The date of death of Jalaluddin Tabrizi is contested. Ghulam Sarwar asserts that he died in 1244, Tabrizi was buried in his khanqah at
Hazrat Pandua. The income of the donated land of the
dargah was worth twenty-two thousand
takas, and hence came to be known as the
Baish Hazari Dargah. The influence of Tabrizi to Muslim Bengal in the 13th-century can be seen from the succeeding centuries with confusions arising due to other Sufi saints with the common name Jalal. The 14th-century Moroccan traveller
Ibn Battuta mentions his encounter with a
Jalaluddin Tabrizi near
Kamarupa although modern historians consider Ibn Battuta to have confused the former with
Shah Jalal of
Sylhet, due to an abundance of supporting inscriptions and evidences suggesting otherwise. The madrasa successively produced hundreds of
ulama including Ghulam Mustafa Burdwani, Izharul Haque, Abdur Rab Lucknowi, Abdur Rahman Lucknowi and Nurul Haque Ansari. ==See also==