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Kampong Ginning Mosque was built in 1748 and is one of the oldest mosques in the city. There is a bathing cistern, the minarets are particularly interesting under the influence of Sumatra-style Hinduism because it is built like a tower, which is unusual for Islamic style and has fine tiles imported from Europe.
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Kampong Ginning Mosque was built in 1748 and is one of the oldest mosques in the city. There is a bathing cistern, the minarets are particularly interesting under the influence of Sumatra-style Hinduism because it is built like a tower, which is unusual for Islamic style and has fine tiles imported from Europe.
Booked a chartered car from Trip.com, the driver sister ran for two hours all the way to the Malacca River. The driver sister took me around first, explained every attraction and various snacks, and then set down for myself. Jichang Street is next to a street, various temples and beliefs exist. This mosque is more famous, I went in to see. The street that is all temples is a Hardrock, opposite H&M.
Qingyun Pavilion Time 7:00-19:00 Built free of charge in the 15th century, Qingyun Pavilion is the oldest Chinese temple in Malaysia. There are inscriptions in memory of Ambassador Zheng He's first visit to Malacca during the Ming Dynasty. All the building materials and artisans were imported from China. The roof of the temple is decorated with glass and china-based mysterious animals, and the temple is dedicated to three altars, one each Confucian, one Shi, and one Dao.
Very characteristic mosque, architectural style different from other mosques, Niangyaofeng, Green top, different from other Malay mosques. Same as China. Very nice.
The mosque is uniquely built, with three green-tiled pyramid roofs that blend Chinese-style moth structures, and a white steeple next to it with a distinct Moorish style.