Shirazi Ruins

Historic Sites Along the Coast

Shirazi Ruins: The Lost Paradise

Shirazi, also known as Kifundi, is a tiny village in bucolic settings at the edge of a sea channel 3 km from A14 highway. About 100 ms or less south of the village is a mosque and one or more tombs in dense bush. There are two wells, one south of the mosque that is still used by the people of the village. The mosque is in ruined condition, all walls and the qibla fallen except for a short portion of the north wall. On the outside it is seen that the north wall stands to a height of about 2 metres, demonstrating that the mosque is deep in rubble. The central musalla measures about 4-60 ms wide by 6.90 ms long. There’s a niche on the east end of the north wall and a window on the west. The mihrab was framed by an architrave that on its lower faces was plain. 200 ms north of Shirazi sits a second mosque, in ruins.

The name Shirazi is an ethnic label that’s still widely used on the coast and island south of Mombasa: It incorporates a claim to Persian origin that’s shared by many of the oldest groups of Swahili, and by others assimilated with them. The Chifundi count themselves as Shirazi, but have also retained their own separate identity. For much of the 13th century the most important coastal town was Mogadishu, a mercantile city on the Somalia-Swahili coast to which new migrants came from the Persian Gulf and southern Arabia. Of these, the most important were called Shirazi, who, in the second half of the 12th century, had migrated southward to the Lamu Archipelago, Pemba, Mafia, and as far as Comoro Islands and Kilwa, where, by the end of the 12th century, they had established a huge dynasty. Whether the “Shirazi” were actually Persian in origin is somewhat doubtful and often debated.


There are dozens of well-studied and accessible historic sites along the Kenya’s Coast. Some of the historic sites located here are composed of the old settlement towns and outlying groups of tombs. North to South, the coast is awash with a collection of ruins, found mainly along the beach, many of them on private lands.


Located along the Kenyan coast, and a hub renowned for its pristine beaches, rich cultural heritage, and breathtaking landscapes, Kwale County uniquely combines two of Kenya’s unsurpassed offerings – beach and safari. Kwale County is also a melting pot of coastal traditions, modern development, farming and trade to boot.

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