One of the characteristic artefacts of the material culture of Medieval Mongols is a folding chair. The Mongols used chairs with legs that were easy to fold and carry. It was a product adapted to the nomadic lifestyle. It was used differently by the nobles and wealthy people. The chairs can be seen in Medieval Mongolian stone statues and Persian miniature paintings that depicted the Mongols. Also, a folding chair was found from the Tavan Tolgoi site of Ongon soum, Sukhbaatar province, Mongolia. During the Mongol Empire, this chair was specially made from wood called “huanghuali” (Dalbergia odorifera, fragrant rosewood or Chinese rosewood). Such a wooden chair, made during the Ming Dynasty of China, has been preserved until the present. It can be said that this chair bears an influence of the Mongol Empire. A record written by Zhao Hong, an ambassador from the Southern Song Dynasty who came to Mongolia in the 13th century, says that Genghis Khan sits in a folding armchair with golden dragon. It also states that his general Mukhali used an armchair with silver dragon. The archeological monument depicting a dragon in the Mongolian folding chair is housed in the museum of Dundgobi province, Mongolia. Around Shangdu, the upper capital of the Yuan Dynasty, there are stone statues from the Mongol Empire. These statues also appear to have armchairs with such dragons. Unfortunately, the part of the core with the dragon was deliberately broken and damaged. The dragon was not only a Chinese symbol but also of kings and nobles in the East, including the Mongols. The “iseri” armchairs of the Mongols were later adopted by Ming and Jin dynasties, as well as other states in Asia, some with editions and some directly.