Research Article
Artefacts Evidence of the Entry of Islam in the First History Century (7th A.D.) at the Bongal Site, Badiri District, Central Tapanuli District
@INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/eai.24-10-2023.2342343, author={Pidia Amelia and Ichwan Azhari and Ika Purnamasari}, title={Artefacts Evidence of the Entry of Islam in the First History Century (7th A.D.) at the Bongal Site, Badiri District, Central Tapanuli District}, proceedings={Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Innovation in Education, Science, and Culture, ICIESC 2023, 24 October 2023, Medan, Indonesia}, publisher={EAI}, proceedings_a={ICIESC}, year={2024}, month={1}, keywords={islam artifact bongal site}, doi={10.4108/eai.24-10-2023.2342343} }
- Pidia Amelia
Ichwan Azhari
Ika Purnamasari
Year: 2024
Artefacts Evidence of the Entry of Islam in the First History Century (7th A.D.) at the Bongal Site, Badiri District, Central Tapanuli District
ICIESC
EAI
DOI: 10.4108/eai.24-10-2023.2342343
Abstract
Bongal is the name of a hill with a height of around 324 meters above sea level located in Jago Jago Village, Badiri District, Central Tapanuli Regency, North Sumatra Province. Since archaeological research was carried out by the Medan Archaeological Center or the National Innovation Research Agency in 2019 - 2022, in various reports or writings this area has been called the Bongal Site. This site holds various worldwide archaeological traces, one of which is Islamic artifacts from the 20th century (7 th AD. This research aims to identify Islamic archaeological artifacts found by the community which is very important and rare primary data. Next, the analysis process is carried out to validate that the data obtained can be reconstructed and is relevant to existing historiography. Furthermore, the Islamic archaeological data became the basis for reconstructing the Islamic history of North Sumatra in the 7th century AD.