How did Ibn Battuta Explore the World?

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  • Опубликовано: 10 янв 2025

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @Knowledgia
    @Knowledgia  Год назад +168

    Thank you so much for watching our video about Ibn Battuta! You can help support our work directly by Joining this channel and get access to perks
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  • @adnanegal111
    @adnanegal111 2 года назад +2719

    "Who lives sees, but who travels sees more".
    -Ibn Battuta

  • @argos.languages
    @argos.languages 2 года назад +5833

    This guy deserves a tv show with 10 seasons. He is definitely the greatest explorer in the whole world.

    • @mhassan8439
      @mhassan8439 2 года назад +283

      In those days for a trveller one has to be very lucky to make it back home again.

    • @aftabansari4920
      @aftabansari4920 2 года назад +204

      Travelled 120000 km of Africa, Europe & Asian countries...

    • @shahfaisalswati3505
      @shahfaisalswati3505 2 года назад +37

      Agree

    • @yasminflower5140
      @yasminflower5140 2 года назад +36

      It would be so interesting

    • @faysalhasan9674
      @faysalhasan9674 2 года назад

      Here is one ruclips.net/video/KFJ89YXAC9k/видео.html

  • @ghadari3027
    @ghadari3027 2 года назад +1778

    Ibn Battuta was probably the only explorer/traveler who’s was motivated but the thirst of knowledge and exploring and not by greed

    • @Yanzdorloph
      @Yanzdorloph 2 года назад +28

      no no he was greedy alright, he expected rulers to give him fortunes as presents, and they did, many times, being a muslim judge at that specific time was probably the best job there's, especially in the newly muslim lands were they are rare

    • @immuslimisupportqatar7591
      @immuslimisupportqatar7591 2 года назад +260

      @@Yanzdorloph if you want to travel and get food you need money bro .

    • @nizarnizar324
      @nizarnizar324 2 года назад +279

      @@Yanzdorloph Yes, he was soliciting gifts, payments only to finance his travels, he never spared his wealth to settle down somewhere in the shade. It's quite different from what motivated Columbus, Marco Polo and Vasco De Gama.
      The proof is when he came back to Morocco, he wasn't rich and he had survived only on his inheritance and the generosity of Morocco's Sultan.

    • @madkingxx6702
      @madkingxx6702 2 года назад +24

      @@Yanzdorloph i mean he's taking gifts from the kings for his job

    • @nizarnizar324
      @nizarnizar324 2 года назад +143

      @Reinhard i came up with that from his biography, his book, and also from his life outcome, he family was rich, so he could have stayed home and enjoyed his wealth, he often moves from place to place when he could have stayed to enjoy the hospitality of the rulers/Kings whom they favoured him. And most importantly, he retired and died without a wealth, without being nominated a governor over a new earned territory for his king/Sultan, he didn't rename any place after his queen/king, he didn't wage a war, bribed a local leader to fight an opposant tribe, he didn't seek for a new route to reach some rich country to buy their stuff cheaper, he didn't hire mercenaries for his cause, he didn't transmit diseases through gifts to indigenous people, he didn't enslave them.
      Now shut up go fish elsewhere.

  • @xNuTx
    @xNuTx Год назад +1329

    Ibn Battuta quotes:
    “ Traveling - gives you a home in a thousand strange places, then leaves you a stranger in your own land ( Home ) “
    “ He who lives sees, and he who travels sees more “
    “ Traveling-it leaves you speechless, then turns you into a storyteller “
    “ Traveling- it offers you a hundred roads to adventure, and gives your heart wings! “
    “ Virtue is by reason and literature, not by origin and lineage “

    • @Dailymailnewz
      @Dailymailnewz Год назад +25

      He was a powerful lose horse fit for traveling not for wars and not for glories, thank God for that...

    • @QarsherskiyMountainGoof
      @QarsherskiyMountainGoof Год назад +55

      @@DailymailnewzA good man of Allah ﷻ , brother Ibn Battuta made like a billion hajj pilgrimages.

    • @Dailymailnewz
      @Dailymailnewz Год назад +5

      @@QarsherskiyMountainGoof you recon Allah will reward him that much?

    • @QarsherskiyMountainGoof
      @QarsherskiyMountainGoof Год назад +20

      @@Dailymailnewz yeah

    • @Dailymailnewz
      @Dailymailnewz Год назад +7

      @@QarsherskiyMountainGoof Amen to that

  • @s-ko-bar4748
    @s-ko-bar4748 2 года назад +5041

    "Traveling leaves you speechless and then turns you into a storyteller" (Ibn Battuta)

    • @Alburr250
      @Alburr250 2 года назад +27

      oh yes!

