Shoroon Bumbagar tomb


The Shoroon Bumbagar tomb is an ancient tomb in Zaamar, Töv Province, west of Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia about north-east from the banks of the Tuul River and close to the 10th-century Khitan town of Khermen Denzh on the banks of the Tuul River. It was built for a Turkic nobleman, believed to be a high ranking yabghu or a tegin between 650 and 700.

Description

The tomb was discovered and excavated in 2011. It is a massive buried structure, which is long, wide and deep. The structure is characteristic of Northern Wei, Sui dynasty and Tang dynasty tombs, but not of contemporary Göktürk tombs, which tend to be shallow and circular, forming a small elevated mound covered with rocks. The tomb of Shoroon Bumbagar was never looted and therefore was found to hold far more artifacts including an intact door, many statues and wall paintings of people, dragons and temples, although there was no inscription. 117 clay objects were discovered. About 50 Byzantine gold coins were also found in the tomb, which had been used as ornaments.
The tomb is an example of a Chinese-style Turkic memorial complex, dated to the second half of the 7th century, with Chinese architectural influence due to Tang control of the area at the time. Chinese culture and military power had been dominant over the Turks, since the Turkic defeat under Illig Qaghan in the War of Yin-shan, marking the end of the Eastern Turkic Khaganate.
The Shoroon Bumbagar tomb is near and contemporary to the tomb of Pugu Yitu, a Turkic chief who was also a vassal of the Tang dynasty under the Jimi system, and died in 678.