'Ulan Bator', or 'Ulaanbaatar' (, Classical Mongolian: [Ulaan Baatur]), is the
capital of
Mongolia.
Ulan Bator has had numerous names in its history. From 1639–
1706, it was known as 'Örgöö' (
Mongolian: Өргөө, ''residence''), and from 1706–1911 as 'Ikh Khüree', 'Da Khüree' or simply 'Khüree' (Mongolian: Их = "great", Хүрээ = "camp"). Its Chinese name was 'Kulun' (). Upon independence in 1911, with both the secular government and the
Bogd Khan's palace present, the city's name changed to 'Niislel Khüree' (Mongolian: Нийслэл = "capital").
When the city became the capital of the new Mongolian People's Republic in 1924, its name was changed to 'Ulaanbaatar' ("red hero"), in honor of Mongolia's national hero
Damdin Sükhbaatar, whose warriors liberated Mongolia from
Ungern von Sternberg's troops and Chinese occupation shoulder-to-shoulder with the Soviet
Red Army. His statue still adorns Ulan Bator's central square.
In
Europe and
North America, Ulan Bator was generally known as 'Urga' (after the Russian form for ''Örgöö'') or sometimes Kuren before 1924, and Ulan Bator afterwards, after the . The Russian spelling is different from the Mongolian because it was defined phonetically, and the Cyrillic script was only introduced in Mongolia seventeen years later.
Geography
Ulan Bator is located at about 1350 meters (4430 feet) above sea level, slightly east of the center of Mongolia on the
Tuul River, a sub
tributary of the
Selenge, in a valley at the foot of the mountain
Bogd Khan Uul.
Due to its high elevation, relatively high latitude, and location hundreds of kilometres from any coast, Ulan Bator is the coldest national capital in the world, with a monsoon-influenced
subarctic climate (
Koppen climate classification ''Dwc'') with brief, warm summers and long, very cold and dry winters. It has an average annual temperature of -1.3°C (29.7°F). The city lies in the zone of
sporadic permafrost, which means that building is difficult in sheltered aspects that preclude thawing in the summer, but easier on more exposed ones where soils fully thaw. Suburban residents live in traditional
gers that do not protrude into the soil.
[2]

Average temperature and precipitation in Ulaanbaatar

The Academic Theatre of Drama in Ulaanbaatar

Traffic in Ulaanbaatar
History
Founded in
1639, Ulan Bator, then 'Örgöö' (Urga), was originally located at the lake Shireet Tsagaan nuur, around 400 km from the present Ulan Bator in
Övörkhangai Province, and was mainly intended to be the seat of the first
Jebtsundamba,
Zanabazar.
It was moved often to various places along the
Selenge,
Orkhon and
Tuul rivers until reaching its present location in the late 18th century, on the high road from
Beijing to
Kyakhta, about 700 miles northwest of Beijing and 165 miles south of the trading town of Kyakhta on the Russian frontier. It was the holy city of the Mongols and the residence of the "Living Buddha," metropolitan of the
Khalkha tribes, who ranked third in degree of veneration among the dignitaries of the lamaist clergy. This "resplendently divine lama" resided in a palace on the southern side of the town. The town prospered in the 1860s as a commercial center on the
tea route between Russia and China (early 20th-century trade was valued at over 1,000,000 dollars a year) and was the seat of the
Qing Amban (highest imperial official) in Mongolia, who controlled all temporal matters and was specially charged with the control of the frontier trade town of Kyakhta and its trade with Russia.
In 1904, on the occasion of the British expedition to Tibet, the
Dalai Lama withdrew from his Tibetan capital
Lhasa and went to Ikh Khüree (as it was named at the time), where he remained until 1908. During his residence there, the Dalai Lama would have no communication with the incumbent
Bogd Khan who was described as a "drunken profligate".
[3]
After Mongolia first proclaimed its
independence, upon the collapse of the Manchu Empire in
1911, the city became the capital of the new
Mongolian People's Republic in
1924 under its new name Ulaanbaatar.
Administration and Subdivisions
Ulan Bator is divided into nine districts (
Düüregs):
Baganuur,
Bagakhangai,
Bayangol,
Bayanzurkh,
Chingeltei,
Khan Uul,
Nalaikh,
Songino Khairkhan, and
Sühbaatar. Each district is subdivided into
Khoroos.
The capital is governed by a city council (the Citizen's Representatives Hural) with forty members, elected every four years. The city council appoints the mayor. The current mayor is
Tsogt Batbayar, who is also the governor of Central Province, i.e.
Töv Aimag, which surrounds the municipality of Ulaanbaatar.
Transportation
Interurban and international: Ulan Bator is served by the
Chinggis Khaan International Airport (formerly Buyant Ukhaa Airport) and is connected by road (mostly unpaved and unmarked) to most of the major towns in Mongolia. There are rail connections to the
Trans-Siberian railway via Naushki and to the Chinese railroad system via
Jining.
Intra-urban: The national and municipal governments regulate a wide system of private transit providers which operate numerous bus lines around the city. Many of these buses are antiquated Soviet vehicles, though Japan and Korea have recently donated and sold modern busses to the city. A secondary transit system of microbusses (passenger vans) operates alongside these bus lines and competes directly, though generally illegally. In the last few years the city licensed an increasing number of marked taxicabs. However, most drivers in the city offer unregulated and occasional (informal) taxicab service to anyone who signals them.
Costs: Bus fares are regulated at about 200 tugrig; microbusses charge about 400 tugrig; taxicab fares are metered. Informal taxicab rates are negotiated before services are rendered and were around 350 MNT/km in 2006.
Colleges and universities
Ulan Bator has five major universities: the
National University of Mongolia, Science and Technological University of Mongolia, University of Health and Medical Science, Pedagogical University, and University of Art and Culture. There are also private and public colleges. A historical
library contains a wealth of ancient Mongolian, Chinese, and
Tibetan manuscripts.
Description

