Category
page 1Mongolists
Rashid-al-Din Hamadani
Persian physician and historian (1247-1318)
Vladimir Minorsky
Russian historian, orientalist, iranist (1877–1966)
Gustaf John Ramstedt
Finnish linguist and diplomat (1873–1950)
Nicholas Poppe
Russian-American linguist (1897–1991)
Józef Kowalewski
Polish orientalist (1800–1878)
Tsendiin Damdinsüren
Mongolian writer and linguist (1908–1986)

Owen Lattimore
American scholar of Central Asia (1900-1989)
Byambyn Rinchen
Mongolian academic (1905-1977)
Isaac Jacob Schmidt
Dutch orientalist
Władysław Kotwicz
Jean-Paul Roux
French historian and turkologist (1925–2009)
Juha Janhunen
Finnish linguist, professor in East Asian Studies, Univ of Helsinki
Boris Vladimirtsov
Russian scientist (1884–1931)
Jack Weatherford
American anthropologist
John Man
British historian and travel writer
Walther Heissig
German mongolist (1913–2005)
Antoine Mostaert
Belgian missionary and linguist who studied Mongolic languages (1881–1971)
Erich Haenisch
German sinologist (1880–1966)
Francis Woodman Cleaves
American orientalist historian. mongolist and sinologist (1911-1995)
György Kara
Hungarian orientalist and philologist (1935–2022)
Georg Huth
Prussian linguist, explorer and lecturer of XIXth century, specialised in Central Asia cultures
Chinggeltei
Chinggeltei (; 12 June 1924 – 27 December 2013) was a professor of linguistics at the Inner Mongolia University in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia, People's Republic of China, focusing on the Mongolic languages. He was one of the founders of the university, and served as its first vice-rector. He was also a former member of the Standing Committee of China's National People's Congress.
Igor de Rachewiltz
Italian mongolist (1929-2016)

Li Xinchuan
Song dynasty historian
Jacques Legrand
French linguist and anthropologist (1946-)
Ákos Bertalan Apatóczky
Hungarian Sinologist
Johannes Jährig
German linguist
Franz Schurmann
American academic
Morris Rossabi
American historian