In the year 1349 a dusty Arab horseman rode slowly toward the
city of Tangier on the North African coast. For Ibn Battuta, it was the end of a
long journey. When he left his home in Tangier 24 years earlier, he had not
planned to travel distant roads all during the years that took him from young
manhood to middle-age. From his mount, Ibn Battuta surveyed the white spires and
homes of Tangier spreading in a crescent along the Atlantic Ocean. He tried to
remember how the city had looked when he left it behind almost a quarter-century
ago.
In 1325 Ibn Battuta had been a young man of 21, reluctantly
leaving his parents to make his first hajj, or pilgrimage, to Mecca some
3,000 miles due east. He had covered those 3,000 miles and then had gone on to
travel another 72,000 miles! Many Muslims made the pilgrimage to the Holy City
but then returned home, for it was not an age when people were accustomed to
straying from home for long periods. When Ibn Battuta began his travels, it was,
in fact, more than 125 years before such renowned voyagers as Columbus, de Gama
and Magellan set sail. It was no wonder, then, that Ibn Battuta returned to his
native city, where his parents had died in his. absence, to find himself a
famous wayfarer. A contemporary described him as "the traveler of the
age," adding' "he who should call him the traveler of the whole body
of Islam would not exceed the truth."
Ibn Battuta was indeed the traveler of his age. His wanderings
took him to Spain, Russia, Turkey, Persia, India, China and all the Arab lands.
His description of the religious, political and social conditions of the lands
he visited—in some cases the only record—give insight into medieval Eastern
civilization. Authorities who estimate Ibn Battuta's journeys at more than
75,000 miles say that the distance was not exceeded by anyone—including Marco
Polo, Magellan or Columbus—until the age of steam.
Travelers have many reasons for visiting foreign lands. Marco
Polo was a merchant and Columbus an adventurer. Ibn Battuta, however, was a
theologian, poet and scholar, a humanitarian in an age when life was cheap. He
left Tangier to visit the holy places of his faith and found himself curious
about the wide world and eager to learn more about it.
Born in 1304, the son of Abdallah, a qadi, or local
judge, Ibn Battuta as a young man received a future qadi's customary
education, essentially a thorough study of religious literature and poetry. He
is, in fact, the only great traveler to describe some of the places he visited
in rhymed verse. His style (translated without rhyme) can be imagined from his
description of the Cairo of 1326: "I arrived at length at Cairo, mother of
cities and seat of Pharaoh the tyrant, mistress of broad regions and fruitful
lands, boundless in multitude of buildings, peerless in beauty and splendour,
the meeting place of comer and goer, the halting place of feeble and mighty,
whose throngs surge as the waves of the sea, and can scarce be contained in her
for all her size and capacity.
"On the Nile," noted the amazed traveler, "there
are 36,000 boats belonging to the Sultan and his subjects."
From Cairo Ibn Battuta toured through Jerusalem, Aleppo and
Damascus, where he joined a caravan of pilgrims bound for Mecca. These caravans
were a familiar sight in Islam. They consisted of Muslims, rich and poor,
ignorant and educated, soldier, merchant and scholar, who were fulfilling the
duty of every Muslim to visit Mecca at least once in his lifetime if possible.
In the towns and cities along the way they were fed, sheltered and entertained
in rest houses and hospices maintained by generous benefactors. This traditional
hospitality—which in Arab countries extends to all guests—made it possible
for Ibn Battuta, who was not rich, to travel with a light purse.
He made the hajj to Mecca seven times. The second time he
stayed in the city three years to study with the great Muslim scholars. This
pilgrimage was preceded by a tour of Persia, including a visit to the then
fabled capital of Islam, Baghdad, where he found public baths that were
unmatched anywhere in the world. "Each establishment," wrote the
traveler, "has a large number of private bathrooms, every one of which has
also a washbasin in the corner, with two taps supplying hot and cold water.
Every bather is given three towels, one to wear round his waist when he goes in,
another to wear round his waist when he comes out, and the third to dry himself
with."
At the end of three years of study in Mecca, Ibn Battuta set out
for India, where he hoped to join the court of the powerful and generous Sultan
of Delhi. By this time he had made it a rule "never, so far as possible, to
cover a second time any road." He went to Jiddah, Mecca's nearest port,
where he turned down passage on a ship he considered unsafe. "This was an
act of providence," he recalls, "for the ship sailed and foundered in
the open sea, and very few escaped."
