Kharkhorin
Kharkhorin
Хархорин ᠬᠠᠷᠠᠬᠣᠷᠢᠨ | |
|---|---|
Town | |
View of Kharkhorin | |
Kharkhorin Location in Mongolia | |
| Coordinates: 47°11′50″N 102°49′26″E / 47.19722°N 102.82389°E | |
| Country | Mongolia |
| Province | Övörkhangai |
| Sum | Kharkhorin |
| Population (2017) | |
• Total | 14,765 |
| Time zone | UTC+8 |
Kharkhorin (Mongolian: Хархорин) is a town and sum (district) center in Övörkhangai Province in Mongolia. It is well known for being near the capital of the Mongol Empire in the 13th century covering 23 million km2. The sum population was 13,828 (1994), 13,964 (2000), and 14,765 (2017). The population of Kharkhorin town itself was 14,765 in 2017 and covered an area of 20.5 km2.
Kharkhorin is located at the lower end of the upper valley of the Orkhon River which is included within UNESCO's World Heritage Site Orkhon Valley Cultural Landscape. The location marks the easternmost foothills of the Khangai Mountains, where they meet the rolling steppe of central Mongolia.
Nearby are the ruins of the ancient town of Karakorum (also known as Kharkhorum or Qara Qorum) which, for a short time, served as the capital of the Mongol Empire under Ogedei Khan, the third son of Genghis Khan. Another Kharkhorin landmark is Erdene Zuu Monastery and its famous phallic rock. The important Paleolithic archaeological site of Moiltyn-am is located near the bridge over the Orkhon River, just west of the settlement. A modern resort is south of Kharkhorin at Khujirt on the river.
Kharkhorin's principal sources of income are tourism and agriculture. Water from the Orkhon River serves to irrigate crops on the large plain east of the town.