Welcome to Horace Mann's Webpage on:

Muslim Travelers and Mapmakers during the Middle Ages

 

Introduction: Muslim civilization always has been mobile (moving). Both the Arabs and the conquerors from Central Asia were originally nomadic (able to move or travel around) and inherited a tradition of travel. Large armies were constantly on the move. Students and scholars went on long journeys to sit at the feet of famous teachers, for the Prophet Muhammad himself encouraged travel even "as far as China" for learning. The wealth of cities depended upon trade. And the Faith of Islam asked of the Faithful the most powerful of all reasons for travel -- the Pilgrimage. So Muslims traveled the length and breadth (width) of the vast (large, extensive, widespread) Islamic Empires and beyond, especially for trade purposes. Muslims traveled by land and by sea and through their trips they began an Age of Travel and Exploration far beyond their homelands.

 

 

Part I: Travelers & Map Makers

A. Ibn Battuta (1305 - 1369?)

Ibn Battuta was perhaps the greatest traveler of the Middle Ages, having traveled about 75,000 miles in 29 years! He is especially important to history because of his written accounts (reports) of his travels. From these records we can learn about the cultures that he visited. The book about his travels is the only historical source of information about many of the places he visited which included the East African coast, the Empire of Mali in West Africa, Arabia, Iraq, Iran, Turkey, India, China, Spain, and many, many more! As a Muslim, he took advantage of the generosity shown to pilgrims and travelers in the Empire. He was often given gifts (of horses, gold, and even slaves) and stayed for free in dormitories, private homes, and even in the palaces of Muslim rulers. For seven years he worked for the Sultan in Delhi, India. On his travels he met several Sultans who welcomed him into their company. His descriptions are filled with adventures - he almost died several times. He survived robbers, shipwrecks, pirates, wars, and the Black Death (or Bubonic Plague).
 
Can you name some of the countries in which he traveled?

 

 

 

 

 

From the Catalan Atlas, National Library of France, Paris. It was completed in 1375.

 

 

 

Rough Map of Ibn Battuta's Travels - about 75,000 miles in 29 years!

Ibn Battuta started his trip in Tangier, Morocco, going east on his first hajj (pilgrimage) to Mecca.

 

 

B. Al-Idrisi (Dreses) 1099-1166

Idrisi's map of the known world - Note: North is at the bottom of the map. Can you see the Mediterranean Sea? Arabia? The Indian Ocean?

 

Al-Idrisi is best known in the West as a geographer, who made a globe or sphere of silver weighing 400 kilograms for the Christian King Roger II of Sicily. Some scholars regard him as the greatest geographer and cartographer (mapmaker) of the Middle Ages. He put together a geographical encyclopedia with many maps.

See another short biography of Al-Idrisi . A copy of the map of Al-Idrisi is displayed in the Sharjah Islamic Museum in the United Arab Emirates.

 

 

 

 

 

C. Leo Africanus (Hasan a-Wazan) was a traveler and mapmaker who lived from 1485-1554. He was captured by Christian pirates and presented to the Pope as a slave. He later was commissioned to write about and make maps of his travels in West Africa. His description of Timbuktu (now in the country of Mali) tells of the city famous for trade of African products and for scholarship with a thriving trade in books. (From "Leo Africanus: Description of Timbuktu" Washington State University.) Read another biography of "Leo Africanus: Moorish Man of Learning."

 

D. The Famous Pilgrimage of Mansa Musa

(Mansa means "king" and Musa is the Arabic name for Moses) - Mansa Musa was an extremely rich ruler of the Mali Empire. Mansa Musa was either the grandson or the grandnephew of Sundiata, the founder of his dynasty. He became "Mansa" or king in 1307. In 1324, he began his famous pilgrimage to Mecca. It was this pilgrimage that awakened the world to the incredible wealth of Mali, or "put Mali on the map." He traveled from his capital of Niani on the Upper Niger River to Walata (Oualâta, Mauritania) and on to Tuat (now in Algeria) before making his way to Cairo. Then he continued on to Medina and Mecca. Accounts vary, and some may be exaggerated, but according to some: Mansa Musa was accompanied in his caravan by 60,000 men including of 12,000 personal slaves finely dressed in silk. The emperor himself rode on horseback and was preceded by 500 slaves, each carrying a gold-decorated staff. In addition, Mansa Musa had a baggage train of 80 camels, each carrying 300 pounds of gold. He generously gave away or spent so much gold that Cairo's gold market didn't recover for several decades. Mansa Musa was able to impress the rest of the Islamic world by his wealth and by his commitment to Islam. As a result he was able to bring Islamic scholars and other Arab settlers to Timbuktu and other towns in Mali and bring it more firmly and with respect into the World of Islamic Nations, or "Dar al-Islam".