After touring through Egypt, Syria, Turkey and Russia, Ibn
Battuta finally reached Delhi, where he remained in the sultan's service as qadi
for eight years. At the end of this time the sultan called him. "I have
sent for you to go as my ambassador to the lung of China," he said,
"for I know your love of travel." The trip was to be a memorable
journey.
No sooner had Ibn Battuta left Delhi than he was taken prisoner
by unfriendly Indians. They marked him for death, but one of the band, a young
man, took pity on him and let him escape. After eating roots and nuts and hiding
out in strange countryside for eight days, Ibn Battuta finally rejoined his
entourage and proceeded to Calicut, a trading port near the tip of India from
which he planned to sail to China.
"We entered the harbour in great pomp, the like of which I
have never seen in those lands," he noted, "but it was a joy to be
followed by distress." Then he describes the great Chinese junks that
monopolized traffic to China.
The large junks had three masts and up to twelve sails, which
were "never lowered, but turned according to the direction of the
wind." Three smaller vessels usually accompanied the junks to tow them if
they became becalmed. The junk was the fourteenth-century equivalent of the
modern ocean liner. It even carried its own fresh food: "The sailors,"
notes Ibn Battuta, "have their children living on board ship, and they
cultivate green stuffs, vegetables and ginger in wooden tanks."
In Calicut Ibn Battuta loaded his party and the presents for the
Chinese emperor on a junk. His own belongings were put onto a smaller vessel
called a kakam. The junk, as it made its way from the harbor, was caught
by a sudden gale which whipped up the sea and dashed the ship onto shoals. All
was lost. The smaller kakam then sailed away with all of Ibn Battuta's
goods. He watched the kakam grow smaller in the distance with nothing to
his name but ten dinars and the carpet he had slept on.
From past experience with foreign rulers, he wisely decided not
to return to Delhi, for while the sultan was a generous man, Ibn Battuta
reasoned that he might not have understood why of all the treasure and envoys,
only Ibn Battuta remained intact! So the stranded ambassador, with the typical
resourcefulness of a seasoned traveler, attached himself to a local Muslim
potentate who appointed him qadi in the nearby Maldive Islands. Ibn
Battuta's description of the customs of these islands was the first to reach the
outside world.
When Ibn Battuta finally sailed again for China, he landed at
Zaytún, the storied "Shanghai" of the thirteenth and fourteenth
centuries, which may have been what is today the island of Amoy, opposite
Formosa. He traveled through China as an ambassador, although he actually
represented no one and was without credentials. Despite the fact that the Muslim
and Chinese empires were not on the friendliest terms, Ibn Battuta journeyed
from Zaytún to Hangchow and Peking and back without any difficulty. On the
contrary, he was feted in most places, a testimony to his charm and native
diplomacy.
"There is no people in the world," noted Ibn Battuta,
"wealthier than the Chinese." He called Hangchow "the biggest
city I have ever seen on the face of the earth." This was the same city
described by Marco Polo as "beyond dispute the finest and noblest in the
world."
The Arab from Tangier turned homeward the way he had come,
except that he avoided Delhi altogether. He passed once again through Mecca and
Baghdad and, in 1348, stopped at Damascus. There he enquired about one of his
sons whom he had left 20 years before. He discovered that the boy had been dead
12 years and his own father 15.
The Black Plague was then raging through the Middle East. At
Cairo Ibn Battuta reported a daily death toll of 21,000, a figure that
historians confirm. Ibn Battuta passed through town after town scourged by the
plague, but providentially he escaped infection for had he been stricken, his
name would have been soon forgotten. He had not yet recorded his travels.
Even after he returned to Tangier in 1349, Ibn Battuta was not
content to spend his remaining days at home, where he might have passed many a
pleasant hour spinning stories of distant lands for his friends. His mother also
had fallen victim to the plague during his absence, and with nothing to keep him
in Tangier, he was soon planning a trip to Spain. After Spain, three years
later, Ibn Battuta began his last journey. He traveled through west-central
Africa, where he mistook the Niger for the Nile, and visited Timbuktu, a city
that was considered legendary by Europeans because none of them had been there.
In 1354 the great traveler was called to Fez by his sultan, who ordered him to
dictate a record of his wanderings to a court scribe.
Strangely enough, Ibn Battuta's exploits were lost to the
Western world for 300 years. Not until the nineteenth century, when his Rihla
(Travels') was discovered in Algeria, did his extraordinary roamings come to
light. In contrast, Marco Polo dictated an account of his journeys to a
contemporary while they shared a prison cell in 1296, and copies had circulated
all over Europe by the fifteenth century. Had Ibn Battuta's work received the
same attention, his name would rank alongside Marco Polo's as a synonym for
world travel.