In the early days of Ibn Battuta. Known for his journey, Ibn Battuta is the only medieval traveler who visited the land of every Muslim ruler of his time. Ibn Battuta has traveled for about 27 years. Ibn Battuta was born on February 25, 1304 in Tangier, Morocco. His religious belief is Islam and he is Muslim. When I was young he studied at Sunni Malkiri Madihab, the main form of education in North Africa at the time. Only 21 years old Ibn Boututa is a pilgrimage to Mecca, in other words, he is alone in the Mecca pilgrimage area.
Abu Abdullah Muhammad Ibn Abdullah Al Lawati Al Tanji Ibn Battuta was born in 1304 in Port Tangier in northern Morocco. A few years later he quickly abbreviated his name to Ibn Battuta *, so that he did not look like 'Abraham - his name, the unprecedented traveler.' However, there is no doubt that Ibn Battuta is the best traveler indeed to travel around the world. In the days when valuable minorities invested in curiosity and had the means and courage to adventure away from the edge of the map, Ibn Battuta began a pilgrimage to Muslim to the Islamic tradition, finally, I handed the best. It is part of it.
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.
Ibn Battuta is one of the world's travelers who visited Mecca in the 15th century. During his journey, he offered us an important city explanation. About 729, Ibnbatuta arrived in Mecca. When Battuta arrived in Mecca it felt like a holy sanctuary, so he began pilgrimage. He stayed in Mecca for several years. In the second year of the existence of Battuta, his caravan "brought lots of charity work to support people who stayed at Mecca and Medina" (p. 51). Providing these charities to the poor helps to achieve another pillar of faith, and he also builds the pillars of pilgrimage to Mecca. In Mecca, pray for the king of Iraq and El Melik El Nasir. Prayer is done in the Mecca Temple. The temple was very big, but it was destroyed once and rebuilt a bit smaller than the original. People of Mecca are also important aspects of the village.