The Altan-Ölgii National Cemetery (Mongolian: Алтан-Өлгий) is a cemetery located in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.
Location
1 explorer visited this place
1.4 km
The Unur Bul Child Center is an orphanage in Bayanzürkh, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.
1.5 km
The Central Military Hospital is a military hospital for the Mongolian Armed Forces located in Bayanzürkh, Ulaanbaatar. It was the first scientific hospital in Mongolia. It has a capacity for 350 beds.
1.6 km
The Mongolor Building is a historical two-story building built in 1905 in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. It has been called by various names in Mongolian such as the Angli Bank Building, Red Building of Grot, Headquarters of Baron Ungern, Prison of the Baron, School of the Red Pants and Military Hospital. It is known as the earliest Dutch-style stone building of Ulaanbaatar.
1.7 km
The Mongolian Military Museum, also known as the Museum of the Mongolian Armed Forces, is a military museum located in Bayanzürkh District, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. It explains Mongolian military history dating back to the Mongol Empire. It is currently located across from an army barracks. The museum is part of the Ministry of Defense.
1.9 km
The Holy Trinity Church also called Trinity Church is a Russian Orthodox church in Ulaanbaatar, capital of Mongolia; situated on Zhukova street, 55 - a, in Bayanzurkh District.
In 1860, as a result of the signing of the Convention of Peking, the Russian Empire was granted the right to open a consulate in Urga, the capital of Outer Mongolia. In 1863 the consulate staff with a convoy of twenty Cossacks came to Urga and opened its own building for the consulate that bound directly to the Orthodox Church in honour of the Holy Trinity. On 22 March 1864 it was sent the first priest who offered a religious service. This date is considered the beginning of the Holy Trinity parish of Russian Orthodox Church in Mongolia.
Since 1927, the church had no priest and was closed for religious use since it was used for other purposes. It was demolished in the 1930s. After the Mongolian Revolution of 1990, the local Orthodox church reemerged. In the summer of 2001 the foundation stone of a new temple in honour of the Holy Trinity was laid. Its construction began in 2005 and ended in 2009.
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Choibalsan and Sukhbaatar
The revolutionary Damdin Sükhbaatar was buried here in 1923, but was later exhumed and reinterred into Sükhbaatar's Mausoleum together with Khorloogiin Choibalsan. The corpses of both rulers were again exhumed, ritually burned, and the ashes entombed at Altan-Ölgii in 2005.
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Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal John Gombojab Hangin Zhamyangiyn Lhagvasuren Gonchigiin Bumtsend Jambyn Batmönkh