-
Peljidiin Genden (Mongolian: Пэлжидийн Гэндэн; 1892 or 1895 –
November 26, 1937) was a
political leader of the
Mongolian People's
Republic who served...
-
demands to
perform Red
Terror against Mongolians were executed,
including Peljidiin Genden and
Anandyn Amar. The
Stalinist purges in Mongolia,
which began...
- time (and
concurrently foreign minister) on
March 22, 1936,
following Peljidiin Genden's
removal from both offices.
Genden had
resisted Soviet pressure...
- were purged, many of whom were executed.
Victims included Prime Minister Peljidiin Genden, who was
enthusiastic about the
liberalisation of the economy....
- needed],
Uchiyama Gudō,
Inoue Shūten,
Norodom Sihanouk,
Takagi Kenmyo and
Peljidiin Genden. Buddhadāsa
Bhikkhu coined the
phrase Dhammic socialism. He believed...
-
Republic of Mongolia,
signed on
March 12, 1936, in Ulaanbaatar,
Mongolia by
Peljidiin Genden, the
prime minister of Mongolia, and
Vladimir Tairov, the Soviet...
-
estimated 17,000
monks were killed,
official figures show.
Prime Ministers Peljidiin Genden and
Anandyn Amar, for example, were
accused of counter-revolution...
-
November 1924
following the
death of the Bogd Khan, as he was
replaced by
Peljidiin Genden only a day later.
Usually a
regency would follow the
death of the...
-
rightist leaders and
ensured the
election of
leftists such as Eldev-Ochir,
Peljidiin Genden, and Ölziin
Badrakh as
secretaries of the
party Central Committee...
-
museum was
housed in the
former residence of
Mongolian prime minister Peljidiin Genden, a
wooden structure built in 1928 by a
German engineer named Goring...