Ibn Battuta's 1331 Journey to West Africa
[2023-02-14 09:20:54]
Battoutah 1331 Indian trip to West Africa provides a comparison of two worlds: Ibn Battuta (Ibn Battuta) West Africa with Muslim interpretation of the traditional society of Africa and pre-modern Islamic culture and faith in tribal conflict. He especially criticized the various roles of the women he observed - so let us gain insight into the judgments formed by his own culture and society. A brief overview of his life is important to understanding the impression and reactions of Batutta to the West African society. Abu Abdallah ibn Battuta was born in Morocco in 1304.
With the help of Andover Ruth poet Ibn Ibn Battuta, Ibn Battuta ended in two years to complete his journey in Asia and Africa on his journey. He quietly served as a judge somewhere near Fitz. He passed away at the age of 64 in 1369. The location of his grave is unknown. "Text Source: Robert Eno Indiana. Edu / + /; Indiana University Education Columbia University Asia afe.easia.columbia.edu <|> Chinese Civilization Visual Information Center, Washington University, depts.washington.edu / chinaciv / = \ ; National Palace Museum, Taipei npm.gov.tw \ = / Library of the US Congress, New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Chinese Tourism Board (CNTO); Xinhua; china.org, China Daily, Japan Press, London Times; National Geographic, New Yorker, Age, Newsweek, Reuters, Associated Press, Lonely Planet Guide, Compton's Encyclopedia, Smithsonian Magazine, Guardian, Yomiuri Newspaper, AFP, Wikipedia, BBC
When Ibn Batuta returned to Morocco at the end of his life in 1354, he spoke a lot of stories about overseas trips. The Moroccan ruler insisted on a trip to his scholar to his scholar that he wanted to record the record of the journey of Ibn Battuta. Scholars wrote these descriptions and they became a famous travel book called Rihla, which means "journey". A trip to Mecca is thousands of miles long. He travels frequently in North Africa and often participates in car security and digital security. In the process he visited cities such as Tunisia, Alexandria, Cairo, Damascus, Jerusalem. Finally, a year and a half after leaving home, he arrived in Mecca and finished his pilgrimage.
Abu Abdullah Muhammad Ibn Battuta is a scholar and tourist of Moroccan Muslims. He is known for his travels and travels and is called Rihla. His journey lasted about 30 years and covered almost the entire Islamic world and other areas. Far more than their predecessors than the Indian subcontinent, Central Asia, Southeast Asia, China, East of the Middle East, West Africa North Africa, West Africa, South and Eastern Europe. After the trip, he returned to Morocco and introduced his experience to Ibn Joozey.