    • @cinder1667
      @cinder1667 2 года назад +106

      Timeless quote that will carry on until the final nights of our species!

    • @musaab.4971
      @musaab.4971 2 года назад +12

      Can you say the quote in it's original language?

    • @meshowzaq6892
      @meshowzaq6892 2 года назад +87

      @@musaab.4971
      "السفر يجعلك عاجزا عن الكلام.. ثم يحولك إلى راوٍ"
      اين بطوطه

    • @musaab.4971
      @musaab.4971 2 года назад +20

      @@meshowzaq6892 ما أظن هذي المقولة الأصلية، تبدو لي مترجمة

  • @Saber23
    @Saber23 2 года назад +3199

    Ibn Battutah really was the main character of life he did all the side quests and the main story 😂❤️

    • @yacinebenoit4gaming965
      @yacinebenoit4gaming965 2 года назад +76

      The real Nathan Drake lol

    • @pandagelud520
      @pandagelud520 2 года назад +65

      now you mention it, it's Cool thats why the pattern looks abstract, he is the MC of his journey

    • @Saber23
      @Saber23 2 года назад +6

      @@pandagelud520 100%

    • @405hunter
      @405hunter 2 года назад +48

      a true Genshin impact traveler

    • @Saber23
      @Saber23 2 года назад +7

      @@405hunter 100%

  • @savinggrace121
    @savinggrace121 2 года назад +2540

    Not taught at all in schools in the UK. I introduced him to my children. What a shame how many countries in Europe and here in the UK totally skip anything to do with anyone with links to Islam.

    • @testyourbrain65
      @testyourbrain65 2 года назад

      Yes they don't like Arabs and Islam

    • @retrogamingfrenzy2373
      @retrogamingfrenzy2373 2 года назад +4

      @@testyourbrain65 why

    • @oujbouaicha8662
      @oujbouaicha8662 2 года назад +188

      I'm going to tell you something that's even more shocking most Moroccans don't even know him or we only know that he's Moroccan which is truly a shame he was not mentioned not even once in the whole 12 years of school life like how ridiculous is that?

    • @oujbouaicha8662
      @oujbouaicha8662 2 года назад +197

      He's more famous in India and Bangladesh but not in his home country 💔😭

    • @immrankhalid
      @immrankhalid 2 года назад +86

      @@oujbouaicha8662 Every high school passed is familiar with his name & work in Pakistan.

  • @annukimuni3389
    @annukimuni3389 Год назад +1432

    Ibn battouta is too popular in japan and South Korea as well (my husband's homeland). I am Japanese and I remember reading his stories as a kid and at school as well. He was such a great inspiration for me to travel the world and live his adventures.

    • @saidsd734
      @saidsd734 Год назад +75

      Really !!! Even in japan !! Waw thats amazing

    • @sam_sa09
      @sam_sa09 Год назад +35

      Really? I'm a Moroccan in Korea and they barely know about Morocco

    • @Imrane__
      @Imrane__ Год назад +2

      LoL

    • @mountblanc39
      @mountblanc39 Год назад +50

      This man (ibnu batutah) is very popular in Indonesia 🇮🇩 too

    • @lightbeings6243
      @lightbeings6243 Год назад +2

      Is it? Wow

  • @sheikhhashashin6946
    @sheikhhashashin6946 2 года назад +1953

    It's really sad, he didn't have the chance to tell his mom about his journey and the wonders of the world :"(

    • @ammanite
      @ammanite 2 года назад +230

      @Rizky Satya that's actually sad to think about, though it's probably not the case. There was a postal system in the Muslim world back then and other travelers. He probably sent his parents letters and gifts.

    • @ashtonfranklin4620
      @ashtonfranklin4620 2 года назад +57

      Yeah because he went back to Morocco after traveling to the mongol Court in China, he traveled back home to Morocco where he discovered his parents died and he later goes into Spain where he serves as an Islamic judge and traveled into the Mali empire where he settled in Timbuktu as a scholar and made it back to his hometown if Morocco where he was told by the sultan to record his discoveries and adventures after traveling all over the world and in his text he's said to travel all across Eurasia

    • @ahmadhasif979
      @ahmadhasif979 2 года назад +75

      They can meet in hereafter, share stories

    • @hamzaiaaza6519
      @hamzaiaaza6519 2 года назад +12

      that is the most saddest thing in his story

    • @ManticorDrones
      @ManticorDrones Год назад +20

      He will tell her everything in a perfect place with no distractions with full recollection, Insha Allah, Allah promises us our reunion.

  • @CyberLx
    @CyberLx 2 года назад +521

    May Allah have mercy on his soul. I’m so proud that he visited my hometown. Big respect for my Moroccan 🇲🇦 brothers and sisters. Love from Somalia 🇸🇴 .

