Abstract

This article gives an overview of the three-hundred-year history of one ofthe largest Mongolian monasteries. During the Manchu period (1691–1911)and the sovereignty of the Mongols (1911–1921), it was the residence of theSain Noyon Khans, the rulers of Sain Noyon Khan Aimag. Although writtensources contain inconsistent data about its foundation, development, and thenames of its temples, the reminiscences of three old monks lively illustratethe life in the monastery and its vicinity before the destruction of the monastery. The monastery had various types of temples and schools, moreover,it was the headquarter of the Sain Noyon Khan himself. A local reincarnation and a Tibetan master resided there permanently, and the ThirteenthDalai Lama also visited it in 1906. The monastery was totally destroyed in1937–1938, but after the democratic changes old monks rebuilt a temple in1990, and started to educate the new generations of monks. The area is richin gold, thus the usual task of the monks is to pacify the local spirits. Manyof the statements of the article derive from the results of the ‘Documentationof Mongolian Monasteries Project’, taking place in 2007, which aimed atdocumenting all monasteries that ever existed in Mongolia.

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