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9 unusual facts about Soliin Danzan


Dambyn Chagdarjav

The victory of revolution of 1921 soon led to strife within the party as various factions jockeyed for power, particularly between Soliin Danzan and Prime Minister Bodoo.

Damdin Sükhbaatar

In early September, Danzan, Losol and Chagdarjav were sent on to Moscow via Omsk, while Sükhbaatar and Choibalsan were to remain in Irkutsk for military training and to maintain contact between the delegation in Moscow and Mongolia.

Dansranbilegiin Dogsom

In 1919 Dogsom joined the revolutionary resistance group Züün Khüree (East Khüree), which counted Soliin Danzan and Damdin Sükhbaatar among its members.

Danzan

Soliin Danzan (1885 – 1924), Mongolian revolutionary and political leader,

Dogsomyn Bodoo

Soon thereafter, however, the political rivalry between Bodoo and Soliin Danzan intensified when Danzan lost his seat as party leader to a relative of Bodoo's.

Jamsrangiin Sambuu

Aligning himself with the leftist faction of the party early on, Sambuu supported the purges and executions of both Dogsomyn Bodoo in 1922 and party leader Soliin Danzan in 1924.

Mongolian Revolution of 1921

The leaders of the East Urga group were Soliin Danzan (1885–1924), an official in the Ministry of Finance, and Dansrabilegiin Dogsom (1884–1939), an official in the Ministry of the Army.

Yapon Danzan

Born to peasant parents in Tüsheet Khan Province (present day east central Mongolia) in 1895, Danzan traveled to Japan in 1916, thus earning the moniker he carried later in life to distinguish him from his contemporary namesake, party leader Soliin Danzan.

Danzan was party chairman during the Third Party Congress in 1924 that saw the purge and execution of former party chairman Soliin Danzan.



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