    • @user-ue4fh5mv9s
      @user-ue4fh5mv9s Год назад +2

      what does it have to do with morocco ? you guys are crazy in love with your "countries"

    • @MuslimGigachad950
      @MuslimGigachad950 Год назад +48

      ​​@@user-ue4fh5mv9sin case you haven't watched the first part: he is moroccan. also, you aren't in love with your country my guy? the will to love your homeland and protect it doesn't exist there?

    • @user-ue4fh5mv9s
      @user-ue4fh5mv9s Год назад +9

      @@MuslimGigachad950 why should i love a piece of land i had no choice of being born in ? for you info ibn battuta was a learned imam of islam and he knew that nationaism or tribalism is prohibited in islam

    • @Johnny_Silverhand77
      @Johnny_Silverhand77 Год назад +37

      ​@@user-ue4fh5mv9s nationalism and tribalism isn't prohibited in islam ... Allah literally says in the quran "We created you from a male and a female, and We made you races and tribes, so that you may come to know one another. The best among you before Allah is the most righteous" ... feeling proud about ur tribe and nation is not bad at all ...the only bad thing is thinking you're nation is superior to another one or your race is superior than the other ones and for that u can oppress the others or commit crimes against them... the only way for u to be "superior" is how much of good deeds a person can do and only allah can judge that

    • @user-ue4fh5mv9s
      @user-ue4fh5mv9s Год назад

      @@Johnny_Silverhand77 Allah said he has divided us in different tribes so that we may know each other and not fight but the funny thing is nationaism/tribalism brings nothing but hate for others for example look at the hatred between moronns and alegrians because of some petty land dispute which has led them to hate each other to the state of insanity.
      Ibn Taymiyyah (d.728H) - rahimahullaah - said: “Everything which is outside the call of Islaam and the Qur‘aan, with regards to lineage, land, nationality, schools of thoughts and ways, then it is from the calls of jaahiliyyah. Indeed, even when the Muhaajirs (those Companions who migrated from Makkah to al-Madeenah) and the Ansaars (those Companions who aided and supported those who migrated) argued, such that one of the Muhaajirs said: “O Muhaajirs! (implying; rally to my aid).” And then one of the Ansaar said: “O Ansaar!” Upon hearing this, the Prophet (sallallaahu ’alayhi wa sallam) said: “Is it with the calls of jaahiliyyah that you call, and I am still amongst you!” And he became very angry at that.”
      Saheeh Muslim (8/120), the Prophet (sallallaahu ’alayhi wa sallam) said: “Indeed Allaah has revealed to me that you should have humility, and that no one should act proudly and oppressively over anyone else, nor should anyone boast over anyone else.”
      Tirmidhee relates from Allaah’s Messenger (sallallaahu ’alayhi wa sallam) that he said: “Let people stop boasting about their forefathers who have died, who are merely fuel for the Hellfire; or they will certainly be more insignificant with Allaah than the beetle which roles dung with its nose. Allaah has removed from you the party spirit of the days of jaahiliyyah and the boasting about one’s forefathers. Indeed a person is either a pious Believer or a wretched sinner. All of mankind are the children of Aadam, and Aadam was created from clay.”

  • @stalin1909
    @stalin1909 2 года назад +2404

    I made it a mission upon myself,to visit Ibn Batuta’s Tomb in the Old town of Tangier , Morocco.
    It took me serious traveling to get there . But I’m glad I did . I did it to pay respect and Admiration to one of the Greatest travelers who ever lived .

  • @KonoozTravel
    @KonoozTravel Год назад +227

    What a spectacular voyager. I like his character. He never gave up and was always looking for new places and cultures. I'm proud that I visited his tomb in Tangier, Morocco, on 31.12.2015

    • @hennaahananee1945
      @hennaahananee1945 Год назад +7

      محضوض مع انه انا من المغرب مزال مجاتني الفرصة

  • @kasimreports
    @kasimreports 2 года назад +2322

    His frequent travel to Mecca clearly defines how much he is Strong believer

    • @ridaassaad3124
      @ridaassaad3124 2 года назад +171

      True. My man was on his way home after decades and decided to make a detour for another pilgrimage.

    • @sameehasamad
      @sameehasamad 2 года назад +1

      Most of the travellers, philosophers and scholars and scientists in the Islamic golden period were strong believers… and that’s what exactly wrong with Muslims today… either they concentrate only on religious studies or only on sciences… it’s very rare that Muslims learn both nowadays

    • @husseinmahmoud7216
      @husseinmahmoud7216 2 года назад +83

      His readiness to fight against alfonso too truly an amazing character ❤️🔥

    • @alialshehri6977
      @alialshehri6977 2 года назад +90

      @@husseinmahmoud7216 yessss I was surprised he immediately turned into a fighter for the sake of his Muslim brothers 🥹

    • @rhnkm
      @rhnkm 2 года назад +21

      If Internet was present in those times, his Iman would have shattered in a span of few years.

