The Adventures of Ibn Battuta: A Muslim Traveler of the Fourteenth Century (64 page)

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Authors: Ross E. Dunn

Tags: #Medieval, #Travel, #General, #Historical, #Biography & Autobiography, #History

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Arno, Joan, and Grady, Helen. “Ibn Battuta: A View of the Fourteenth-Century World, A Unit of Study for Grades 7–10,” Los Angeles: National Center for History in the Schools, UCLA, 1998.

Beckingham, C. F. “The
Rihla
: Fact or Fiction?” In I. R. Netton, ed.
Golden Roads: Migration, Pilgrimage and Travel in Mediaeval and Modern Islam
, Richmond, England, 1993, pp. 86–94.

Benatti, L. “Ibn Battuta e i suoi viaggi.”
Africa e Mediterraneo
14–15 (1995): 78–81.

Bro, Thyge C.
Ibn Battuta: En arabisk rejsende fra det 14. århundrede
, Oslo, 2001. In Danish.

Bullis, Douglas. “The Longest Hajj: The Journeys of Ibn Battuta.”
Saudi Aramco World
51 (July/August 2000): 2–39.

Dunn, Ross E.
Gli straordinari viaggi di Ibn Battuta: Le mille avventure del Marco Polo arabo
, Milan, 1993. Italian edition.

——. “Ibn Battuta and Muslim Cosmopolitanism in the 14th c.”
Hadeeth ad-Dar
, Dar al-Athar al-Islamiyyah, Kuwait, 12 (2001): 10–13.

——. “Migrations of Literate Muslims in the Middle Periods: The Case of Ibn Battuta.” In I. R. Netton, ed.
Golden Roads: Migration, Pilgrimage and Travel in Mediaeval and Modern Islam
, Richmond, England, 1993, 75–85.

——.
Petualangan Ibnu Battuta: Seorang Musafir Muslim Abad ke-14
, Jakarta, 1995. Indonesian edition.

Durkee, Noura.
The Amazing Adventures of Ibn Battuta
, Washington, D.C., 1995. For children.

El Moudden, Abderrahmane. “The Ambivalence of
Rihla
: Community Integration and Self-Definition in Moroccan Travel Accounts, 1300–1800.” In Dale F. Eickelman and James Piscatori, eds.
Muslim Travelers: Pilgrimage, Migration, and the Religious Imagination
, Berkeley, 1990, pp. 69–84.

Gibb, H. A. R., ed.
The Travels of Ibn Battuta A.D. 1325–1354, Translated with Notes from the Arabic Text Edited by C. Defremery and B. R. Sanguinetti
. 5 vols. Vols. 1–3: Cambridge University Press for the Hakluyt Society, 1958, 1961, and 1971. Vol. 4: Translation Completed with Annotations by C.F. Beckingham. London: Hakluyt Society, 1994. Vol. 5: Index, A. D. H. Bivar, Compiler, Aldershot, England: Ashgate Publishing, 2001.

Guennoun, Abdallah.
Memoirs of Important Men of Morocco: Ibn Battuta
. Rabat: Islamic Eucational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, 1996.

Hamdun, Said, and Noel King. (trans. and eds.).
Ibn Battuta in Black Africa
. Foreword by Ross E. Dunn, Princeton, N.J.: Markus Wiener, 1994.

Ibn Battuta: Actes du Colloque international organizé par l’Ecole Supérieure Roi Fahd de Traduction à Tanger les 27, 27, 29 octobre 1993
, Tangier, 1996.

Ibn Battuta: Muslim Scholar and Traveler. Calliope
9 (April 1999). Entire issue.

Kruk, R. “Ibn Battuta: Travel, Family Life, and Chronology: How Seriously Do We Take a Father?”
Al-Qantara: Revista de Estudios Árabes
16, 2 (1995): 369–84.

Mackintosh-Smith, Tim, ed.
The Travels of Ibn Battutah
, London, 2003.

——.
Travels with a Tangerine: A Journey in the Footnotes of Ibn Battutah
, London, 2001.

Mapelli López, E. “Escolio sobre la Málaga de Ibn Battuta (1350).”
Boletín de la Real Academia de Córdoba
65, 126 (1994): 221–9.

Martínez Enamorado, V. “Granadinos en la Rihla de Ibn Battuta: Apuntes biográficos.”
Al-Andalus
2 (1994, 1996): 203–21.

