Results 51 to 60 of about 606 (143)

К СРАВНИТЕЛЬНОМУ ИЗУЧЕНИЮ АНТРОПОНИМОВ ЗАПАДНОМОНГОЛЬСКИХ НАРОДОВ

open access: yesOriental Studies, 2018
This article is dedicated to investigation of west-mongolian origins personal names in comparative study, revealing of peculiarities of function, which use in past and present in language.
Alexander Borlaevich Lidzhiev
doaj  

Xinjiang Oirat Version of the Jangar and Its Epic Images: Means of Artistic Expression

open access: yesOriental Studies, 2020
Introduction. The study of stylistic features inherent to national epic narratives is one of the most relevant areas of modern folklore research. Of particular research interest ― in terms of identifying distinctive and typological features of the ...
Tsagana B. Seleeva
doaj   +1 more source

Bembya Mitruev, about Oirat influence on Buddhism

open access: yes, 2019
Bembya says the following: Among Oirats there were many Buddhist scholars who produced works, but, these works were not as widely used as those written by eastern Mongols.

core   +1 more source

Oirat Manuscripts in the Cabinet for Collecting, Cataloguing and Publishing Old Books of Ethnic Minorities in Ürümqi (Part One) [PDF]

open access: yes, 2021
The authors of this article present a summary of the unpublished catalogue of Oirat manuscripts and xylographs preserved at the Cabinet for Collecting, Cataloguing and Publishing Old Books of Ethnic Minorities, the National Affairs Committee of the ...
Aoqier, Alateng   +3 more
core   +1 more source

‘The Story of Usun Debeskertu Khan’: Didactic Essentials

open access: yesМонголоведение, 2019
The Story of Usun Debeskertu Khan is a most famous Oirat (Kalmyk) Clear Script literary composition. The text consists of homilies delivered by Tibetan King Tri Palpachen and his sixteen senior executives.
Baazr A. Bicheev
doaj   +1 more source

Buddhist terminology of Tsongkhapa’s Lamrim: Tibetan original and Oirat translation (to the statement of the problem)

open access: yes, 2023
In all traditions of Tibetan Buddhism, there are texts of the “Lamrim” class, but the most famous texts are rightfully considered to be those written by the founder of the Tibetan Gelug Buddhist tradition, Je Tsongkhapa Lobsang Drakpa (Tib.
E. U. Omakaeva, G. B. Korneev
core   +1 more source

Buddha in the Mythological Tradition of the Oirats

open access: yesМонголоведение (Монгол судлал)
Introduction. The article is devoted to the study of the religious and mythological tradition of the Oirats, which underlies their ethnic worldview. The purpose of the study is to identify the relationship of different stages in the structure of archaic myths that appeared after the Oirats adopted the Buddhism. Materials and methods.
Baazr A. Bicheev, Urnukhdelger Dashzeveg
openaire   +2 more sources

REVIVING TRADITION: OIRAT SILVER CRAFTSMANSHIP IN BAYANGOL

open access: yes
This video features an Oirat silver craftsman in Khoshut County, Bayangol. Tsedenbal, born into a Khoshut family in Bayangol, has been working on silver crafting for many years and recently improved his skills in Inner Mongolia.

core   +1 more source

Öriyin Сolmon (‘Morning Star’) Journal: Contemporary Literature and Folklore of Xinjiang Oirats

open access: yesМонголоведение, 2020
Introduction. Newspapers and journals that published works of first national writers played a significant role in the formation of modern Xinjiang Oirat literature. The earliest attempts Xinjiang Oirats to establish a national newspaper — Ili Kundan Keln
Bayindalai Batan
doaj   +1 more source

‘The Mirror of Menge’: One Oirat Manuscripts from the Aldan Maadyr National Museum of the Tyva Republic Revisited

open access: yesМонголоведение, 2019
Goals. The article introduces into scientific circulation an Oirat-language text dealing with astrological practices and housed by the Aldan Maadyr National Museum of the Tyva Republic. M aterials.
Bembya L. Mitruev
doaj   +1 more source

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