Ibn Battuta — "Traveling gives you home in a thousand strange places, then leaves you a strange…"
Traveling gives you home in a thousand strange places, then leaves you a stranger in your own land.
Traveling gives you home in a thousand strange places, then leaves you a stranger in your own land.
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"I saw in this city a strange custom: the women do not veil themselves, and they are not ashamed of this."
"The women of this land wear veils that cover their entire faces, so I could not see their beauty."
"I saw a rhinoceros for the first time near the Indus River. It looked like a huge pig with a horn on its nose, and it was uglier than anything I had ever seen."
"The people of this city have a strange custom of burying their dead in trees. It is a very unusual sight."
"Traveling offers you a hundred roads to adventure, and gives your heart wings!"
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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