Mazzoli-Guintard, C. “Le Royaume de Grenade au milieu du XIVe siècle: Quelques données sur les formes de peuplement à travers le voyage d’Ibn Battûta.”
Voyages et voyageurs au Moyen Age: XXVIe Congrès de la S.H.M.E.S. (Limoges-Aubazine, mai 1995)
, Paris, 1996, pp. 145–64.

Morgan, David O. “Ibn Battuta and the Mongols.”
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society
, 3rd ser., vol. 2 (April 2001), pp. 1–11.

Netton, Ian Richard, “Arabia and the Pilgrim Paradigm of Ibn Battuta: A Braudelian Approach.” In Ian Richard Netton, ed.
Arabia and the Gulf: From Traditional Society to Modern States: Essays in Honour of M. A. Shaban’s 60th Birthday
, London 1986, pp. 29–40.

Norris, H. T. “Ibn Battuta’s Journey in the North-eastern Balkans.”
Journal of Islamic Studies
5, 2 (1994): 209–20.

Rumford, James.
Traveling Man: The Journey of Ibn Battuta, 1325–1354
, Boston, 2001. For children.

Tolmacheva, Marina A. “Ibn Battuta on Women’s Travels in the Dar al-Islam.” In Bonnie Frederick and Susan H. McLeod, eds.
Women and the Journey: The Female Travel Experience
, Pullman, Wash.: Washington State University Press, 1993, p. 119–40.

INDEX

The index that appeared in the print version of this title was intentionally removed from the eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below

Abadan

Abbasid Caliphate

’Abd al-Wadid sultanate

al-’Abdari, Abu Muhammad

Abohar

Abraham

Abu al-Tayyib

Abu Bakr, Abu Yahya, sultan

Abu Bakr, caliph

Abu Bakr,
shaykh
of Mogadishu

Abu’Inan, sultan

and Abu l’Hasan

and Ibn Battuta

character of

death of

Abu l’Barakat

Abu l’Fath, Rukn al-Din

Abu l’Hasan, sultan

Abu l’Mawahid Hasan
see
Ibn Sulayman, al-Hasan

Abu Sa’id, Ilkhan

Abu Sa’id, sultan

Abu Tashfin, sultan

Abu Yusuf Ya’qub, sultan

Acre

Adam and Eve

Adam’s Bridge

Adam’s Peak

Aden

Aden, Gulf of

Aegean Sea

Afghanistan

’Aghyul, ‘Ali (traveler)

Ahaggar mountains

Ahsan Shah, Jalal al-Din, sultan

’Ain al-Mulk, rebellion of

Air

Ajlun

akhis

see also fityan

Akhmim

Akko
see
Acre

Akkridur
see
Egridur

Aksaray

’Ala al-Din mosque

’Ala al-Din Muhammad

al-Andalus
see
Andalusia

Alanya

’Alaya
see
Alanya

Alburz mountains

Aleppo

Alexandria

Alfonso XI, king

Algeciras

Algeria

Algiers

Alhama

Alhambra

Aligarh
see
Koil

’Ali ibn Abi Talib, caliph

’alim

see also ’ulama

Almohads

alms giving

Alughu, khan

Amasiya
see
Amasya

Amasya

amir

caravan leader

military commander

amir al-hajj

amirs
, of Turkish Anatolia

Amroha

Amu Darya River

’Anah

Anatolia

society and culture

see also
Turks

Andalusia

Muslim emigrants from

Andarab River

Andronicus II, emperor

Andronicus III, emperor

Annaba
see
Buna

Antalya

Aqaba (town)

Aqaba, gulf of

Arabia

see also
Mecca, Medina, Yemen

Arabian Sea

Arabic language

Arab nomads

’Arafat, plain of

Aragon
see
Aragon-Catalonia

Aragon-Catalonia

Aral Sea

arid belt, historical importance of

Armenia, Armenians

Arya Chakravarti (king)