(See information at "Islamic Legacy of Timbuktu" . There is more information from "Carmen Sandiego" (from Encyclopedia Britanica). See an image of Mansa Musa (or his brother and successor, Suleyman) from the Catalan Atlas; see "Maps websites", below. For more information about Mansa Musa, see "West Africa - what was it like before Slavery and Colonization?"

 

E. Islamic Journeys to the Americas?

"Muslims in the Americas Before Columbus". This site summarizes the theories and evidence that Muslim explorers from Andalusia (Muslim Spain) made trips to the Americas in 889 and 999; from Targay (South Morocco) in 1291; and two trips from West Africa (Mali Kingdom) with the second voyage in 1311 led by the elder brother of Mansa Musa named Abu Bakari. Read a description of a play of the story of Abu Bakari's trip (about 1307) who traveled from Mali with 2,000 ships. This story is based on oral tradition and was performed by Ballet D'Afrique Noire, a touring dance company of Senegal.

Learn more about it:

See "Muslim Legacy in Early Americas" and a brief presentation at: "Columbus Came Late: The African Presence in Early America", and a short article with good photographs at KAM Africans in Pre-Columbian America and more citing of evidence of African trips to the Americas.

These trips to the Americas are not completely proven and the evidence is disputed. Therefore, these trips are not found in most textbooks at the present time. But both Columbus and Cortes told of hearing about or witnessing Africans during their voyages. According to one Italian Church document of Columbus' voyage, it is recounted, "...and he (Columbus) wanted to find out what the Indians of Hispaniola had told him, that there had come to it from the south and southeast Negro people, who brought those spear points made of a metal which they called guanin...which was found to have thirty-two parts, eighteen of gold, six of silver, and eight of copper." This was similar to how spear points were made in Mali!

 

F. Zheng He [or Cheng Ho], a Chinese Muslim under the authority of Ming Emperor made several trips of exploration and diplomacy from 1405 - 1433. He even made a hajj to Mecca! Learn more about his travels and the huge size of his ships at "Chinese Mariner Zheng He". More about his life and adventures is found at "Cheng Ho and Suzhou - History Comes Full Circle" For a teacher's lesson plan from AskAsia, see "Should the Ming End the Treasure Ship Voyages?".

Drawing comparing the size of a Chinese Treasure Ship about 1430 with Columbus' ship, 1492.
from When China Ruled the Sea by Louise Levathes

 


You are here at Page One: Islamic Travelers and Map Makers

Go to Page Two: Trade Routes and Journeys

Go to Page Three: Transportation: By Ship

Go to Page Four: Transportation: On Land

Go to Part Four: Maps to see historical maps and even take a "Virtual Tour" of modern countries.

 

Go to the Student Activities Page on Travelers and Mapmakers

Go to the Main Page


Books and Magazines:

