Queen Anu

[1] With troops provided by Ochirtu, Galdan avenged his brother's death and assumed the Dzungar Khanate throne.

[5] She was buried in the foothills of Khangai mountains in an area now referred to as "Khatant" (place of the queen) in present-day Khotont soum of Arkhangai Province.

She had a son and two daughters from her marriage to Galdan Boshughtu: In 1975, the celebrated Mongolian author Byambyn Rinchen (1905-1977) published his novel Ану хатан "Lady Anu" about the life and death of the eponymous 17th century Mongol Dzungar Khanate queen.

In 2010, Mongolian novelist Baatarsuren Shuudertsetseg published Домогт Ану хатан (The Legendary Queen Anu).

The importance of family, women's empowerment, and national identity were central themes of her treatment of Anu's life.