- Chinese: 札薩克; lit. 'power,' 'authority') was the head of a
Mongol banner or
khoshun during the Qing
dynasty and the Bogd Khanate. The
position was held by...
-
instead of text in
Mongolian script. A
banner (Chinese: 旗; pinyin: qí, "
khoshun" in Mongolian) is an
administrative division of the
Inner Mongolia Autonomous...
-
Khoshun-Uzur (Russian: Хошун-Узур; Buryat: Хошуун Yзүүр,
Khoshuun Üzüür) is a
rural locality (an ulus) in
Mukhorshibirsky District,
Republic of Buryatia...
- the
citizens of five
Uryankhay k****un (Tuvan: кожуун; Russian: хошун,
khoshun), the Republic's
administrative divisions,
which began the
practice of...
-
households were placed,
primarily for
military purposes.
Banner (Qosighun or
khoshun) as
former division of all
Mongols under Qing rule (includes Inner/Outer...
- Mongols, and the
local Mongols were
united into a
Aohan Banner (Aohan
Khoshun in Mongolian).
Wuhuan Mongols Demographics of
China Aohan Banner. Information...
- the
Sunid Yutsi held a
Congress of People's
Representatives and
aimags khoshuns of
Inner Mongolia. Held for
three days, the
Congress proclaimed the establishment...
-
comprising the
lords of the
khoshuns; the
chigulgan daruga (чуулган дарга -
official presiding the congress) was
appointed from the
khoshun lords by the Qing government...
- five
banners (
khoshun, 旗) and 46 or 47
arrows (sum, 佐領);
Chinese and
Russian sources differ on the
number of
khoshuns and sums. Each
khoshun was governed...
- five
khoshuns ("banner") and 46 or 47
sumuns ("arrow") (Chinese and
Russian sources differ on the
number of
khoshuns and sumuns). Each
khoshun was governed...