Kollam or
Quilon (Coulão), formerly
Desinganadu, is an old seaport and
city on the
Laccadive Sea coast in
Kerala,
India on
Ashtamudi Lake. Kollam has had a strong commercial reputation since the days of the Phoenicians and Romans. Fed by the Chinese trade, it was mentioned by
Ibn Battuta in the 14th century as one of the five Indian ports he had seen during the course of his twenty-four year travels. Desinganadu's rajas exchanged embassies with Chinese rulers while there was a flourishing Chinese settlement at Kollam. In the 9th Century, on his way to
Canton, China, Persian merchant
Sulaiman al-Tajir found Kollam to be the only port in India visited by huge Chinese junks.
Marco Polo, the great Venetian traveller, who was in Chinese service under
Kublai Khan in 1275, visited Kollam and other towns on the west coast, in his capacity as a Chinese mandarin.