The byproduct of sericulture in different industries.pptx
Ibn Battuta
1. Bibliography
▪ Orias.berkeley.edu
▪ Hakluytsociety.com
▪ blog.europeana.eu
▪ History.com
▪ The Travels of Ibn Battuta – Ibn Batuta
▪ Culture and Conquest in Mongol Eurasia By Thomas T.Allsen
▪ The Mongols and the Armenians (1220-1335)
▪ Term Paper Resource Guide to Medieval History
▪ Kj vids
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9. 9
Year Path
1325 Across North Africa to Cairo
1326 In Cairo
1326 Cairo to Jerusalem, Damascus, Medina, and Mecca
1326 The Hajj - from Medina to Mecca
1326 - 1327 Iraq and Persia
1328 - 1330 The Red Sea to East Africa and the Arabian Sea
1330 - 1331 Anatolia
1332 - 1333 Lands of the Golden Horde & the Chagatai
1334 - 1341 Delhi, the Capital of Muslim India
1341 - 1344 Escape from Delhi to the Maldive Islands and Sri Lanka
1345 - 1346 Through the Strait of Malacca to China
1346 - 1349 Return Home
1349 - 1350 On to al-Andalus and Morocco
1350 - 1351 Journey to Mali
The Journey
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Maldives coins, LM ISC LIMIS – Lietuvos muziejų
informacijos, skaitmeninimo ir LIMIS centras, CC BY
Ibn Battuta’s indubitably genuine travels in the
Islamized western Mongol successor states are
one of the main sources on the Golden Horde
and the Chaghatay khanate.
14. If u don’t understand watch the video, please?
14
While the Mongol Empire dominated Eurasia, the two Italian tourists came from Plano Karpini’s Giovanni‘, and Marco Polo from Venice, arriving through Karakorum and Dudud, capital of the Mongol Empire through Central Asia and China.
The merchant of Venice, Marco Polo, worked in Kublai Khan until 1275-1292.
(February 25, 1304 – 1368 or 1369) aged 64 or 65
Ibn Battuta, or ‘Abu Abd al-Lah Muhammad ibn Abd al-Lah l-Lawati t-Tangi ibn Batutah’ to give him his full name
Born in Tangier, Morocco, Ibn Battuta came of age in a family of Islamic judges. In 1325, at age 21, he left his homeland for the Middle East.
He is a Moroccan traveler who described all four successor states of the Mongol Empire
From there he crossed Arabia into the Mongol IL-KHANATE in 1326. By this time he had apparently conceived his love of traveling for its own sake. After traveling to Tabriz in the entourage of the last Il-Khan, Abu-Sa‘id whom rained (1317–35), he returned to Mecca in 1327.
By this time he planned to go to India but could not find a guide, and instead he went north to Turkish Anatolia (see TURKEY).From Sinope he crossed the Black Sea to the GOLDEN HORDE and the ordo (palace-tent) of ÖZBEG KHAN (1313–41).
And Dispatched as an envoy to the Mongol YUAN DYNASTY in China in 1342, he reached there, if at all, only after lingering in ports from the Maldives to Sumatra.
On his return to Morocco he witnessed the BLACK DEATH in Syria in 1348.
It’s a photo of book which is Traveling Man: The Journey of Ibn Battuta By James Rumford
Maldives coins, LM ISC LIMIS - Lithuanian Museum of Information, Digitization and LIMIS Center, CC BY