  • @outlandishpersonnel6441
    @outlandishpersonnel6441 2 года назад +1447

    This man has written the book titled "Kitabul Rohela". He is not underrated in Bangladesh as in Bangladeshi educational institutions he must be studied in every history class.

    • @normalguy5208
      @normalguy5208 2 года назад +13

      Amazing

    • @saidsd734
      @saidsd734 2 года назад +66

      Really? Thats amazing, i am very proud as a moroccan

    • @outlandishpersonnel6441
      @outlandishpersonnel6441 2 года назад +125

      @@saidsd734 Yes, really. In the video on 12.21 you find the information that Ibn Batuta came to Chittagong and Sylhet to meet a man called Hazrat Shah Jalal Rahmatullah in 1345. Chittagong and Sylhet are two major cities of Bangladesh. Ibn Batua stayd in Bangladesh and recorded history which we learn today. For this reason we know him and respect him.

    • @saidsd734
      @saidsd734 2 года назад +53

      @@outlandishpersonnel6441 waw thats awesome, i didnt know that ! InchAllah i visit Bangladesh some day!

    • @outlandishpersonnel6441
      @outlandishpersonnel6441 2 года назад +34

      @@saidsd734 You're are welcome 😊. Bangladesh is a very beautiful country, and It's a Muslim country. You can search about Bangladesh in RUclips.

  • @aakashdwivedi7778
    @aakashdwivedi7778 2 года назад +765

    In India his legacy still lives on, his adventures and experiences were introduced to us as kids through our school textbooks and we even have poems and songs about him here. Its quite fascinating really, the impact a solitary man can have

    • @nawfalourimech8974
      @nawfalourimech8974 2 года назад +3

      Waw amazing, are those poems and songs available on YT ?

    • @zakariaalami1491
      @zakariaalami1491 2 года назад +3

      Wow really ?

    • @kriketprayme
      @kriketprayme 2 года назад +12

      @@nawfalourimech8974 this is the song : ruclips.net/video/V7_9NeXbFdU/видео.html

    • @mr6t965
      @mr6t965 2 года назад +3

      @@kriketprayme 🤣🤣

    • @fadeout007
      @fadeout007 2 года назад +1

      @@kriketprayme 😆😂

  • @m_7meedo188
    @m_7meedo188 2 года назад +446

    What’s draw my attention is how many rules have used him to be the judge in their towns. Tells a lot about his character.

    • @diae1752
      @diae1752 Год назад +88

      He also was studying under great scholars of Islam on his way. mostly when you hear he stayed for few months he was furthering his knowledge and getting more certifications. That along with being already a certified judge from a family of judges made rulers want to use him and many times he would struggle to leave. If I remember right they would even get him married to locals to tie him. But staying wasn't his style I guess :D

    • @annukimuni3389
      @annukimuni3389 Год назад +65

      He was a highly educated man, At that time, the world's scientists were traveling to Morocco to study and do not forget that the first university built in the world is in Morocco ( The country of Ibn Battuta). So he had a great value and a deep respect from people in the world at that time. He was a wise thinker and philosopher as well.

    • @deez8827
      @deez8827 Год назад +15

      He was a wise man due to his experiences and meeting different human kinds

    • @sufianmustafa5656
      @sufianmustafa5656 Год назад +12

      @@diae1752 i love his style indeed 😊, i fail to imagine how many languages he'd speak lol.

    • @chuckichas
      @chuckichas Год назад +2

      @@annukimuni3389 IMPRESSIVE. What a quest. The fact that is was written down - our great fortune. Thanks for the information. I am now Googling first university in the world. So much to learn.

  • @agailham8476
    @agailham8476 2 года назад +827

    From my school book, the name "Sumatera" in Indonesia can be counted as the legacy from Ibn Battuta. When he visited Samudera Pasai Sultanate during his journey to China, he wrote the word "Sumatrah" for that place in his journal (maybe from the misspelling from the "Samudera" word). The word "Sumatrah" become the international name for the region and then for the island as well until today.

    • @notescreators2308
      @notescreators2308 2 года назад +20

      waw, i never know that

    • @silvervirio3642
      @silvervirio3642 2 года назад +14

      If that was true, it would be pretty cool.

    • @ahmadsherbeny5609
      @ahmadsherbeny5609 2 года назад +4

      Wow this is new to me, thx for sharing this marvelous info =)

    • @zakirnaikahmaddeedat3651
      @zakirnaikahmaddeedat3651 2 года назад

      What's the name of the book you read?

