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Daud Bandagi Kirmani

Daud Bandagi Kirmani

FieldValue
nameShaikh Daud Bandagi Kirmani
imageShaikh_Daud_Bandagi_Kirmani.jpg
altEarly 17th-century miniature of Daud Bandagi Kirmani
captionEarly 17th-century miniature of Daud Bandagi Kirmani
birth_date
death_date1575
death_placeShergarh, Okara District, Punjab, Pakistan
resting_placeTomb at Shergarh, Okara District, Punjab, Pakistan
religionIslam
denominationSunni
orderQadiriyya
era16th century

Syed Muhammad Ibrahim bin Syed Fatehullah Kirmani 1513-1575C.E. (AH 919–982), more popularly known as Shaikh Daud Bandagi Kirmani was a 16th-century saint of the Qadiri order.

His mausoleum

Shrine of Daud Bandagi Kirmani

His mausoleum in Shergarh, Punjab, was completed in 1580 CE. The interior of the octagonal shrine is decorated with intricate floral and geometric frescoes. On each of the eight interior lower alcoves are Persian couplets by Shah Abul Muali extolling Daud. The grave is in an enclosure in the center of the shrine with the graves of six of his lineal descendants on either side. The exterior of the shrine has panels of intricate stucco tracery on all sides. The shrine, is under the care of the Auqaf Department and the Archeology Department of the Government of Punjab, Pakistan, which conducted extensive restoration work in the 1980s, mainly on the preservation of the frescoes.

References

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References

  1. Hanif, N.. (2000). "Biographical Encyclopedia of Sufis (South Asia)". Pentagon Press.
  2. Khalid, Haroon. (22 December 2017). "The naked ascetics: Pakistan's Sufi dervishes, Digambar Jain monks and Udasi sadhus". Dawn.
  3. Khalid, Haroon. (22 December 2017). "The naked ascetics: Pakistan's Sufi dervishes, Digambar Jain monks and Udasi sadhus". Dawn.
  4. Hanif, N.. (2000). "Biographical Encyclopedia of Sufis (South Asia)". Pentagon Press.
  5. Khalid, Haroon. (2015-11-08). "The naked ascetics: Pakistan's Sufi dervishes, Digambar Jain monks and Udasi sadhus".
  6. Khalid, Haroon. (2017-12-22). "The naked ascetics: Pakistan's Sufi dervishes, Digambar Jain monks and Udasi sadhus".
  7. Abd Al-Qadir Badaoni. (1898). "Muntakhabu-t-tawārīkh Vol I". Asiatic Society of Bengal.
  8. Abd Al-Qadir Bin Maluk Shah Al-Badouni (Grand Mufti of India). (1865). "The Muntakhab Al-Tawarikh Vol II". Bibliotheca Indica. Calcutta.
  9. Abd al-Qādir ibn Mulūk Shāh Badāʼūnī. (1976). "Muntak̲hab Ut-tawārik̲h Vol III". Karimsons, India.
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