Ibn Battuta — "The people of this city are very religious. They pray five times a day and fast …"
The people of this city are very religious. They pray five times a day and fast during the month of Ramadan.
The people of this city are very religious. They pray five times a day and fast during the month of Ramadan.
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"I saw a man whose body was covered with hair, and he had a tail like a monkey."
"The people of this country eat dogs and pigs, and they do not care about cleanliness."
"The people of this city have a strange custom of burying their dead in trees. It is a very unusual sight."
"They are a people who do not know how to fight, and they are a cowardly people."
"I saw a man who had two heads, and another who had three legs, and another who had a hand like an elephant's trunk."
Moroccan Muslim scholar and explorer whose Rihla (travels) covered ~75,000 miles across the Islamic world from Mali to China — the most-traveled person of the medieval world. Closely associated with Marco Polo (his Venetian counterpart, traveling 50 years earlier in the opposite direction). For an intellectual contrast, see medieval European Christian insularity, the sheltered monastic-feudal worldview of 14th-century Latin Christendom — Ibn Battuta's 30-year journey demonstrates that the 14th-century Dar al-Islam was a single intellectual ecosystem from West Africa to Beijing, while medieval Europe was still tribal and parochial. The cleanest 'connectedness vs insularity' contrast in pre-modern history — Battuta could find a familiar Maliki judge in any city from Mali to Sumatra.
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