In 1031, a prominent merchant and
Abbasid ambassador called Abu Ali arrived to
Emperor Renzong's court to give tribute and gifts. In turn, Renzong rewarded Abu Ali 50,000 ounces of silver. He soon settled in
Guangzhou and married the daughter of a Chinese general. Ali's descendants (with the surname Pu) would hold high positions later in the Song and
Yuan dynasties as bureaucrats, statesmen, military officials, Confucian scholars, and influential merchants. In the Song period, a Chinese Muslim called Liang Jiegu was famed for his medical abilities. His ancestors arrived from Arabia and settled in Kaifeng. The family were given the surname "Liang" by a Song emperor. Some of the most distinguished merchants of Guangzhou and
Quanzhou during the Song Dynasty included the Muslim traders Pu and Shi Nuowei. Pu arrived to China from
Champa while Shi was from
Sumatra. Muslim merchants like Pu and Shi played an important role within the trading network between China and Southeast Asia. ==See also==