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by A.S. Chughtai
Abu Abdullah Muhammad Ibn Battuta
Introduction
Abu Abdullah Muhammad Ibn Battuta, also known as Shams ad - Din,
was born at Tangier, Morocco, on the 24th February 1304 C.E. (703
Hijra). He left Tangier on Thursday, 14th June, 1325 C.E. (2nd
Rajab 725 A.H.), when he was twenty one years of age. His travels
lasted for about thirty years, after which he returned to Fez,
Morocco at the court of Sultan Abu 'Inan and dictated accounts
of his journeys to Ibn Juzay. These are known as the famous Travels
(Rihala) of Ibn Battuta. He died at Fez in 1369 C.E.
Ibn Battuta was the only medieval traveller who is known to have
visited the lands of every Muslim ruler of his time. He also travelled
in Ceylon (present Sri Lanka), China and Byzantium and South Russia.
The mere extent of his travels is estimated at no less than 75,000
miles, a figure which is not likely to have been surpassed before
the age of steam.
Travels
In the course of his first journey, Ibn Battuta travelled through
Algiers, Tunis, Egypt, Palestine and Syria to Makkah. After visiting
Iraq, Shiraz and Mesopotamia he once more returned to perform
the Hajj at Makkah and remained there for three years. Then travelling
to Jeddah he went to Yemen by sea, visited Aden andset sail for
Mombasa, East Africa. After going up to Kulwa he came back to
Oman and repeated pilgrimage to Makkah in 1332 C.E. via Hormuz,
Siraf, Bahrain and Yamama. Subsequently he set out with the purpose
of going to India, but on reaching Jeddah, he appears to have
changed his mind (due perhaps to the unavailability of a ship
bound for India), and revisited Cairo, Palestine and Syria, thereafter
arriving at Aleya (Asia Minor) by sea and travelled across Anatolia
and Sinope. He then crossed the Black Sea and after long wanderings
he reached Constantinople through Southern Ukraine.
On his return, he visited Khurasan through Khawarism (Khiva) and
having visited all the important cities such as Bukhara, Balkh,
Herat, Tus, Mashhad and Nishapur, he crossed the Hindukush mountains
via the 13,000 ft Khawak Pass into Afghanistan and passing through
Ghani and Kabul entered India. After visiting Lahri (near modern
Karachi), Sukkur, Multan, Sirsa and Hansi, he reached Delhi. For
several years Ibn Battuta enjoyed the patronage of Sultan Mohammad
Tughlaq, and was later sent as Sultan's envoy to China. Passing
through Cental India and Malwa he took ship from Kambay for Goa,
and after visiting many thriving ports along the Malabar coast
he reached the Maldive Islands, from which he crossed to Ceylon.
Continuing his journey, he landed on the Ma'bar (Coromandal) coast
and once more returning to the Maldives he finally set sail for
Bengal and visited Kamrup, Sylhet and Sonargaon (near Dhaka).
Sailing along the Arakan coast he came to Sumatra and later landed
at Canton via Malaya and Cambodia. In China he travelled northward
to Peking through Hangchow. Retracing his steps he returned to
Calicut and taking ship came to Dhafari and Muscat, and passing
through Paris (Iran), Iraq, Syria, Palestine and Egypt made his
seventh and last pilgrimage to Makkah in November 1348 C.E. and
then returned to his home town of Fez. His travels did not end
here - he later visited Muslim Spain and the lands of the Niger
across the Sahara.
On his return to Fez, Ibn Battuta dictated the accounts ofhis
travels to Ibn Juzay al-Kalbi (1321-1356 C.E.) at the court of
Sultan Abu Inan (1348-1358 C.E). Ibn Juzay took three months to
accomplish this work ,which he finished on 9th December 1355 C.E.
Ibn Battuta
in Africa
A sample from Ibn Battuta's writing describing his
visit to the African kingdom of Mali,
extracted here from the Medieval Sourcebook website.
(http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1354-ibnbattuta.html)
After returning to Fez, in 1352 Ibn Battuta crosses
the Sahara and makes a tour of the kingdom of Mali, including
the city of Timbuktoo.
From Walata to the river Niger.
When I decided to make the journey to Malli [the city of Mali],
which is reached in twenty-four days from Iwalatan if the traveller
pushes on rapidly, I hired a guide from the Massufa--for there
is no necessity to travel in a company on account of the safety
of that road--and set out with three of my companions.