Parliament building, Sühbaatar Square, July 2006
The city consists of a central district built in Soviet 1940s and 1950s-style architecture, surrounded by and mingled with residential concrete towerblocks and larger ger quarters. In recent years, a lot of the towerblock's ground floors have been modified and upgraded to small shops, and many new buildings have been erected, some of them illegally. Among the few pre-1920 buildings is the
Choijin Lama Monastery.
The main sites are:
★
Natural History Museum. Features many dinosaur fossils found in Mongolia.
★
National Museum of Mongolian History
★
Gandantegchinlen Khiid Monastery, with a 25-meter-high statue of
Migjid Janraisig
★ The
Bogd Khan's Winter Palace
★
Ulaanbaatar Opera House
★ The
Zaisan Memorial, a memorial to Russian soldiers killed in World War II, which sits on a hill south of the city. The Zaisan Memorial includes a Russian tank paid for by the Mongolian people and a circular memorial painting which depicts scenes of friendship between the peoples of Russia and Mongolia. Visitors who make the long climb to the top are rewarded with a panoramic view of the whole city down in the valley.
★
Sükhbaatar Square, in the government district. In the center of Sükhbaatar Square, there is a statue of
Damdin Sükhbaatar on horseback. On the north side of Sükhbaatar Square is the Mongolian Parliament building, featuring a large statue of
Chinggis Khan at the top of the front steps.
★
National Sports Stadium. The
Naadam festival is held here every July.
★
Gorkhi-Terelj National Park, a nature preserve with many tourist facilities, approximately 70 km from Ulan Bator.
Sister Cities
★
Tianjin,
People's Republic of China
★
Taipei,
Taiwan
★
Seoul,
South Korea
★
Denver, Colorado,
USA
★
Gold Coast, Queensland,
Australia
★
Miyakonojo, Miyazaki,
Japan
★
Leeds,
United Kingdom (according to a 2005
Calendar broadcast).
Embassies
Bulgaria,
China, the
Czech Republic,
France,
Germany,
Japan,
Laos,
Poland,
Russia,
Taiwan,
Turkey, the
United Kingdom, and the
United States all have embassies in Ulaanbaatar.
[4][5][6][7][8]
See also
Architecture of Mongolia
References
★
1. Mongol Messenger www.mongolmessenger.mn
2. geography.about.com coldcapital.html
3. ''The Chinese Empire'', ed. M. Broomhall, London, 1907, p. 357
4. http://www.embassiesabroad.com/embassies-in/Mongolia#1958
5. http://www.themoscowtimes.com/travel/facts/emb_abroad.html
6. http://www.mfa.government.bg/index.php?tid=49#art384
7. http://www.britishembassy.gov.uk/servlet/Front?pagename=OpenMarket/Xcelerate/ShowPage&c=Page&cid=1087554253488
8. http://www.msz.gov.pl/Polish,Missions,Abroad,2143.html
External links
★
City of Ulan Bator official site
★
City council of Ulaanbaatar official site
★
Mayor of Ulaanbaatar official site
★
"Urga or Da Khuree" from A. M. Pozdneyev's ''Mongolia and the Mongols''
★
Photos of Ulanbaataar with comments
★