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Ibn Battuta

Ibn Battuta

1304 CE1369 CE · Alexandria

Abu Abdallah Muhammad ibn Battuta (born 24 February 1304 in Tangier) was a Moroccan jurist and traveler whose account of his journeys, the Rihla ("Journey"), is one of the most celebrated travel narratives of the pre-modern world. He came from an Arabised Berber family of the Lawata tribe that produced qadis (Islamic judges), and he was trained in the Maliki madhhab — the school of Sunni law dominant in North Africa. In 1325, aged twenty-one, he left Tangier to perform the hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca), and what began as a pilgrimage became roughly three decades of travel. By his own telling he crossed Egypt, Syria, Arabia, Iraq and Persia, sailed the East African coast, passed through Anatolia and the lands of the Golden Horde, and reached India, where he reports serving for some years as a qadi in Delhi under Sultan Muhammad ibn Tughluq. He describes further travel to the Maldives — where he says he was made chief judge — and onward toward Southeast Asia and China. Returning to Morocco around 1349, he then reportedly journeyed to Muslim Granada and, in 1352–1354, across the Sahara to the Mali Empire. At the Marinid court he dictated his recollections to the Andalusian scholar Ibn Juzayy, who shaped them into the Rihla (c. 1352–1356). He is said to have served afterward as a qadi in Morocco and to have died there, traditionally in 1368/69. Scholars treat the book as a partly reconstructed memoir: some episodes are vivid and reliable, others compressed, borrowed or embellished.

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Did you know?

  • The man who out-traveled Marco Polo

    The Moroccan jurist Ibn Battuta left Tangier in 1325 — the year after Marco Polo died — and did not settle again for nearly three decades. By the time he dictated his travelogue, the Rihla, he had covered roughly 75,000 miles (about 120,000 km) from Timbuktu to the Maldives to the coast of China, a documented range no traveler of his era is known to have matched.

    How we know

    Ibn Battuta b. 24 Feb 1304, d. 1368/1369; departed Tangier 14 June 1325; traveled c.1325–1354 (≈29 yrs); ~117,000 km / ~73,000–75,000 mi (Ross Dunn). Marco Polo d. Jan 1324, ~24,000 km / ~15,000 mi.

Life journeyclick any stop, or use ←/→Trace on the map →

Stop 2 of 111325–1326Departed On Hajj

AlexandriaEgypt

What they did here

Set out from Tangier in 1325 (aged twenty-one) to perform the hajj. The Rihla traces his route eastward through North Africa to Egypt, reaching Alexandria and then Cairo in 1326. These early legs are generally regarded as among the most reliable.

About Alexandria

Alexandria (al-Iskandariyya) is the great Mediterranean port-city of northern Egypt, founded by Alexander the Great in 331 BCE and a leading centre of learning in antiquity. After the Muslim conquest of Egypt (642) it remained a major commercial and scholarly hub; the Shadhili Sufi Ibn Ata Allah al-Iskandari (d. 1309) took his nisba from the city, and the modernist reformer Muhammad Abduh (d. 1905) was active in Egypt's intellectual life there and in Cairo.

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The world in their lifetime

Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Ibn Battuta’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.

Works

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