On the way there are many trees [baobabs], and these trees are
of great age and girth; a whole caravan may shelter in the shade
of one of them. There are trees which have neither branches nor
leaves, yet the shade cast by their trunks is sufficient to shelter
a man. Some of these trees are rotted in the interior and the
rain-water collects in them, so that they serve as wells and the
people drink of the water inside them. In others there are bees
and honey, which is collected by the people. I was surprised to
find inside one tree, by which I passed, a man, a weaver, who
had set up his loom in it and was actually weaving.
A traveller in this country carries no provisions, whether plain
food or seasonings, and neither gold nor silver. He takes nothing
but pieces of salt and glass ornaments, which the people call
beads, and some aromatic goods. When he comes to a village the
womenfolk of the blacks bring out millet, milk, chickens, pulped
lotus fruit, rice, "funi" (a grain resembling mustard
seed, from which "kuskusu" [couscous] and gruel are
made), and pounded haricot beans. The traveller buys what of these
he wants, but their rice causes sickness to whites when it is
eaten, and the funi is preferable to it.
Ibn Battuta reaches the Niger river, which
he mistakenly believes to be the Nile
The Nile [actually the Niger] flows from there down to Kabara,
and thence to Zagha. In both Kabara and Zagha there are sultans
who owe allegiance to the king of Malli. The inhabitants of Zagha
are of old standing in Islam; they show great devotion and zeal
for study.
Thence the Nile [Niger] descends to Tumbuktu [Timbuktoo] and Gawgaw
[Gogo], both of which will be described later; then to the town
of Muli in the land of the Limis, which is the frontier province
of [the kingdom of] Malli; thence to Yufi, one of the largest
towns of the negroes, whose ruler is one of the most considerable
of the negro rulers. It cannot be visited by any white man because
they would kill him before he got there.
A crocodile
I saw a crocodile in this part of the Nile [Niger],
close to the bank; it looked just like a small boat. One day I
went down to the river to satisfy a need, and lo, one of the blacks
came and stood between me and the river. I was amazed at such
lack of manners and decency on his part, and spoke of it to someone
or other. [That person] answered. "His purpose in doing that
was solely to protect you from the crocodile, by placing himself
between you and it."
Ibn Battuta arrives at the city of Mali, capital of the kingdom
of Mali p 323-335.
Thus I reached the city of Malli [Mali], the capital of the king
of the blacks. I stopped at the cemetery and went to the quarter
occupied by the whites, where I asked for Muhammad ibn al-Faqih.
I found that he had hired a house for me and went there. His son-in-law
brought me candles and food, and next day Ibn al-Faqih himself
came to visit me, with other prominent residents. I met the qadi
of Malli, 'Abd ar-Rahman, who came to see me; he is a negro, a
pilgrim, and a man of fine character. I met also the interpreter
Dugha, who is one of the principal men among the blacks. All these
persons sent me hospitality-gifts of food and treated me with
the utmost generosity--may God reward them for their kindnesses!
Ten days after our arrival we ate a gruel made of a root resembling
colocasia, which is preferred by them to all other dishes. We
all fell ill--there were six of us--and one of our number died.
I for my part went to the morning prayer and fainted there. I
asked a certain Egyptian for a loosening remedy and he gave me
a thing called "baydar," made of vegetable roots, which
he mixed with aniseed and sugar, and stirred in water. I drank
it off and vomited what I had eaten, together with a large quantity
of bile. God preserved me from death but I was ill for two months.
Ibn Battuta meets the king of Mali.
The sultan of Malli is Mansa Sulayman, "mansa" meaning
[in Mandingo] sultan, and Sulayman being his proper name. He is
a miserly king, not a man from whom one might hope for a rich
present. It happened that I spent these two months without seeing
him, on account of my illness. Later on he held a banquet in commemoration
of our master [the late sultan of Morocco] Abu'l-Hasan, to which
the commanders, doctors, qadi and preacher were invited, and I
went along with them. Reading-desks were brought in, and the Koran
was read through, then they prayed for our master Abu'l-Hasan
and also for Mansa Sulayman.
When the ceremony was over I went forward and saluted Mansa Sulayman.
