MUSEUMS The National Museum of Mongolian History Prehistoric, historic and ethnographic section (includes some complete dinosaurs skeleton and eggs excavated in the Gobi desert), nature and mineralogical section.
There is also a museum on the third floor called the “Golden Camel” museum, exhibiting Camel paraphernalia from all over the country. The museum also includes fossils discovered by the American Paleontologist Robert Andrews Chapman during the 1920’s. The Zanabazar Museum of Fine Art Exhibits a great collection of paintings and sculptures, among which are some rare religious items such as tangkas and Buddhist statues. Modern paintings and other art for sale.
This museum is dedicated to paintings, religious arts and artifacts. You will find a wonderful collection of archeological artifacts from Hun period (III-II centuries BC) and panel embroidery. It houses the largest tanka scroll (Buddhist embroidery tapestry) in Mongolia, but the museum premises are not spacious enough to display this 36 meters long tanka. The museum also has two unique Tsam Dance masks lavishly decorated with 15,000 and 5,000 pieces of deep purple corals.
The Natsagdorj Museum Celebrates Mongolia's most famous poet and playwright, Dashdorjiin Natsagdorj, who was an ardent nationalist. The museum is said to be built on the exact site where Natsagdorj lived. It's between the Monastery - Museum of Choijin Lama and the northern entrance of Nairamdal Park, but was closed at the time of research for remodelling. The Victims of Political Persecution Memorial Museum. This new museum consists of a series of haunting displays chronicling the bloody communist purges of the 1930s - an aggressive campaign to eliminate encounter - revolutionaries. During the campaign, intellectuals were arrested and put on trial, sent to Siberian labour camps or shot. Mongolia lost top writers, scientists and thinkers. The museum was inspired by the former prime minister P. Genden, who was executed in Moscow by the KGB in 1937 for refusing Stalin's orders to carry out the purge. The museum is now run by his daughter. The walls of the ground floor carry the names of 20,000 souls. A yellow dot by the name signifies that the deceased was a monk, red means a communist, and blue means a civilian.
A number of Temples were destroyed and many Lama’s were executed during the socialist occupation. The Mongolian people were also banned from practicing Buddhism on pain of death. The people were also stopped from communicating with their extended family, which itself caused problems with childbirth, the infant mortality rate in Mongolia is still around 13% party due to this issue. Location: Genden Street (Gendengiin Gudamj) next to the Wedding Palace. Open Saturday to Monday 10.00 - 16.30 Photography T5,000, Video T10,000
The Ulaanbaatar City Museum The Ulaanbaatar City Museum is the green Russian-style building next to the Wrestling Palace. It has a few interesting black-and-white photos of early Ulaanbaatar and an old map of the original ger settlement, though not much else. It's open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Hunting Museum If killing innocent animals is your thing, visit the Hunting Museum, on the street leading to Gandan Khiid. The Railway Museum The Railway Museum, near the International Railway Ticketing Office, may satisfy train buffs. Other train-spotting options include the old engines parked in front of the Jiguur Grand Hotel The Mongolian Military Museum The Mongolian Military Museum is at the eastern end of Peace Ave - you'll need to take a taxi to find it. The Theatre Museum The Theatre Museum was founded in 1991 on International Day of Theatre. It is one of the vocational museums that show the development of theatre in Mongolia. Photographs and biographies of those who stood at the inception of theatre in Mongolia, historic documents, books and scripts are displayed for visitors. The Theatre Museum is worth-while if you're interested in the dramatic arts - the collection of puppets is wonderful. The museum is on the 3rd floor of the Palace of Culture (it's entrance is on the northern side of building), open daily except Monday and Tuesday. Intellectual museum (National Toy Museum) The toy museum is housed in a four storey building behind the Ulaanbaatar Hotel and contains exhibits of over 500 toys and puzzles from around the world.
The intellectual museum is popular with school parties and tourists alike. The museum is a great day out and there are loads of stuff to keep people occupied, ranging from more conventional games like chess and checkers to the more complete puzzles and brain teasers.
Mongolia is the birthplace of chess, which is also a popular game with children and adults alike, and is still widely played among children and teenagers, you will find many people old and young playing chess in the open air during the summer months all over the city and the countryside sometimes going on for days! Location: Baga Toiruu. Open 10.00 - 17.00 Monday - Saturday. Choijin Lam Temple Museum This small monastery located in downtown was built on the turn of this century by the decree of the Bogd Khaan for his younger brother. This is one of few Buddhist monasteries that survived destruction during 1930.
The museum contains precious examples of Buddhist art including the paintings by Ts. Zanabazar, a renowned religious reformer and great artisan of 17th century, as well as colorful masks for
Tsam Dance ceremony embroidered with corals, bronze statues of gods in erotical poses, silk tankas and many other artifacts protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it Ticket: 2400 tug Video camera: 12000 tug Photo: 5500 tugrugs Bogd Khaan’s Winter Palace The winter Palace was the home of the eight living Buddha and the last king of Mongolia. The Palace was built between 1893 and 1903. The Palace suffered at the hands of local thieves until they were caught by a guard a few years ago, while they were scraping gold leaf from the roof!
The winter palace isn’t always open so you might have to pay more than one visit if you want to see the inside. The palace itself is located on the southern side of Peace Bridge and can be easily identified by the colorfully painted building and that are visible from the road, I say this because there’s quite a large wall surrounding the Palace! Location: Chinggisiin Urgun Chuluu. Open Friday - Tuesday summer and winter (allegedly) 9.00 - 17.30 during the summer and 9.30 - 16.30 during the winter. Entry again is 2 - 3,000 Tugrug. There is a gift shop in the grounds. G.K.Jukov’s house museum A decision has been taken to newly built G.K.Jukov House-Museum by a group of experts of the Ministry of Defense, the Russian Embassy in Ulaanbaatar, the General Headquarters of the Armed Forces of Mongolia, and the Military Museum.
Now, any reconstruction will not help the house. The new house-museum will be erected at 100% Russian investments by the “Russian house” company within two-months. The project has been designed by the Russian side. Like the old building, the new one will have one floor and a mansard. The initiative is also supported by the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation. |
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Address : Tokyo street, Bayanzurkh district, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia Phone : 976-99195416 976-11-452595 Fax : 976-11-452595 E-mail : mongol@nilerdene-tour.mn Web site : www.nilerdene-tour.mn |
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