Dashdorjiin Natsagdorj was born on 17 November 1906 in Darkhan Zasag banner under the Qing dynasty (modern
Bayandelger District,
Töv Province) to father Dashidorji, a heavily-indebted
taiji (petty noble), and mother Pagma, who died when he was seven years old. Natsagdorj was taught to read and write by his father, and from the age of nine was tutored by a colleague of his. From 1917, he was employed as a scribe in the
Bogd Khanate government's Ministry of War. In 1921, Natsagdorj joined the
Mongolian Revolutionary Youth League (MRYL). After the
1921 revolution, he was private secretary to
Damdin Sükhbaatar, and from April 1922 an assistant to the
Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party's Central Committee (CC). From 1923 to 1925, he was successively secretary of the CC, the party's Military Commission, and acting government secretary during
Balingiin Tserendorj's premiership. Natsagdorj was elected a member of the presidium of the CC in August 1923, and then a deputy member from August 1924 to March 1925. He participated in the party's Second Congress in 1923 and Third Congress in 1924, which adopted Mongolia's first constitution. Natsagdorj also served as deputy chairman of the MRYL, and in 1925 was elected chairman of the Young Pioneers, its children's organization. He participated in the MRYL's
shii jüjig (
Beijing opera-style) plays, and wrote the lyrics of the Pioneers' anthem, "Song of the Pioneers". Natsagdorj was also editor of the
Mongolian People's Army newspaper
Ardyn Tsereg. In 1923, he married Damdiny Pagmadulam, who founded the Mongolian Women's Committee in 1924; their daughter, Tserendulam, was born in 1923. In the autumn of 1925, at age 19, Natsagdorj left his government positions to study, first at
Leningrad's Military-Political Academy. In September 1926, he and his wife joined a group of 35 Mongolian youths sent for educations in Germany and France. Natsagdorj attended the
University of Berlin's journalism school and
Leipzig University, where he studied with the
Mongolist Erich Haenisch; Pagmadulam attended the Leipzig Higher School for Women. In 1929, after the Mongolian government recalled all students studying outside the
Soviet Union, Natsagdorj worked as a researcher in the history department of the Institute of Scripture and Manuscripts (later the
Mongolian Academy of Sciences). In 1930, he worked with
Tsyben Zhamtsarano on a translation of the first volume of
Karl Marx's
Das Kapital, and later translated several books and stories to Mongolian from their German originals or translations, including
Marco Polo's travels, a Mongolian history by the tsarist adviser Ivan Korostovets, and
Edgar Allan Poe's short story "
The Gold-Bug"; he also translated poems by
Alexander Pushkin and some works by
Anton Chekhov. Natsagdorj also served as head of the Ideology Department of the Central Committee, secretary of the Mongolian Revolutionary Writers' Organization (1930–1937), and the literary editor of the MRYL newspaper
Zaluuchuudyn Ünen ("Youth Truth"). Natsagdorj was arrested on 17 May 1932 for allegedly making a "slanderous statement" while celebrating the lunar new year (
Tsagaan Sar). Pagmadulam (with whom Natsagdorj had separated) and others who had studied in Germany were also arrested. He was said to be involved with the "left deviationists", and described in police reports as a
taiji. However, as he had neither "joined the
Whites" nor "spoken or acted against the state", the special commission of the Internal Affairs Directorate sentenced him to a year's probation on 29 October 1932. Natsagdorj married Nina Ivanovna Chistyakova, a Soviet German woman whom he had met in Leningrad; their daughter, Ananda Shiri, was born on 22 March 1934. In 1935, Chistyakova and Ananda Shiri left Mongolia for Leningrad; some sources say that she had overstayed her visa, but others say Natsagdorj had taken to heavy drinking and secret liaisons with women. On 8 February 1937, Natsagdorj was arrested again on false charges during the early
Stalinist purges in Mongolia, and was sentenced to five months of forced labor. He died of a
stroke on a street in
Ulaanbaatar on 13 July 1937, aged 30. An investigation into his arrest in 1989 declared him innocent. == Works ==