The qadi, the preacher, and Ibn al-Faqih told him who I was, and
he answered them in their tongue. They said to me, "The sultan
says to you 'Give thanks to God,'" so I said, "Praise
be to God and thanks under all circumstances." When I withdrew
the [sultan's] hospitality gift was sent to me. It was taken first
to the qadi's house, and the qadi sent it on with his men to Ibn
al-Faqih's house. Ibn al-Faqih came hurrying out of his house
barefooted, and entered my room saying, "Stand up; here comes
the sultan's stuff and gift to you." So I stood up thinking--since
he had called it "stuff"--that it consisted of robes
of honour and money, and lo!, it was three cakes of bread, and
a piece of beef fried in native oil, and a calabash of sour curds.
When I saw this I burst out laughing, and thought it a most amazing
thing that they could be so foolish and make so much of such a
paltry matter.
The court ceremonial of king Sulayman of
Mali
On certain days the sultan holds audiences in the
palace yard, where there is a platform under a tree, with three
steps; this they call the "pempi." It is carpeted with
silk and has cushions placed on it. [Over it] is raised the umbrella,
which is a sort of pavilion made of silk, surmounted by a bird
in gold, about the size of a falcon. The sultan comes out of a
door in a corner of the palace, carrying a bow in his hand and
a quiver on his back. On his head he has a golden skull-cap, bound
with a gold band which has narrow ends shaped like knives, more
than a span in length. His usual dress is a velvety red tunic,
made of the European fabrics called "mutanfas." The
sultan is preceded by his musicians, who carry gold and silver
guimbris [two-stringed guitars], and behind him come three hundred
armed slaves. He walks in a leisurely fashion, affecting a very
slow movement, and even stops from time to time. On reaching the
pempi he stops and looks round the assembly, then ascends it in
the sedate manner of a preacher ascending a mosque-pulpit. As
he takes his seat the drums, trumpets, and bugles are sounded.
Three slaves go out at a run to summon the sovereign's deputy
and the military commanders, who enter and sit down. Two saddled
and bridled horses are brought, along with two goats, which they
hold to serve as a protection against the evil eye. Dugha stands
at the gate and the rest of the people remain in the street, under
the trees.
The negroes are of all people the most submissive to their king
and the most abject in their behaviour before him. They swear
by his name, saying "Mansa Sulayman ki" [in Mandingo,
"the emperor Sulayman has commanded"]. If he summons
any of them while he is holding an audience in his pavilion, the
person summoned takes off his clothes and puts on worn garments,
removes his turban and dons a dirty skullcap, and enters with
his garments and trousers raised knee-high. He goes forward in
an attitude of humility and dejection and knocks the ground hard
with his elbows, then stands with bowed head and bent back listening
to what he says. If anyone addresses the king and receives a reply
from him, he uncovers his back and throws dust over his head and
back, for all the world like a bather splashing himself with water.
I used to wonder how it was they did not blind themselves. If
the sultan delivers any remarks during his audience, those present
take off their turbans and put them down, and listen in silence
to what he says.
Sometimes one of them stands up before him and recalls his deeds
in the sultan's service, saying, "I did so-and-so on such
a day," or, "I killed so-and-so on such a day."
Those who have knowledge of this confirm his words, which they
do by plucking the cord of the bow and releasing it [with a twang],
just as an archer does when shooting an arrow. If the sultan says,
"Truly spoken," or thanks him, he removes his clothes
and "dusts." That is their idea of good manners.
Festival ceremonial
I was at Malli during the two festivals of the sacrifice and the
fast-breaking. On these days the sultan takes his seat on the
pempi after the midafternoon prayer. The armour-bearers bring
in magnificent arms--quivers of gold and silver, swords ornamented
with gold and with golden scabbards, gold and silver lances, and
crystal maces. At his head stand four amirs driving off the flies,
having in their hands silver ornaments resembling saddle-stirrups.
The commanders, qadi and preacher sit in their usual places.