    • @agailham8476
      @agailham8476 2 года назад +24

      @@zakirnaikahmaddeedat3651
      My schoolbook when I was in middle school. Wikipedia Indonesia also mention this. I think they using same citation from Hamka's book "Sedjarah Islam di Sumatera" (1950).
      id.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumatra
      But Wikipedia English did not mention this. They explain that earliest mention about "Sumatra" can be dated to 1017, far before Ibn Battuta came to this island.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumatra

  • @romenbarua8813
    @romenbarua8813 Год назад +234

    I’m from Bangladesh. Since my school days whenever I hear his name it always give me goosebumps. Ibn batuta means story of adventure during ancient times to every single kids in my country. We can’t describe any historical period of his timeline without mentioning his name as a proven evidence. He was most attractive part in every history class.

  • @nenenindonu
    @nenenindonu 2 года назад +3283

    Ibn Battuta lived in such an interesting period when most of Asia was recovering from the Mongol conquests going through cultural transmissions and architectural development

    • @friendly_thunder3648
      @friendly_thunder3648 2 года назад +44

      he died in funny numer 1369
      Wow so many lieks

    • @yeetman4953
      @yeetman4953 2 года назад +2

      @@MrWhodatsay exchanging culture.

    • @crazyraptor2907
      @crazyraptor2907 2 года назад +31

      @@friendly_thunder3648 omg your pfp i can't stand it

    • @kiwuuspurr1927
      @kiwuuspurr1927 2 года назад +6

      @@crazyraptor2907 the amogus effect

    • @theguywhogoeswhy9223
      @theguywhogoeswhy9223 2 года назад

      @@friendly_thunder3648 1369 fUnnY nUmBer 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂🥸

  • @kazirakibahmed2965
    @kazirakibahmed2965 2 года назад +789

    I plan to visit Morocco and pay my respect to this extraordinary adventurer and traveller one day in sha Allah. From Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇻🇳

    • @richardwestwood8212
      @richardwestwood8212 2 года назад +45

      His house is still standing in Tanger, the city in which he was born and raised. The Moroccans are very welcoming and I lived there for a long time, I even speak the language.

    • @hemyarite.kingdom4070
      @hemyarite.kingdom4070 2 года назад +48

      That’s not the Morocco flag 🇲🇦

    • @messoussiahmed9910
      @messoussiahmed9910 2 года назад +1

      argentina WC winner 22

    • @strixtech450
      @strixtech450 2 года назад +10

      That's Vietnam flag dude

    • @badrissaad
      @badrissaad 2 года назад +4

      you can visit his grave in tanger

  • @lerneanlion
    @lerneanlion 2 года назад +2456

    Indeed, this is true. His joruney across the known world is greatly underrated! More likes for Ibn Battuta!

    • @alittlebitgone
      @alittlebitgone 2 года назад +2

      Well, considering there is zero evidence for any of this, and very little of it makes any sense at all, we can safely ignore it.

    • @abcd9283
      @abcd9283 2 года назад +76

      @@alittlebitgone what kind of evidence do you need??

    • @copiusgrimus6671
      @copiusgrimus6671 2 года назад +70

      @@alittlebitgone what evidence tou need he litterly wrote a book

    • @vattghern257
      @vattghern257 2 года назад +5

      more underrated medival explorer is Benedict The Pole, he travelled with Pope's embassy to give a letter to the mongol khan, he travelled through Poland/Rus/pontic stepps and dessert to karracorum. He travelled few years before Marco Polo, and was the first source of knowledge for europeans of mongol empire.
      on TrashingMadPL channel is video about him, but in polish.

    • @obamacare9139
      @obamacare9139 2 года назад +56

      @@alittlebitgone its a medieval history. You expect them to made a monuments or something?? He literally write a book about it

  • @jellyfish3140
    @jellyfish3140 2 года назад +275

    We Bangladeshis 🇧🇩 know Ibn Battuta well as he is studied in our education curriculum. So, as a Bangladeshi and particularly Chittagongian, I got goosebumps when on 12:20, the narrator takes the name of Chittagong, then Sylhet. I love Hazrat Shah Jalal Rahmat Ullah Alai. Surely that was the time when Muslims were having their golden time with political, intellectual and spiritual dominance.

    • @kenkaneki9138
      @kenkaneki9138 Год назад

      In India a golden time but in the rest of the world Mongols were in the process of converting to Islam and making the Mongol empire into Islamic states. Delhi Sultanate was not destroyed by Mongols thats why it thrived.

