-
traditional Chinese: 趙汝适; pinyin: Zhào Rǔkuò; 1170–1231), also
romanised as Zhao
Rugua, Chau Ju-kua, or
misread as Zhao Rushi, was a
Chinese government official...
- far as China. The 13th-century
Chinese writer and
customs inspector Zhao
Rugua wrote that
Ruxiang or
xunluxiang (Chinese: 乳香 rǔ xiāng/ 薰陸香 xūn lù xiāng)...
- was
described in the Zhu fan zhi ("Records of
Foreign Peoples") by Zhao
Rugua (1170–1228), a
Chinese customs inspector for the
southern port city of Quanzhou...
-
historical record of
Surabaya was in the 1225 book Zhu fan zhi
written by Zhao
Rugua, in
which it was
called Jung-ya-lu. The name
Janggala is
derived from the...
-
Piribebuy River Hondo River Itapytangua Tacuaty Curuguaty Hucuratí Loma
Rugua Caguijuru–Caraguataí
Iguatemi Río
Verde Cambaceguá Lomaruguá
Cerro Corá...
- the
Chinese Song
dynasty book Zhu Fan Zhi,
written around 1225 by Zhao
Rugua, the two most
powerful and
richest kingdoms in the
Southeast Asian archipelago...
-
Javanese aggression appeared to be defensive. In his
account of Sanfoqi, Zhao
Rugua records in
Zhufanzhi (ca. 1225): In the past, [this state] used an iron...
- use of the name is
possibly by Song-era
Chinese maritime official Zhao
Rugua as the Pi-sho-ye, who
raided the
coasts of
Fujian and
Penghu during the...
-
Sheikh Abdullah Arif in 1112. The book
Zhufan Zhi (諸蕃 志),
written by Zhao
Rugua in 1225,
cited the
record of a geographer, Chou Ku-fei, in 1178 that there...
-
often misconstrued as
pirates for
political reasons, but
Faxian and Zhao
Rugua both
described fierce warriors armed with an ****nal of
weapons who would...