The interpreter Dugha comes with his four wives and his slave-girls,
who are about a hundred in number. They are wearing beautiful
robes, and on their heads they have gold and silver fillets, with
gold and silver balls attached. A chair is placed for Dugha to
sit on. He plays on an instrument made of reeds, with some small
calabashes at its lower end, and chants a poem in praise of the
sultan, recalling his battles and deeds of valour. The women and
girls sing along with him and play with bows. Accompanying them
are about thirty youths, wearing red woollen tunics and white
skull-caps; each of them has his drum slung from his shoulder
and beats it. Afterwards come his boy pupils who play and turn
wheels in the air, like the natives of Sind. They show a marvellous
nimbleness and agility in these exercises and play most cleverly
with swords. Dugha also makes a fine play with the sword. Thereupon
the sultan orders a gift to be presented to Dugha and he is given
a purse containing two hundred mithqals of gold dust and is informed
of the contents of the purse before all the people. The commanders
rise and twang their bows in thanks to the sultan. The next day
each one of them gives Dugha a gift, every man according to his
rank. Every Friday after the 'asr prayer, Dugha carries out a
similar ceremony to this that we have described.
On feast-days after Dugha has finished his display,
the poets come in. Each of them is inside a figure resembling
a thrush, made of feathers, and provided with a wooden head with
a red beak, to look like a thrush's head. They stand in front
of the sultan in this ridiculous make-up and recite their poems.
I was told that their poetry is a kind of sermonizing in which
they say to the sultan: "This pempi which you occupy was
that whereon sat this king and that king, and such and such were
this one's noble actions and such and such the other's. So do
you too do good deeds whose memory will outlive you." After
that the chief of the poets mounts the steps of the pempi and
lays his head on the sultan's lap, then climbs to the top of the
pempi and lays his head first on the sultan's right shoulder and
then on his left, speaking all the while in their tongue, and
finally he comes down again. I was told that this practice is
a very old custom amongst them, prior to the introduction of Islam,
and that they have kept it Up.
Ibn Battuta judges the character
of the people of Mali
The negroes possess some admirable qualities. They
are seldom unjust, and have a greater abhorrence of injustice
than any other people. Their sultan shows no mercy to anyone who
is guilty of the least act of it. There is complete security in
their country. Neither traveller nor inhabitant in it has anything
to fear from robbers or men of violence. They do not confiscate
the property of any white man who dies in their country, even
if it be uncounted wealth. On the contrary, they give it into
the charge of some trustworthy person among the whites, until
the rightful heir takes possession of it. They are careful to
observe the hours of prayer, and assiduous in attending them in
congregations, and in bringing up their children to them.
Their piety
On Fridays, if a man does not go early to the mosque, he cannot
find a corner to pray in, on account of the crowd. It is a custom
of theirs to send each man his boy [to the mosque] with his prayer-mat;
the boy spreads it out for his master in a place befitting him
[and remains on it] until he comes to the mosque. Their prayer-mats
are made of the leaves of a tree resembling a date-palm, but without
fruit.
Another of their good qualities is their habit of wearing clean
white garments on Fridays. Even if a man has nothing but an old
worn shirt, he washes it and cleans it, and wears it to the Friday
service. Yet another is their zeal for learning the Koran by heart.
They put their children in chains if they show any backwardness
in memorizing it, and they are not set free until they have it
by heart. I visited the qadi in his house on the day of the festival.
His children were chained up, so I said to him, "Will you
not let them loose?" He replied, "I shall not do so
until they learn the Koran by heart."
The nakedness of the women
Among their bad qualities are the following. The
women servants, slave-girls, and young girls go about in front
of everyone naked, without a stitch of clothing on them. Women
go into the sultan's presence naked and without coverings, and
his daughters also go about naked. Then there is their custom
of putting dust and ashes on their heads, as a mark of respect,
and the grotesque ceremonies we have described when the poets
recite their verses. Another reprehensible practice among many
of them is the eating of carrion, dogs, and asses.
Ibn Battuta leaves the city of Mali
The date of my arrival at Malli was 14th Jumada I, 53 [AH 753,
June 28, 1352], and of my departure from it 22nd Muharram of the
year 54 [AH 754, February 27, 1353].
The hippos of the river Niger
I was accompanied by a merchant called Abu Bakr
ibn Ya'qub. We took the Mima road. I had a camel which I was riding,
because horses are expensive, and cost a hundred mithqals each.
We came to a wide channel which flows out of the Nile [Niger]
and can only be crossed in boats. The place is infested with mosquitoes,
and no one can pass that way except by night. We reached the channel
three or four hours after nightfall on a moonlit night.
