This English edition of the work of the Arab traveller usually known as Ibn Battuta (1304 68/9) was translated by Rev. Samuel Lee (1783 1852), Professor of Arabic in the University of Cambridge, from 'the abridged Arabic manuscript copies, preserved in the Public Library of Cambridge', and published in 1829. Lee's work sparked widespread European interest in Ibn Battuta, who had set off from his native Morocco on a pilgrimage to Mecca in 1325, and kept travelling for the next twenty-four years, reaching as far east as China and as far south as Zanzibar, as well as visiting parts of Spain and...
This English edition of the work of the Arab traveller usually known as Ibn Battuta (1304 68/9) was translated by Rev. Samuel Lee (1783 1852), Profess...
This four-volume edition of the Arabic text of the Journey of the Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta (1304 68/9), with a French translation, was published in 1853 8 as part of the 'Collection d'ouvrages orientaux' of the French Societe Asiatique. In 1325, Ibn Battuta, who came from a family of Islamic jurists in Tangier, set out to make the pilgrimage to Mecca the beginning of a journey that would last for twenty-four years and take him as far as China. In Volume 1, he describes his departure from Tangier, and his journey via Tunis to Egypt, where he travelled to Cairo, planning to reach a Red...
This four-volume edition of the Arabic text of the Journey of the Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta (1304 68/9), with a French translation, was published...
This four-volume edition of the Arabic text of the Journey of the Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta (1304 68/9), with a French translation, was published in 1853 8. In 1325, Ibn Battuta, who came from a family of Islamic jurists in Tangier, set out to make the pilgrimage to Mecca the beginning of a journey that would last for twenty-four years and take him as far as China. In Volume 2, he leaves Najaf and heads for Persia, exploring Isfahan and Shiraz before returning to Baghdad. Next he goes north, as far as modern Turkey, before performing a second pilgrimage to Mecca. From Jeddah, he sails to...
This four-volume edition of the Arabic text of the Journey of the Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta (1304 68/9), with a French translation, was published...
This four-volume edition of the Arabic text of the Journey of the Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta (1304 68/9), with a French translation, was published in 1853 8. In 1325, Ibn Battuta, who came from a family of Islamic jurists in Tangier, set out to make the pilgrimage to Mecca the beginning of a journey that would last for twenty-four years and take him as far as China. In Volume 3, having decided to visit the court of the Turkic sultan Muhammad bin Tughluq at Delhi, he travels via Bukhara and Samarkand to Afghanistan and then across the Hindu Kush into India. At Delhi, he was given the post...
This four-volume edition of the Arabic text of the Journey of the Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta (1304 68/9), with a French translation, was published...
This four-volume edition of the Arabic text of the Journey of the Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta (1304 68/9), with a French translation was published in 1853 8. In 1325, Ibn Battuta, who came from a family of jurists in Tangier, set out to make the pilgrimage to Mecca the beginning of a journey that would last for twenty-four years and take him as far as China. In Volume 4, the sultan of Delhi asks Ibn Battuta to lead an embassy to China, during which he suffers difficulties, including attacks by Hindus, and shipwreck. He eventually reaches China via Sri Lanka, Vietnam and the Philippines; he...
This four-volume edition of the Arabic text of the Journey of the Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta (1304 68/9), with a French translation was published ...