Puhaddin
Puhaddin | |||||||||
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Chinese | 普哈丁 | ||||||||
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Tomb of Puhaddin | |||||||||
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Chinese | 普哈丁墓 | ||||||||
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Puhaddin (fl. 13th century), sinified as Puhading, was a 16th-generation descendant of the Islamic prophet Muhammad who supposedly proselytized in China between 1265 and 1274[1] during the Mongol conquest of the Southern Song dynasty.
He is credited with the erection of the Crane Mosque on the east bank of the Grand Canal in eastern Yangzhou, Jiangsu, where his tomb is still preserved in a Ming graveyard.[2]
References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ Olivová (2009), p. 30.
- ^ "Garden Tomb of Puhaddin", El Segundo: Fodor's Travel
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Bibliography
[edit]- Olivová, Lucie B. (2009), "Building History and the Preservation of Yangzhou", Lifestyle and Entertainment in Yangzhou, NIAS Studies in Asian Topics, No. 44, Copenhagen: Nordic Institute of Asian Studies, pp. 3–36.