    • @megamagikarp8512
      @megamagikarp8512 Год назад

      ​@@hhhmo7328india was born in 1947

    • @megamagikarp8512
      @megamagikarp8512 Год назад

      @@hhhmo7328 search it up on google Indian, your country was born in 1947

    • @ARAVINDANSHIVARAMAKRISHNAN
      @ARAVINDANSHIVARAMAKRISHNAN Год назад +2

      ​@@hhhmo7328 at that time most of india is under Muslim rule , many sultanates

    • @ARAVINDANSHIVARAMAKRISHNAN
      @ARAVINDANSHIVARAMAKRISHNAN Год назад +3

      @@hhhmo7328 there is no india , all of nations was splitted into different small countries ,mostly hindu and muslim nations, the idea of india came after 1947

  • @sblong07
    @sblong07 11 месяцев назад +26

    I took my son to Tangier where Ibn Batuta’s house stands ( commemorated with small plaque) in the Kasbah neighbor in the old
    Medina 14 years ago. Today he sent me this video. That trip inspired us to explore the world like Ibn Batuta and today we have seen half of the world together. ❤

  • @tarikjahid2339
    @tarikjahid2339 2 года назад +2047

    As moroccan we feel so proud of him he was not only a traveller but also a Moroccan Ambassador

    • @tipu...
      @tipu... 2 года назад +147

      Love Morocco from Pakistan ...

    • @soufall5118
      @soufall5118 2 года назад +69

      No he's algerian even if he was born in tangier. You should study some algerian Logic it's one of a kind.

    • @madproject7148
      @madproject7148 2 года назад +181

      @@soufall5118 lol

    • @truthseeker5880
      @truthseeker5880 2 года назад +126

      @@soufall5118 looool 😂😂

    • @tarikjahid2339
      @tarikjahid2339 2 года назад +79

      @@soufall5118 lool

  • @sheg9629
    @sheg9629 2 года назад +1217

    as a Maldivian i deeply thank God for sending this man to us, he is the one who made us Muslim, we were a people who worshiped idols, his arrival n teachings made the king a Muslim n it spread like fire when people started learning about Islam, n thnks to God n him today i am proud to say we are the only 100% Muslim country in the world

    • @ouadietrackingplatform2784
      @ouadietrackingplatform2784 2 года назад +50

      No not him another morrocan before him in his book he talk about this

    • @daresavage345
      @daresavage345 2 года назад +37

      Somalia 🇸🇴 is also 100% muslim

    • @12hafida
      @12hafida Год назад +46

      im moroccan and happy to read your comment.

    • @abderrahmanebelkhayat3049
      @abderrahmanebelkhayat3049 Год назад +40

      im a moroccan and even from tangier and it is the first time that i know maldives are Muslims because of him , mashaalah

    • @lebelem
      @lebelem Год назад +55

      @sheg9629 Maldivian people was converted to Islam by Abu Al barakat Youssouf Al Barbari, Moroccan merchant, in 1153. His grave is in Hukuru mosque

  • @khanawithkaran6853
    @khanawithkaran6853 2 года назад +3411

    If he had a camera he could've become the world's first travel vlogger 😂

    • @GhGh-sj4wb
      @GhGh-sj4wb 2 года назад +201

      Ibn Battuta is the greatest traveler, explorer and traveler in history

    • @rahasyatreasure
      @rahasyatreasure 2 года назад +5

      भारत के धार्मिक स्थलों से जुड़ी रहस्यमयी अनसुनी कहानियाँ-ruclips.net/video/hp7mNjPuCto/видео.html

    • @ultimatestoryteller
      @ultimatestoryteller 2 года назад +71

      I wonder if his gram account would say "Wanderlust" as well. 😂
      Drew Binsky would be so jealous of him btw.

    • @imranyounus7559
      @imranyounus7559 2 года назад +8

      @@ultimatestoryteller lol

    • @anwarsofian354
      @anwarsofian354 2 года назад +4

      That era doesn't exist yet

  • @I_hu85ghjo
    @I_hu85ghjo 2 года назад +198

    Such an underrated man. I remember reading his book every day on a balcony in Catalunya (Spain) having a view on the lower pyrenees while the sun was shining brightly and the natural smell of the cows and grass were roaming around the countryside . Oh man... the feels!

    • @Mereo110
      @Mereo110 Год назад +13

      Because we live in a European centric world. Everyone knows Marco Polo, but few know Ibn Batuta

  • @Wonderer224
    @Wonderer224 Год назад +303

    I read his book over 20 years ago and it was extremely fascinating. He was telling everything he saw: the culture, the people, their customs and the cities. He would even condemn if he saw bad habits😂.

    • @SupKash
      @SupKash Год назад +3

      Can you tell me the name of the book??

