Pujini Ruins
Pujini Ruins (Magofu ya mji wa kale wa Pujini in Swahili ) is a Medieval historic site next to the village of Pujini located in Chake Chake District of Pemba South Region.[2] There used to be a fortified palace at the site, only ruins of the walls remain. The palace is believed to have been of Mkame Mdume.[3][4] Its one of several National Historic Sites on the island of Pemba including Chambani and Ras Mkumbuu.
|  The stairway to the rampart, Pujini ruins, Pemba South. | |
|  .svg.png.webp) Shown within Tanzania | |
| Location | Chake Chake District, Pemba South Region,  Tanzania | 
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 5°19′40.8″S 39°47′4.56″E | 
| Type | Settlement | 
| History | |
| Material | Coral rag | 
| Founded | 12-14th century CE | 
| Abandoned | 17th century CE | 
| Cultures | Swahili | 
| Site notes | |
| Ownership | Tanzanian Government | 
| Management | Antiquities Division, Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism [1] | 
| Public access | yes | 
| Architecture | |
| Architectural styles | Swahili & Islamic | 
| Official name | Pujini Ruins Historic Site | 
| Type | Cultural | 
| inactive excavation | |
See also
    
    
References
    
- "Antiquities Division". Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism Tanzania. Archived from the original on 2022-08-03. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
- Spear, Thomas (January 2000). "Swahili History and Society to 1900: A Classified Bibliography". History in Africa. 27: 339–373. doi:10.2307/3172120. JSTOR 3172120. S2CID 161594711.
- LaViolette, Adria; Fleisher, Jeffrey (2009). "The Urban History of a Rural Place: Swahili Archaeology on Pemba Island, Tanzania, 700-1500 AD". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 42 (3): 433–455. JSTOR 40646777.
- Ingrams, William Harold (1800). The chief's trumpet or sacred horn in East Africa. JSTOR 60230294. OCLC 656511131.
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