Mongolic peoples
0 sources
Mongolic peoples
Summary
Mongolic peoples is an ethnic group[1]. It ranks in the top 8% of ethnic_group entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (342 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Mongolic peoples's religion is recorded as Tibetan Buddhism[3].
- Mongolic peoples's religion is recorded as Sunni Islam[4].
- Mongolic peoples's religion is recorded as Tengrism[5].
- Mongolic peoples's religion is recorded as Mongolian shamanism[6].
- Mongolic peoples is in the country of Mongolia[7].
- Mongolic peoples is in the country of People's Republic of China[8].
- Mongolic peoples is in the country of Russia[9].
- Mongolic peoples is in the country of Afghanistan[10].
- Mongolic peoples's image is recorded as Mongols-map.png[11].
- Mongolic peoples's instance of is recorded as ethnic group[12].
- Mongolic peoples's ancestral home is recorded as East Asia[13].
- Mongolic peoples's location is recorded as East Asia[14].
- Mongolic peoples's location is recorded as North Asia[15].
- Mongolic peoples's location is recorded as South Asia[16].
- Mongolic peoples's location is recorded as South European Russia[17].
- Mongolic peoples's subclass of is recorded as human population[18].
- Mongolic peoples's part of is recorded as Mongoloid[19].
- Mongolic peoples's Commons category is recorded as Mongolic peoples[20].
- Mongolic peoples's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Mongol peoples[21].
- Mongolic peoples's described by source is recorded as Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1926–1947)[22].
- Mongolic peoples's different from is recorded as Mongols[23].
- Mongolic peoples's language used is recorded as Mongolic[24].
Body
Personal Life
Religious affiliations include Tibetan Buddhism[3], a religious denomination[25]; Sunni Islam[4], an Islamic denomination[26], founded in 0601[27]; Tengrism[5], a religion[28]; and Mongolian shamanism[6], a religion[29].
Why It Matters
Mongolic peoples ranks in the top 8% of ethnic_group entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (342 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[30]