The earliest contact between Germanic and Mongol peoples are said to have occurred in 1241, during the Battle of Legnica, with the Mongols under Baidar proving victorious over a combined force of Poles, Moravians, and Germans, though the Mongols retreated back to Hungary shortly after.[3]
In 1989, about 300 exhibits from Mongolian museums were organized in Munich, dedicated to the "art and culture of the Mongolian equestrian people".[7]
West Germany
Mongolia-West Germany ties being established on January 31, 1974.[6][8][9]
Post-communist era
Since the German reunification, a large number of visits have been held by various high-ranking German and Mongolian politicians and delegations. The following is a list of the most important state visits since 1990:[10]
From May to June 1995, the mixed German-Mongolian culture commission met in Ulaanbaatar under the direction of Peter Truhart.[12] On September 16, 1997, an agreement on cultural exchange and cooperation was signed between Germany and Mongolia.[12]
Agreements
On August 22, 1994, Germany and Mongolia passed a double taxation agreement in order to avoid double taxation of German and Mongolian citizens.[13] A year later, in October 1995, the two countries signed a financial cooperation agreement. A delegation from the Committee on Economic Cooperation and Development of the German Bundestag traveled to Mongolia in March 1998.
Trade
Germany is Mongolia's main trading partner in the European Union, together with the United Kingdom, but on January 31, 2020 the United Kingdom left the EU.[1]
In 2022, to reduce Germany's reliance on critical minerals from Russia and China, Chancellor Olaf Scholtz conveyed to visiting Prime Minister of Mongolia Luvsannamsrain Oyun-Erdene that Germany aims to buy raw materials from Mongolia, including copper and rare earths.[14]
Diaspora
In the 2010 Mongolian National Census, 3,852 Mongolian citizens were recorded to have been living in Germany.[15]
^Serge M. Wolff: Mongol delegations in Western Europe, 1925–1929 – Part One, in: Journal of The Royal Central Asian Society, vol. 32, no. 3-4 (1945), pp. 289–298; Serge M. Wolff: Mongol delegations in Western Europe, 1925–1929 – Part Two, in: Journal of The Royal Central Asian Society, vol. 33, no. 1 (1946), pp. 75–93.
^ ab"Улс төрийн харилцаа". Монгол улсаас Герман улсад суугаа элчих сайдын яам. Retrieved 22 August 2017.
^Der mongolische Außenminister Tserenpil Gombosuren wurde vom Präsident der Industrie- und Handelskammer der Mongolei Sed-Ochir Bayarbaatar begleitet (Bettina Ehlers: Kompendium der deutsch-mongolischen Beziehungen, Hamburg 2000, vgl. S. 43, siehe Literatur)