Where is Quanzhou Mosque?

Quanzhou Aisuha Mosque, referred to as Mosque, is also called Jing Qing Temple. Located in Tumen Street, Quanzhou. Founded in the second year of the Northern Song Dynasty (1009)-400 years of Islamic calendar. In the third year of the Yuan Dynasty (13 10), Ahmed Benmohamed Judd, a native of Shiraz City (now the southern Iranian coast), rebuilt and expanded. According to the records of China stone tablet, it was rebuilt twice in the tenth year of Yuan Zheng Zhi (1350) and the thirty-seventh year of Ming Wanli (1609). The existing buildings mainly include the Temple Gate, the Temple of Heaven and the Famous Mountain Hall. It is the only mosque built of granite and diabase in China, with typical Arabic and Central Asian styles. There are stone inscriptions in the temple to protect mosques and Islam in the fifth year of Yongle in Ming Dynasty (1407). Mosque is one of the three earliest existing Islamic temples in China, an important historical relic of Quanzhou's development of overseas transportation and trade, and a historical witness of friendly exchanges between China and Arab countries. 196/kloc-0 was listed as a national key cultural relics protection unit in March.