/497–S/2020/982), I hereby transmit the report on the use of foreign terrorist fighters by the Republic of Armenia in its recent aggression against the Republic of Azerbaijan (see annex).* Additional photo evidence and the list of foreign nationals involved in Armenian forces and terrorist groups unlawfully deployed in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan are available from the Permanent Mission of Azerbaijan upon request. I should be grateful if you would have the present letter and its annex circulated as a document of the General Assembly, under agenda items 35, 40, 70, 71, 72, 86 and 114, and of the Security Council. (Signed) Yashar Aliyev Ambassador Permanent Representative * Circulated in the
    [Show full text]
  • Hungary and the Holocaust Confrontation with the Past
    UNITED STATES HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL MUSEUM CENTER FOR ADVANCED HOLOCAUST STUDIES Hungary and the Holocaust Confrontation with the Past Symposium Proceedings W A S H I N G T O N , D. C. Hungary and the Holocaust Confrontation with the Past Symposium Proceedings CENTER FOR ADVANCED HOLOCAUST STUDIES UNITED STATES HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL MUSEUM 2001 The assertions, opinions, and conclusions in this occasional paper are those of the authors. They do not necessarily reflect those of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council or of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Third printing, March 2004 Copyright © 2001 by Rabbi Laszlo Berkowits, assigned to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Copyright © 2001 by Randolph L. Braham, assigned to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Copyright © 2001 by Tim Cole, assigned to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Copyright © 2001 by István Deák, assigned to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Copyright © 2001 by Eva Hevesi Ehrlich, assigned to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Copyright © 2001 by Charles Fenyvesi; Copyright © 2001 by Paul Hanebrink, assigned to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Copyright © 2001 by Albert Lichtmann, assigned to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Copyright © 2001 by George S. Pick, assigned to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum In Charles Fenyvesi's contribution “The World that Was Lost,” four stanzas from Czeslaw Milosz's poem “Dedication” are reprinted with the permission of the author. Contents
    [Show full text]
  • Diplomatic Relations Between Russia, China and Mongolia: the Creation of the Mongolian People's Republic, 1881-1924
    Western Oregon University Digital Commons@WOU Student Theses, Papers and Projects (History) Department of History 6-12-2020 Diplomatic Relations between Russia, China and Mongolia: The Creation of the Mongolian People's Republic, 1881-1924 Jeffery Pittsenbarger Western Oregon University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.wou.edu/his Part of the Asian History Commons, Diplomatic History Commons, and the Political History Commons Recommended Citation Pittsenbarger, Jeffery, "Diplomatic Relations between Russia, China and Mongolia: The Creation of the Mongolian People's Republic, 1881-1924" (2020). Student Theses, Papers and Projects (History). 278. https://digitalcommons.wou.edu/his/278 This Paper is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of History at Digital Commons@WOU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Student Theses, Papers and Projects (History) by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@WOU. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]. Diplomatic Relations between Russia, China and Mongolia: The Creation of the Mongolian People's Republic, 1881-1924 Jeffery Pittsenbarger History 499: Senior Seminar Dr. David Doellinger Dr. Elizabeth Swedo June 5, 2020 1 Abstract Beginning with an agreement between China and Russia in 1881, Mongolia was faced with a series of unfair treaties that prevented them from becoming independent from China. This thesis examines the agreements and treaties made between China, Russia and Mongolia between 1881 and 1924 to illustrate how the Mongolian People’s Republic formed as a direct result of unfavorable diplomatic relations between the three nations.
    [Show full text]