On reaching it I saw sixteen beasts with enormous bodies, and
marvelled at them, taking them to be elephants, of which there
are many in that country. Afterwards I saw that they had gone
into the river, so I said to Abu Bakr, "What kind of animals
are these?" He replied, "They are hippopotami which
have come out to pasture ashore." They are bulkier than horses,
have manes and tails, and their heads are like horses' heads,
but their feet like elephants' feet. I saw these hippopotami again
when we sailed down the Nile [Niger] from Tumbuktu to Gawgaw.
They were swimming in the water, and lifting their heads and blowing.
The men in the boat were afraid of them and kept close to the
bank in case the hippopotami should sink them.
They have a cunning method of catching these hippopotami. They
use spears with a hole bored in them, through which strong cords
are passed. The spear is thrown at one of the animals, and if
it strikes its leg or neck it goes right through it. Then they
pull on the rope until the beast is brought to the bank, kill
it and eat its flesh. Along the bank there are quantities of hippopotamus
bones.
Cannibals
We halted near this channel at a large village,
which had as governor a negro, a pilgrim, and man of fine character
named Farba Magha. He was one of the negroes who made the pilgrimage
in the company of Sultan Mansa Musa. Farba Magha told me that
when Mansa Musa came to this channel, he had with him a qadi,
a white man. This qadi attempted to make away with four thousand
mithqals and the sultan, on learning of it, was enraged at him
and exiled him to the country of the heathen cannibals. He [the
qadi] lived among them for four years, at the end of which the
sultan sent him back to his own country. The reason why the heathens
did not eat him was that he was white, for they say that the white
is indigestible because he is not "ripe," whereas the
black man is "ripe" in their opinion.
Sultan Mansa Sulayman was visited by a party of these negro cannibals,
including one of their amirs. They have a custom of wearing in
their ears large pendants, each pendant having an opening of half
a span. They wrap themselves in silk mantles, and in their country
there is a gold mine. The sultan received them with honour, and
gave them as his hospitality-gift a servant, a negress. They killed
and ate her, and having smeared their faces and hands with her
blood came to the sultan to thank him. I was informed that this
is their regular custom whenever they visit his court. Someone
told me about them that they say that the choicest parts of women's
flesh are the palm of the hand and the breast.
Ibn Battuta arrives at Timbuktoo
Thence we went on to Tumbuktu, which stands four
miles from the river [Niger]. Most of its inhabitants are of the
Massufa tribe, wearers of the face-veil. Its governor is called
Farba Musa. I was present with him one day when he had just appointed
one of the Massufa to be amir of a section. He assigned to him
a robe, a turban, and trousers, all of them of dyed cloth, and
bade him sit upon a shield, and the chiefs of his tribe raised
him on their heads. In this town is the grave of the meritorious
poet Abu Ishaq as-Sahili, of Gharnata [Granada], who is known
in his own land as at-Tuwayjin ["Little Saucepan"].
Ibn Battuta leaves Timbuktoo for Gogo
From Tumbuktu I sailed down the Nile on a small boat, hollowed
out of a single piece of wood.
I went on . . . to Gawgaw [Gogo], which is a large city on the
Nile, and one of the finest towns in the Negrolands. It is also
one of their biggest and best-provisioned towns, with rice in
plenty, milk, and fish, and there is a species of cucumber there
called "inani" which has no equal. The buying and selling
of its inhabitants is done with cowry-shells, and the same is
the case at Malli [the city of Mali]. I stayed there about a month,
and then set out in the direction of Tagadda by land with a large
caravan of merchants from Ghadamas.
Ibn Battuta continues to travel in the lands along the Niger,
but then returns to Morocco, re-crossing the Sahara. He arrives
in Fez in December of 1355.
Ibn Battuta ends his long and many travels p, 339.
I arrived at the royal city of Fa's [Fez], the capital of our
master the Commander of the Faithful (may God strengthen him),
where I kissed his beneficent hand and was privileged to behold
his gracious countenance. [Here] I settled down under the wing
of his bounty after long journeying. May God Most High recompense
him for the abundant favours and ample benefits which he has bestowed
on me; may He prolong his days and spare him to the Muslims for
many years to come.
Here ends the travel-narrative entitled "A Donation to those
interested in the Curiosities of the Cities and Marvels of the
Ways." Its dictation was finished on 3rd Dhu'l-hijja 756
[December 9, 1355]. Praise be to God, and peace to His creatures
whom He hath chosen.
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