    • @syahir7494
      @syahir7494 Год назад +15

      ​@@SupKashRihla (the travels)

    • @nasro97
      @nasro97 Год назад

      the book has been a reference in hollywood in historical / science-fiction MOVIES

    • @Wonderer224
      @Wonderer224 Год назад

      @@SupKash
      Ibn Battuta’s travels

    • @trippijr7692
      @trippijr7692 Год назад +28

      He called us somalis fat and eat as much as family in saudi. I don't blame him becuase his not lying😂

  • @mhvalue7343
    @mhvalue7343 2 года назад +1647

    ibn Battuta is not underrated in Muslim world.I read books of him in my child hood
    edit: omg to many likes
    thank you all.

    • @theawesomeman9821
      @theawesomeman9821 2 года назад +28

      or says he's underrated? Everyone I knew had to read about him for school, even in the West.

    • @mhvalue7343
      @mhvalue7343 2 года назад +13

      @@theawesomeman9821 I heard first time that in west you read about him. 👍

    • @devanshgupta.233
      @devanshgupta.233 2 года назад +7

      i read about him in school as well

    • @anisghil
      @anisghil 2 года назад +8

      I was 8 when, we read book about him in Algiers' school

    • @cardboardsnail81
      @cardboardsnail81 2 года назад +14

      In india we even have a popular song on ibn batuta lol

  • @redmoor1852
    @redmoor1852 2 года назад +1007

    Ibn battuta is so underrated, he deserves more recognition.
    Anyway, he is still the pride of Morocco ❤🇲🇦

    • @GhGh-sj4wb
      @GhGh-sj4wb 2 года назад +34

      Ibn Battuta is the greatest traveler, explorer and traveler in history

    • @AdamAzzr
      @AdamAzzr 2 года назад +32

      He's not underrated in Morocco, and that's enough for me.

    • @lonewolf7873
      @lonewolf7873 2 года назад +49

      He is very famous in Bangladesh. We read about him in text books.

    • @smaquasim1745
      @smaquasim1745 2 года назад +30

      I always discuss him in the family. I first read about him when I was 8 or 9. from India

    • @yorusuyasoul69420
      @yorusuyasoul69420 2 года назад +6

      never heard of him before but i saw only his name in a metro station in dubai lol

  • @bcs332
    @bcs332 2 года назад +146

    I recognized this guy's name from my researchs on history. He's very important for history. Whenever I research a random medieval city or tribe in Asia, I encounter his accounts.

  • @tardybloomer
    @tardybloomer Год назад +131

    we have a mall in the UAE named after him, and the inside of the mall illustrates his travels by making each part look like the locations he travelled through. truly an incredible explorer, thank you for mkaing this video :)

    • @Younsse-1
      @Younsse-1 Год назад +3

      تحياتي لإخواننا في الإمارات من المغرب♥️🇲🇦 أتمنى ان ازور هذا الموقع الرائع يوما ما

    • @lebollsong
      @lebollsong Год назад +2

      Oh yeah I've been there before lol good place

    • @The-advicer
      @The-advicer 11 месяцев назад +1

      Oh what is the name

    • @khadija4958
      @khadija4958 10 месяцев назад +1

      I went to that mall that’s why the name was so familiar to me

    • @MorabitAbderahman-Berkane
      @MorabitAbderahman-Berkane 9 месяцев назад +1

      Why? He's not Arab, it's like Spaniards honouring Indians

  • @lilac2698
    @lilac2698 2 года назад +2340

    In India, we often have stories of Ibn Battuta in our Hindi literature school textbooks in the lower grades.

    • @godofthisshit
      @godofthisshit 2 года назад +169

      @Lilac and he's known to almost nobody in America. Interesting how different areas view what's important.

    • @tatbhar7304
      @tatbhar7304 2 года назад +61

      Would mind telling me tje name of these stories about him so that i can read them.
      Thank you
      I'm Moroccan

    • @mayhewberube5408
      @mayhewberube5408 2 года назад +253

      @@godofthisshit Average American doesn't know how many states there are in his country, nor what his nation's flag stands for.....etc....
      different areas of view of what's important and if anything is important at all

    • @KD400_
      @KD400_ 2 года назад

      @@mayhewberube5408 bro in England they don't know anything either in school we don't learn anything valuable and most people come out of school uneducated and end up in welfare and drugs and many other useless things

    • @mayhewberube5408
      @mayhewberube5408 2 года назад +66

      @@KD400_ England still has an aristocratic system, the people of the high class receive excellent education since childhood to prepare them to govern the country and lead the most powerful companies and corporations, as of the populace it is strategically left in the dark, because an ignorant people is easier to rule

  • @LeeshaHaneef
    @LeeshaHaneef 2 года назад +541

    He even arrived in Maldives, even now it’s hard for us to get out because we are disconnected from main continental lands, our only options are to fly, hardly locals use passenger ships, I can imagine how his journey would be back then. It’s stated that he was here around 9 months and served as a judge. Even though the journey was hard, he never had to apply for a Visa back then. In today’s age, he would have to apply to many Visas.