Arz al-Rum
see
Erzurum

Arzanjan
see
Erzincan

Ashqelon

Asia Minor
see
Anatolia

Asilah

Asir

Assiou

Astrakhan

Aswan

Asyut

atabeg

Atlantic Ocean

trade on Moroccan coast of

Awliya, Nizam al-Din

Ayas

Aya Soluk

Aybek, Qutb al-Din, sultan

’Aydhab

commercial importance of

Aydin, amirate of

Azak

Azelik
see
Takadda

Azerbaijan

Azov
see
Azak

Azov, sea of

Bab al-Mandeb, strait of

Babylon

Bahmani sultanate

Bahrain

Bahri Mamluks
see
Mamluk sultanate

al-Balafiqi, Abu l’Barakat

Balikesir

Balkh

Ballish
see
Velez Malaga

Bamako

Bambuk

Bandar-e-Ma’shur
see
Machul

Bandar Salawat
see
Chilaw

bandits and pirates

in Strait of Gibraltar

in India

in Morocco

in Spain

Bantu-speaking people

Banu Hanifa

Banu Hilal

see also
Arab nomads

Banu Marin
see
Marinid sultanate

Banu Nabhan

al-Baqi’

Barah Nagar

baraka

Barani, Zia al-Din

Barcelona

Basra

Battala
see
Puttalam

Batu, khan

Bayalun, princess

Bayn al-Qasrayn

Bayt al-Faqih

Beijing

Beirut

Beja (people)

Beja (town)

Bengal

Bengal, Bay of

Berbers

and Marinid dynasty

and Sufism

Berganma

Berke, khan

Bethlehem

Biba

Bibliothèque Nationale

Bichaqchi, Akhi

Bijaya

bilad al-sudan see
Mali, Sudan

Bir al–Ksaib

Birgi

Bish Dagh

Bistam

Black Death

and epidemic in India

causes and treatment

in Ifriqiya

in Spain

origins and spread of

social effects of

see also
plague

Black Sea

Bone
see
Buna

Booksellers,
madrasa
of the

Borneo

Bosphorus

Bougie
see
Bijaya

bubonic plague
see
Black Death, plague

Buda

Buddhism, Buddhists

Bukhara

al-Bukhari

Bulgaria, kingdom of

Bulghar

Buna

Burckhardt, John

Burdur

Bure

Burgomadzhary
see
Machar

Burhan al-Din

Burhanpur Gap

Burma

Bursa

Burton, Richard

al-Bushri family

al-Bushri, Muhammad
see
Al-Bushri family

Byzantine empire

and Khanate of Kipchak

and Turkish expansion

decline of

see also
Anatolia, Turks

Cagliari

Cairo

architecture of

Black Death in

maps

population of

society and economy

see also
Mamluk sultanate

Calahora

Calicut

Caliphate, High
see
Abbasid Caliphate

Caliphs, mosque of the

Cambay

Cambay, Gulf of

camels

canal du Sahel

Cannanore

Canton

Cape Comorin

caravans

of
hajj
pilgrims: from Damascus

from Egypt

from North Africa

from Yemen

of Iraq

organization of

trans-Saharan

caravanserais
see khans

Caria

Caspian Sea

Castile, kingdom of

Catalans

Catalonia
see
Aragon-Catalonia

Caucasus mountains

Ceuta

intellectual life of

maps

political importance of

trade of

Ceylon

Chagatay, khanate of

Chagatay, son of Genghis Khan

Champa

Charikar

Chaul

Chelif River

Chilaw

China, Chinese

envoys to India

in Persia

see also
Yuan dynasty

Chinggis Khan

see also
Mongols

Chishti brotherhood

Chittagong

Choban family

Chola empire

Christianity, Christians

in Anatolia

in Crimea

in Persia

Cilicia

Citidel, of Cairo

Cizre

Collection of Histories

colleges
see madrasas

Constantine

Constantinople

Cordova

cosmopolitanism

defined

in Islamic society

in Ilkhanid Persia

cowrie shells

Crimea

Crusade, fourth

Cyprus

Cyrenaica

Dacca

dallal

Darmanhur

Damascus

as center of learning

great mosque of

Mamluk capital in Syria

maps

Mongol attack on

society and economy

trade of

Damietta

Danube river

Dar al-Islam

defined

Muslim allegiance to

Daulatabad

capital of sultanate

map

Deccan

Défrémery, C.

Delhi, sultanate of

and west coast of India

government of

international relations of

lavish spending in

map

origins of

rebellions against

rule in Bengal

Delhi (city)

as center of Muslim culture

architecture of

capital of sultanate

maps

Denizli

Deogir
see
Daulatabad

Dhar

Dhibat al-Mahal
see
Maldive islands

dhikr

Dhofar
see
Zafar

dhow
see
ships

Dhu l-Hulaifa

Dinawar
see
Dondra

Divehi

Djerba island

Dnieper river

Doab

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