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  1. Ibn Battuta started on his travels in 1325, when he was 20 years old. His main reason to travel was to go on a Hajj, or a Pilgrimage to Mecca, to fulfill the fifth pillar of Isla.. But his traveling went on for around 29 years and he covered about 75,000 miles visiting the equivalent of 44 modern countries which were then mostly under the ...

    • Overview
    • Early life and travels

    Ibn Battuta was a medieval Muslim traveler who wrote one of the world’s most famous travel logs, the Riḥlah. This work describes the people, places, and cultures he encountered in his journeys along some 75,000 miles (120,000 km) across and beyond the Islamic world.

    How did Ibn Battuta impact the world?

    Ibn Battuta’s Riḥlah has tremendous documentary value because of its detailed accounts of social, cultural, and political aspects of much of the Islamic world during the 14th century. His unique and mostly reliable historiography is valuable for the study of history.

    What was Ibn Battuta’s early life like?

    Ibn Battuta was born into a family of qadis, Muslim judges who enjoyed significant civil authority at the time. He was educated toward this end in his hometown of Tangier. His travels began when he undertook a pilgrimage (hajj) to Mecca.

    What was Ibn Battuta’s occupation?

    Ibn Battuta was from a family that produced a number of Muslim judges (qadis). He received the traditional juristic and literary education in his native town of Tangier. In 1325, at the age of 21, he started his travels by undertaking the pilgrimage (hajj) to Mecca. At first his purpose was to fulfill that religious duty and to broaden his education by studying under famous scholars in Egypt, Syria, and the Hejaz (western Arabia). That he achieved his objectives is corroborated by long enumerations of scholars and Sufi (Islamic mystic) saints whom he met and also by a list of diplomas conferred on him (mainly in Damascus). Those studies qualified him for judicial office, whereas the claim of being a former pupil of the then-outstanding authorities in traditional Islamic sciences greatly enhanced his chances and made him thereafter a respected guest at many courts.

    That renown was to follow later, however. In Egypt, where he arrived by the land route via Tunis and Tripoli, an irresistible passion for travel was born in his soul, and he decided to visit as many parts of the world as possible, setting as a rule “never to travel any road a second time.” His contemporaries traveled for practical reasons (such as trade, pilgrimage, and education), but Ibn Battuta did it for its own sake, for the joy of learning about new countries and new peoples. He made a living of it, benefitting at the beginning from his scholarly status and later from his increasing fame as a traveler. He enjoyed the generosity and benevolence of numerous sultans, rulers, governors, and high dignitaries in the countries he visited, thus securing an income that enabled him to continue his wanderings.

    From Cairo, Ibn Battuta set out via Upper Egypt to the Red Sea but then returned and visited Syria, there joining a caravan for Mecca. Having finished the pilgrimage in 1326, he crossed the Arabian Desert to Iraq, southern Iran, Azerbaijan, and Baghdad. There he met the last of the Mongol khans of Iran, Abū Saʿīd (ruled 1316–36), and some lesser rulers. Ibn Battuta spent the years between 1327 and 1330 in Mecca and Medina leading the quiet life of a devotee, but such a long stay did not suit his temperament.

    Britannica Quiz

    Exploration and Discovery

    Embarking on a boat in Jiddah, he sailed with a retinue of followers down both shores of the Red Sea to Yemen, crossed it by land, and set sail again from Aden. This time he navigated along the eastern African coast, visiting the trading city-states as far as Kilwa (Tanzania). His return journey took him to southern Arabia, Oman, Hormuz, southern Persia, and across the Persian Gulf back to Mecca in 1332.

    • Ivan Hrbek
  2. 10 de feb. de 2020 · Durante 30 años, a lo largo de incesantes travesías a pie, en camello o por mar, Ibn Battuta recorrió el mundo conocido en el siglo XIV, desde el Sáhara hasta China y desde Rusia a la India

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  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ibn_BattutaIbn Battuta - Wikipedia

    Ibn battuta al-Tanji; Occupation(s) Traveller, Geographer, explorer, scholar: Era: Post-classical history: Notable work: Rihla: Arabic name: Personal (Ism) Shams al-Dīn: Patronymic (Nasab) Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd Allāh ibn Muḥammad ibn Ibrāhīm ibn Muḥammad ibn Yūsuf: Teknonymic (Kunya) ʾAbū ʿAbd Allāh: Epithet (Laqab) ibn Baṭṭūṭah

  4. Después de regresar a casa de sus viajes en 1354, y por sugerencia del gobernante mariní de Marruecos, Abu Inan Faris, Ibn Battuta dictó un relato en árabe de sus viajes a Ibn Yuzayy, un erudito a quien había conocido previamente en Granada. Ese relato es la única fuente de las aventuras de Ibn Battuta.

  5. 7 de feb. de 2019 · Ibn Battuta es famoso por su obra "La Rihla de Ibn Battuta", la historia de sus viajes entre 1325-alrededor de 1352. ¿Cuántos países visitó Ibn Battuta? Ibn Battuta visitó 40 países y atravesó tres continentes. ¿Se considera precisa la Rihla de Ibn Battuta?

  6. 12 de may. de 2020 · The first volume recorded Ibn Battuta's earliest journeys through Tunisia, Egypt, Syria and Arabia. Volume II continues with his journeys through Persia, Iraq and Arabia, Asia Minor and South Russia with detailed descriptions of the towns on the way and the customs of the inhabitants.