Tanbih Wa Ishraf
Baghdad · 956
c. 896 CE–c. 956 CE · Baghdad
Abu al-Hasan Ali ibn al-Husayn al-Mas'udi (born in Baghdad around 896 CE; the birth date is an estimate, not firmly recorded, and is sometimes placed a few years earlier) was one of the most wide-ranging historians and geographers of the medieval Islamic world. Later writers nicknamed him the "Herodotus of the Arabs" for the way he wove travel, observation, and storytelling into universal history. Tradition holds that he descended from Abdullah ibn Mas'ud, a Companion (sahabi) of the Prophet Muhammad — a claim repeated in the biographical sources but not independently verifiable.
From roughly his twenties he traveled almost constantly. Sources credit him with journeys through the Persian lands, the Caspian and Armenian regions, the Indus valley and western India, the East African ("Zanj") coast, and Arabia, gathering reports firsthand and from merchants and sailors he met; the furthest reaches sometimes attributed to him (Ceylon, China) are doubted by modern historians, who note he gathered much China material from the traveler Abu Zayd al-Sirafi rather than necessarily visiting himself. In his later years he is associated with Antioch (c. 943), Damascus (c. 945-946), and finally Fustat (Old Cairo), where he was active from the 940s and died in 345 AH / September 956 CE.
His surviving works are Muruj al-dhahab wa-ma'adin al-jawhar ("The Meadows of Gold and Mines of Gems"), a sweeping world history-geography whose surviving recension dates to c. 947, and the later abridgment Kitab al-Tanbih wa-l-ishraf. His sectarian and legal identity is genuinely debated: the Sunni scholar Ibn Hajar described him as having Shi'i and Mu'tazili (rationalist-theology) leanings; al-Subki and others counted him a Shafi'i jurist (a student of Ibn Surayj); and much modern scholarship leans toward Zahiri or Shafi'i affiliation. Some Twelver Shia biographers claim him as one of their own, but the sources do not settle the question.
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Al-Mas'udi was born in Baghdad, capital of the Abbasid caliphate, around 896 CE (sometimes placed a few years earlier); the exact year is an estimate, not a recorded date. His family was reportedly of Arab descent, traced to the Companion Abdullah ibn Mas'ud (a traditional genealogical claim that the sources repeat but do not independently verify).
Major Mizrahi center; home of Yosef Hayyim (Ben Ish Chai).
The world in their lifetime
Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Al-Mas'udi’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.
Baghdad · 956
Baghdad · 956