From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Öndör Gongor, 1922

Öndör Gongor ( Mongolian: Өндөр Гонгор, "Tall Gongor", c. 1880/85 – late 1920s), whose full name was Pureviin Gongor ( Mongolian: Пүрэвийн Гонгор), was a man in early-20th century Mongolia, who suffered from gigantism. He was measured 2.36 m (7 ft 9 in) high by Roy Chapman Andrews, [1] but some other sources even give 2.45 m (8 ft). He is known all over Mongolia, and also mentioned or pictured in some accounts of contemporary western travellers. [2] [3]

According to an interview with his daughter G. Budkhand, published in 1997, Gongor was the third child of a herder named Pürev, who lived in the Dalai Choinkhor wangiin khoshuu what is today Jargalant sum of Khövsgöl aimag. He was not particularly big as a child. He only had long fingers. Because he always ate a lot, he became a bit unpopular with his parents, and eventually was sent to Ikh Khüree. One day, he was summoned to the Bogd Khan, given fresh clothes, and after a while he was even made to marry a woman who worked as one of the Bogd Khan's seamstresses on the grounds that their fates were connected at least according to a horoscope by the Bogd Khan. [1]

There is uncertainty around what Gongor's occupation at the Bogd Khan's court was: accountant and keeper of the Bogd Khan's elephant, [1] the Bogd Khan's bodyguard, [3] or wrestler. [2] In 1913, he traveled to Russia with a delegation headed by Sain Noyon Khan Namnansüren. Later, he is said to have worked at the toll office. [1]

Gongor had four children. He died in his home area in the late 1920s, before reaching the age of 50. [1] His corpse is said to have been stolen during the funeral – at that time, the deceased were laid out in the steppe to be devoured by birds and other animals.[ citation needed].

One of Gongor's grandsons, D. Davaanyam, is a well-known children's author in Mongolia. [1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f M. Nyamaa, Khövsgöl aimgiin lavlakh toli, Ulaanbaatar 2001, p. 49f.
  2. ^ a b Frans August Larson, Duke of Mongolia, Boston 1930, p. 129f.
  3. ^ a b Ladislaus Forbath, Joseph Geleta, The New Mongolia, London 1936, pp. 247, 259.
Picture at Jargalant Museum ( Khövsgöl Province)
Öndör Gongor photos at the Jargalant Museum
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Öndör Gongor, 1922

Öndör Gongor ( Mongolian: Өндөр Гонгор, "Tall Gongor", c. 1880/85 – late 1920s), whose full name was Pureviin Gongor ( Mongolian: Пүрэвийн Гонгор), was a man in early-20th century Mongolia, who suffered from gigantism. He was measured 2.36 m (7 ft 9 in) high by Roy Chapman Andrews, [1] but some other sources even give 2.45 m (8 ft). He is known all over Mongolia, and also mentioned or pictured in some accounts of contemporary western travellers. [2] [3]

According to an interview with his daughter G. Budkhand, published in 1997, Gongor was the third child of a herder named Pürev, who lived in the Dalai Choinkhor wangiin khoshuu what is today Jargalant sum of Khövsgöl aimag. He was not particularly big as a child. He only had long fingers. Because he always ate a lot, he became a bit unpopular with his parents, and eventually was sent to Ikh Khüree. One day, he was summoned to the Bogd Khan, given fresh clothes, and after a while he was even made to marry a woman who worked as one of the Bogd Khan's seamstresses on the grounds that their fates were connected at least according to a horoscope by the Bogd Khan. [1]

There is uncertainty around what Gongor's occupation at the Bogd Khan's court was: accountant and keeper of the Bogd Khan's elephant, [1] the Bogd Khan's bodyguard, [3] or wrestler. [2] In 1913, he traveled to Russia with a delegation headed by Sain Noyon Khan Namnansüren. Later, he is said to have worked at the toll office. [1]

Gongor had four children. He died in his home area in the late 1920s, before reaching the age of 50. [1] His corpse is said to have been stolen during the funeral – at that time, the deceased were laid out in the steppe to be devoured by birds and other animals.[ citation needed].

One of Gongor's grandsons, D. Davaanyam, is a well-known children's author in Mongolia. [1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f M. Nyamaa, Khövsgöl aimgiin lavlakh toli, Ulaanbaatar 2001, p. 49f.
  2. ^ a b Frans August Larson, Duke of Mongolia, Boston 1930, p. 129f.
  3. ^ a b Ladislaus Forbath, Joseph Geleta, The New Mongolia, London 1936, pp. 247, 259.
Picture at Jargalant Museum ( Khövsgöl Province)
Öndör Gongor photos at the Jargalant Museum

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