Tombs of the Muslim rulers of Hami

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The tombs of the Muslim rulers of Hami , tombs of the Hui kings in Hami or tombs of the Muslim kings of Hami etc. ( Chinese  哈密 ​​回 王墓 , Pinyin Hāmì Huí wángmù , English Tomb of Hami Muslim Princes / Hami Islamic King Tombs / Kumul Muslim King tomb / etc. ) are located in the city of Kumul (Chin. Hami) in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region , People's Republic of China . These are the graves of the Muslim rulers and their family members from the time of the Qing Dynasty to the time of the Republic . They are located in Altun ( 阿勒 屯村 ) village in Huicheng ( 回 城乡 ) community, a southwestern suburb of Hami (Kumul).

Darhan Hanbok Abeydulla ( Chinese  達爾罕 汗 伯克歐拜杜拉  /  达尔罕 汗 伯克欧拜杜拉 , Pinyin Dá'ěrhǎn Hànbókè 'ōubàidùlā ) submitted to the Qing in 1696, in the 35th year of the Kangxi era Dynasty , the Chinese . Emperor Kangxi awarded him the title of wang (king / prince) of the area and his family ruled the region for the next 231 years. The seventh ruler Boxir ( 回 王 博锡尔 ) was killed in 1867 (in the 6th year of the Tongzhi era) in a peasant uprising by the Uyghurs of Hami. ( he shuo qinwang 和 硕 亲王 ) and 20,000 tael (one tael corresponds to approx. 38 grams) were donated for his grave, which was completed in twenty years of construction. The tomb complex also includes a mosque.

The graves of the Muslim rulers of Hami ( Hami Hui wangmu ) have been on the list of monuments of the People's Republic of China (6-297) since 2006 .

The site is now in the Hami Rulers History Museum ( Hami wang lishi chenlieguan 哈密 ​​王 历史 陈列馆 ).

See also

Web links

Footnotes

  1. In Chinese also Hāmì wáng líng 哈密 ​​王陵 or Huí wáng fén 回 王坟 u. a.
  2. chinaculture.org ( memento of November 23, 2008 in the Internet Archive ) (found on September 8, 2009)
  3. german.china.org.cn (found on September 8, 2009)

Coordinates: 42 ° 48 ′ 40 ″  N , 93 ° 29 ′ 14 ″  E