Sengiin Erdene Explained

Sengiin Erdene
Birth Date:1929
Birth Place:Binder, Khentii, Mongolia
Death Date:2000
Occupation:Novelist
Alma Mater:Mongolian State University; School of Military Officers
Period:1955; 1949
Genre:short story, novel
Notableworks:Amidralyn Toirog (Circle of Life); Khoid Nasandaa Uchirna (See You in After-Life)
Children:Erdeniin Bat-Üül
Awards:State Awards of Mongolia (1965)

Sengiin Erdene (Mongolian: Сэнгийн Эрдэнэ) was a Mongolian novelist and writer.

Biography

Sengiin Erdene was born on December 7, 1929, in Binder, Khentii Province. His father, a herder from Buryatia who had come to Mongolia a few years previous, was killed during the repressions of the late 1930s.

Erdene graduated from the School of Military Officers, Ulaanbaatar in 1949 and the Mongolian State University in 1955. Before turning completely to writing, he worked as a psychiatrist for several years.

Among his most notable works are "Amidralyn Toirog", "Bayan Burd" (Oasis), "Zanabazar", "Malyn Kholiin Toos" (Dust Raised by Livestock), "Naran Togoruu" (Sun Cranes) and "Khoit Nasandaa Uchirna". He was awarded with the State Awards of Mongolia in 1965, the Awards of the Mongolian Writers' Union in 1976 and the title of People's Writer of Mongolia in 1994.

Several of Erdene's works have been translated into German.[1]

Sengiin Erdene died in 2000. One of his sons is Erdeniin Bat-Üül, a prominent politician from Mongolia's Democratic party.

References

  1. "Khulan and me" and "Salute" in Renate Bauwe-Radna (editor), Erkundungen, Berlin 1976,

    several short stories and novellas in Sonnenkraniche, Berlin 1979, and

    The End of the Serüün Temple, 2009 (together with "The Hunter's Bride")

Renate Bauwe: Leben und Werk des mongolischen Schriftstellers Sengijn Erdene (in German)