Across the wide grasslands of Central Asia — in Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and other countries — people have lived in round felt tents for thousands of years. The tents are called gers in Mongolian, yurts in Turkic languages. They are not temporary camping tents. They are real homes, where families have lived for many generations, where children grow up, where elders die, where every part of life happens. The ger is also a piece of careful engineering. It has to do many things at once. It has to keep families warm in Mongolian winters when temperatures drop to minus 40 degrees Celsius. It has to keep them cool in summer heat over 30 degrees. It has to stand up to strong winds across the open steppe. It has to be light enough to be carried on camels or horses. It has to be quick to put up and take down. A skilled family can disassemble a ger in about an hour, pack it onto a few camels, travel many kilometres, and reassemble it in another two or three hours. A ger has been engineered by careful work over thousands of years. The wooden lattice walls fold up like an accordion. The roof poles slot into a central ring. The whole structure is wrapped in felted wool — sheep's wool that has been pressed and beaten into thick warm cloth. The door always faces south, where the sun is. Inside, family items are arranged in specific places, each with its own meaning. About 2 million gers are in use today in Mongolia and across Central Asia. Many Mongolians live in gers in cities — whole districts of Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia's capital, are made of gers. Other Mongolians live in modern apartments but spend summer holidays in their family ger. The ger is not a relic. It is a living tradition that has lasted because it works. This lesson asks how the ger is built, how it is used, and what it teaches us about a way of life that values being able to move.
Because a well-made ger lasts. The wooden frame, made of birch or pine, can last for 50 to 100 years if properly cared for. The felt covers wear out faster — perhaps every 10 to 20 years — but they are replaceable. The whole structure is designed to be repairable, part by part, rather than thrown away. This is a different relationship with possessions than many city-dwellers have. A modern apartment is built once and demolished when its time is over. A ger is built, repaired, modified, passed down, repaired again, perhaps modified again. It is a relationship with a home that lasts across generations. Many traditional dwellings around the world have similar long lives — Japanese wooden houses, Tunisian troglodyte homes, Inuit sod houses, Indigenous Australian shelters. The ger is one of the longest-lasting examples. Students should see that 'home' can mean a structure built to last forever in one place, or a structure built to last across many places. Both are real choices. The ger is the second kind, and it works.
Because each part does specific work. The khana lattice walls fold flat for transport but stand strong when expanded. The uni poles spread the weight of the roof evenly to all parts of the wall. The toono is the structural keystone that holds the whole roof in tension. The felt provides insulation. Each part has been refined over thousands of years to do its job. There is also a deeper point: when you have to carry your home on camels, every part has to be useful. There is no room for anything decorative that does not also serve a purpose. The orange paint on the uni poles, for example, helps preserve the wood from rot. The traditional patterns on the door, often in bright colours, are protective symbols. Every detail has reasons. Students should see that 'engineering' is not just modern. The Central Asian peoples who developed the ger over thousands of years were doing real engineering — solving real problems with available materials, refining the design over generations until each part worked as well as possible. The ger is some of the most refined nomadic engineering anywhere in the world.
Because the dwelling is shaped by what life requires. Mongolian herding life requires moving with the animals and surviving extreme cold. The ger evolved to do both. Different ways of life produce different dwellings. Inuit hunting life produced igloos and sod houses. Indigenous Australian life produced light shelters and camp arrangements. Pacific Islander life produced thatched houses oriented to catch sea breezes. European agricultural life produced stone and timber farmhouses. Each is right for its way of life, wrong for others. The ger would be a poor choice for a London family with no animals and a permanent job. A London terraced house would be a poor choice for a Mongolian family with 500 sheep that need to move every few months. Both are excellent for their actual situations. Students should see that 'house' is not one thing. Different peoples have developed different homes for different lives. The ger is one of the most refined examples of a particular kind of life — herding life on a vast grassland, shaped by deep cold and the need to move.
Mixed but mostly alive. Millions of gers are in use. The basic design works as well as ever. The skills to make and maintain gers are still widely held. New gers are made every year. Tourism has created an additional market. But the underlying way of life — herding on the steppe — faces real challenges. Climate change makes the dzud winters more severe. Younger Mongolians sometimes prefer city life. The pull of urban opportunities is real. Yet the ger persists, even in cities. Many Mongolians who live in apartments still keep ties to family gers, family pastures, family animals. The ger has not become a museum object. It is still a living dwelling, with all the practical and emotional weight that implies. Students should see that 'tradition' is not always a question of preservation versus modernity. Sometimes traditions adapt by becoming part of modern life — kept for what they do well, modified where modern life requires. The Mongolian ger is one of the clearest examples. End the lesson here. The gers are pitched on the steppe and in the city. The next move will happen in a few months. The story continues.
