Inner Mongolian saddler keeps ancient craft alive
The residents of Inner Mongolia, dubbed the "horseback people", boast a more than 2000-year history of saddle-making.
Togtonbayar, a saddler from Horqin Left Wing Rear Banner in Tongliao city, has been engaged in saddle-making for at least 40 years.
According to the 72-year old saddler, traditional saddles highlight the exquisite arts of wood cutting, leather-weaving, metal-carving and embroidery.
In 2008, the Mongolian saddle was added to China's list of Intangible Cultural Heritage, and Togtonbayar become a national-level inheritor of China's representative intangible cultural heritage.
"Although few people use horses for transportation in Inner Mongolia, tourism development has spurred the demands for this handicraft and I hope this skill could be passed to young generations, " the saddler said.
- First-ever footage of wild Amur tigress taking care of five cubs caught on camera
- China's Genhe city witnesses extremely cold weather
- Beijing courts handled 15,000 patent cases involving bottleneck technologies
- Beijing gives big boost to IP protection over the past five years
- Man sentenced to death for killing his children
- Hemodialysis services cover all counties with over 100,000 permanent residents
