  • Traveling Man: The Journey of Ibn Battuta, 1325-1354, by James Rumford. A great book for elementary and middle school students.
  • The Arabs in the Golden Age by Moktefi and Ageorges, Millbrook Press, pages 20 - 23
  • Silver Burdett The Rise of Islam by Moktefi, pages 18 - 23. (Out of print.)
  • Travellers and Explorers, IQRA Trust, London, 1992 distributed in the U.S. by Astrolabe Pictures, call 1-800-39-ASTRO
  • The Silk Route : 7,000 Miles of History by John Major, HarperCollins, 1995
  • Travelers: Ibn Battuta
    1. National Geographic "Ibn Battuta, Prince of Travelers" 12/91 [Especially good!]
    2. "Synopsis of the 14th Century Adventures of Ibn Battuta" by Ross Dunn, UCSD
    3. Adventures of Ibn Battuta by Ross Dunn, University of California Press, 1988. [Great!]
    4. Children's books: Amazing Adventures of Ibn Battuta [set of 5] by Durke, Astrolabe Pictures (call 1-800-39-ASTRO) [Muslim Heroes series]
    5. Ibn Battuta: A View of the Fourteenth-Century World (A Unit of Study for Grades 7 - 10), by Joan Arno and Helen Grady, National Center for History in the Schools, University of California, Los Angeles, 1998.
  • Arab World Notebook for Secondary: Najda, p. 208 - 210 (Teacher Resource book for sale)
  • Travels:
    1. ARAMCO World: May-June, 1992 "The Middle East and the Age of Discovery". This magazine has some good background information on the Muslims' interest in geography and mapmaking, and the learning of the Greeks which they translated, then expanded upon. [See pages 3 - 5, especially.]
    2. ARAMCO World: July-August, 1988 "Traveling the Silk Roads". This has an excellent map of the Silk Road which brought trade goods between Byzantium (modern Turkey) to China. It has photographs of people and places along the way.
    3. ARAMCO World: July-August, 1977 "Al-Idrisi and 'Roger's Book'" This tells the story an Arab geographer who compiled the first scientific map of the world. See pages 14 - 19.
    4. ARAMCO World: Sept.-October, 1997 "Riding the Forty Days' Road" shows camel caravans from Sudan up into Egypt.
    5. "Arabia's Frankincense Trail" National Geographic, October 1985
    6. Major, John S., The Silk Route - 7,000 Miles of History, Harper Collins, 1995
  • Van Sertima, Ivan. They came before Columbus, New York: Random House, c1976. and African Presence in early America, New Brunswick, U.S.A.: Transaction Publishers, c1992. give evidence for the theory of early contact from Africa hundreds of years before Columbus. These are fascinating books.
  • Zheng He, the Admiral of the Ming Dynasty fleet (1405-1433), was a Muslim who sailed through the Indian Ocean and down the coast of East Africa to explore for China. His story is told in When China Ruled the Seas by Louise Levathes, and will be featured in a forthcoming edition of ARAMCO World Magazine. Also see Cheng Ho from Astrolabe Pictures [Muslim Heroes series; 1-800-39-ASTRO] [Note: "Cheng Ho" is the Cantonese-Romanization spelling of "Zheng He."]

Community Resources:

  1. Travel agencies in your community can supply you with pictures from travel brochures of various places. You can use these pictures to illustrate some of your activities, such as "Medieval Travel Advertisements" (see "Activities" below). There is one on Mission at 25th Street.
  2. Community Resources - Visit the website "Influence of the Middle East and Islam upon the Mission - A Photography Project" which shows restaurants, stores, and other places within 6 blocks of Horace Mann Middle School, San Francisco. [Under construction]
  3. Consulates in San Francisco which can provide classes with booklets, information about their countries and perhaps answer some questions about student projects:
    1. Yemen Consulate - 1255 Post St., Suite 1030, San Francisco, CA 94109. (415) 567-3036
    2. Egyptian Consulate - 3001 Pacific Avenue, San Francisco, California 94115; Tel: (415) 346-9700
    3. Jordanian Consulate - 972 Mission Street, 4th Floor, San Francisco, California 94103, Tel: (415) 546 1155, Fax: (415) 546 4041

Audio/Visual Resources and Teacher's Guides:

  1. Video on Trans-Saharan Travel by Caravan: "Caravans of Gold" - Africa Series - Africa: Program 3. Reveals the history and present day life of the continent in breathtaking photography and rare archival film. Hosted by Basil Davidson, British author. Available at many video stores, or for sale for about $60 from Schoolhouse Videos. This video shows the trade of salt for gold that was done by camel caravans, some about Ibn Battuta's description of West Africa, the wealth of West African gold, and the pilgrimage of Mansa Musa.
  2. Teacher Lesson Plan Resources: See http://multimedia2.freac.fsu.edu/fga/academy/aftimb.htm
  3. Silk Road - Materials for Teacher Workshop on the Silk Road includes a recommendation for a CD-ROM, which may be borrowed from REECAS, The Silk Road: Digital Journey, produced by Marek Gronowski (DNA Multimedia Corporation, 1760 West 2nd Ave. Vancouver, B.C. V6J 1H6, Canada, tel. 1-604-736-8783; e-mail: info@dna.bc.ca. Works on both Windows and Mac). This site also recommends books and videotapes. Also SEE THEIR "SILK ROAD AND CENTRAL ASIA ON THE WORLD WIDE WEB.