The ger (Mongolian) or yurt (Turkic languages) is the traditional round felt tent of nomadic peoples across Central Asia — Mongolians, Kazakhs, Kyrgyz, Turkmen, and many others. It has been used in some form for at least 3,000 years. The structure has specific parts: a wooden lattice wall (khana) that folds flat for transport, sloping wooden roof poles (uni), a central wooden ring at the top (toono), and a covering of felted wool. The whole structure is held together with ropes. A typical family ger weighs about 250 kg, can be put up or taken down in a few hours, and can be carried on a few camels or horses. The ger is engineered for a specific way of life: herding sheep, goats, horses, and camels on the wide grasslands of Central Asia, where moving with the animals is necessary for survival. The thick felt walls hold heat extraordinarily well — important for Mongolian winters when temperatures reach minus 40 degrees Celsius. About 2 million gers are in use today. Around 30 percent of Mongolians still live in gers, including in the capital Ulaanbaatar where whole districts are made of them. The ger is not a relic but a living dwelling adapted to modern circumstances.
| Part | What it is | What it does |
|---|---|---|
| Khana | Wooden lattice wall panels | Form the round wall; fold flat like an accordion for transport |
| Uni | Long wooden roof poles | Spread the weight of the roof evenly; usually painted orange or red |
| Toono | Central wooden ring at the top | Holds the roof poles together; lets light and smoke out; window to the sky |
| Felt covers | Sheets of felted sheep's wool | Provide insulation; layered for winter, removed for summer |
| Buslur | Cord tied around the outside | Holds the whole structure together against wind |
| Door | Wooden door, often with bright decoration | Always faces south, towards the sun |
Gers are temporary camping tents.
Gers are real homes where families live for years and generations. They are made of wood and felt, designed to last decades, and able to be repaired and modified across generations. They have stoves, beds, altars, family belongings — everything a permanent home would have.
'Tent' makes the ger sound impermanent. The ger is a real home that happens to be moveable.
Nomadic life means homeless.
Nomadic peoples have homes, just homes that move with them. Mongolian herders move four or five times a year to follow good pastures, but they do this with their family ger as their home. They are not without a home; they are with a home that travels.
This is one of the most basic misunderstandings of nomadic life. 'Homeless' implies lacking a home; nomadic peoples have homes that work for their lives.
Gers are no longer used.
About 2 million gers are in use today. Around 30 percent of Mongolians still live in gers, including in the capital Ulaanbaatar. The design works and is being passed to new generations.
The 'no longer used' framing makes the ger sound like a museum object. It is a living dwelling.
A ger is a primitive shelter.
A ger is a piece of refined engineering that solves multiple problems at once — extreme cold, strong winds, the need to move, the need to be light enough for camels. It has been refined over thousands of years and works extremely well for its purpose. The same kind of careful design appears in many traditional dwellings worldwide.
Calling careful traditional design 'primitive' is a common error. The ger is sophisticated, just sophisticated for a different problem than a London house solves.
Treat Mongolian and Central Asian cultures with respect. Use the proper terms — ger (Mongolian), yurt (Turkic), khana, uni, toono. Pronounce 'ger' as roughly 'ger' (with a hard g, not 'jer'); 'yurt' as roughly 'yoort'; 'Ulaanbaatar' as 'oo-LAN-bah-tar'. Be careful not to make the lesson into a tourist brochure for Mongolia. The country is a real modern place with its own complex politics, economy, and challenges. Some students may have travelled to Mongolia or Central Asia, or may have family connections to these regions; give them space to share if they want, but do not put them on the spot. Avoid the lazy 'living like in Genghis Khan's time' framing — Mongolians today are modern people with smartphones, university degrees, and contemporary lives, who happen to also live in or near gers. Be honest about the challenges nomadic life faces — climate change, urbanisation, economic pressures — without making the lesson into a story of pure decline. Many Mongolians actively choose nomadic life because it works. Many move between city and steppe, keeping both. Avoid the 'noble savage' framing — Mongolian herders are not living a 'simpler' or 'purer' life. They are doing complex work that requires deep knowledge of animals, weather, and the land. The work is sophisticated. Be aware that 'yurt' has become a Western lifestyle term — used for fancy eco-tourism camps, hippie communes, and so on. The Western yurt and the Central Asian ger are related but different. The lesson should focus on the original, living tradition. Finally, end the lesson on the present. The gers are pitched. The animals are grazing. Mongolians today are using a 3,000-year-old design because it still works.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the ger.
What is a ger, and where is it used?
What are the main parts of a ger?
Why have Central Asian peoples developed a moveable home?
How does a ger handle extreme weather?
Are gers still used today?
These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.
In your own life or family, what do you have that is built to last across generations? What do you have that is meant to be replaced quickly?
Mongolian nomadic life requires moving four or five times a year. Most modern lives require staying in one place. What might be gained, and what might be lost, by each way?
Climate change is making Mongolian winters more severe and harder for nomadic herders. What is owed to peoples whose ways of life are threatened by changes they did not cause?
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