    • @العقيدمعمرالقذافي-ح4ف
      @العقيدمعمرالقذافي-ح4ف 2 года назад +33

      we in morocco do not need visa to go to maldives and vice versa

    • @StrivingSoul00
      @StrivingSoul00 2 года назад +13

      Designer Dot a Somali from Mogadishu converted Maldives from Buddhist to Islam. He was also a governor.

    • @yusefpersona82
      @yusefpersona82 2 года назад +6

      Hé had three wives in the maldives

    • @ismaelemaz4696
      @ismaelemaz4696 2 года назад +11

      Leesha, glad to see a Maldivian interested in history instead of the gossip and baseless celebrity which flood the internet, may you be blessed with knowledge.

    • @aseriesoftriangleswecalltr6065
      @aseriesoftriangleswecalltr6065 2 года назад

      He wasn`t in Maldives, thats a myth

  • @realhades9178
    @realhades9178 2 года назад +675

    As a Moroccan, I love seeing my country's history getting recognition

    • @simosan4451
      @simosan4451 2 года назад +23

      و ديولنا فيلم مقدروش اخسروه عليه و على غيروا.

    • @AdamAzzr
      @AdamAzzr 2 года назад +39

      @@simosan4451
      فيلم على بن بطوطة غايخيصو ميزاانية كبيرة و تصوير مزيان.
      اذا كانو غايشوهوه غير بلاش

    • @simosan4451
      @simosan4451 2 года назад +10

      @@AdamAzzr خاصوا مزانية ؟ و علاه الفلوس لخاصة ؟؟؟ ميزانية 2m لشهر دير ليك ابن بطوطة و يوسف بن تاشفين و يعقوب المنصور و مولاي اسماعيل و اشيط الخير، راهم باغينك تبقى تفكر في بلاستك و تقول الميزانية تيجي البراني و دير مبغا في تاريخنا كما دار المويتي مع طارق ابن زياد لرضوا عربي و رضنا حنا ع.ب.ي.د عندهم.

    • @specialone3209
      @specialone3209 2 года назад +8

      @@AdamAzzr اه متلا دير إنتاج ديالو HBO ولا نيتفليكس و يمتلو فيه مغاربة

    • @AdamAzzr
      @AdamAzzr 2 года назад +3

      @@simosan4451
      هضرة خاوية، إذا كنتي غادي مسلسل و لا فيلم على بن بطوطة خاصك تصورو ب نفس الجودة ديال نيتفليكس وHBO، إذا ما كنتيش غاتصورو هكا غي بلاش.
      اما سلاطين هضرة خرا، تا هي خاصها ميزانية، و لا مكنتيس غطلعو بنفس الجودة د غيم اوف ثرونز و لا فايكينكز غي بلاش، انا ضد التشويه.
      بغيت الحاجة يا تكون مقادة مزيان يا ماديرش غاع

  • @idolsairx6234
    @idolsairx6234 2 года назад +182

    As a moroccan, seeing this amazing figure of our history getting recognised, makes me genuinely super happy. Ibn Battuta was not only a great traveler, but also an incredibly kindhearted person!! He has witnessed many great cultures of the 14th century and has walked around the earth with a passion to never give up on your dreams. Alhumdulilah i am very happy we have had amazing people like him!!!

    • @frans8160
      @frans8160 2 года назад

      He was also a sexist and rapist but I guess that doesn't matter lol

    • @ztaitai
      @ztaitai Год назад +2

      Me too I feel so proud to have ancestors like him, he's the real legend ❤️

    • @fodk7021
      @fodk7021 Год назад

      @@frans8160 he was ? maybe you can give us some historical evidence ?

    • @blutherhood3893
      @blutherhood3893 9 месяцев назад

      @@fodk7021 Maybe you can just do a little research instead of asking here in comments, he's a Moroccan Berber traveler.

    • @fodk7021
      @fodk7021 9 месяцев назад

      @@blutherhood3893 uhhh when did I say he wasn't ? T3elem t9ra

  • @theemperorofmankind7706
    @theemperorofmankind7706 2 года назад +158

    Inn Battuta:
    Refuses a regular 5 to 9 job
    Decides to go abroad exploring
    Goes on a pilgrimage to mecca 3 times just cause he can
    Explores the entire Muslim world
    Returns back
    Makes his biography
    Dies in year 69
    Refuses to elaborate
    Absolute mad lad

  • @batsoup97
    @batsoup97 2 года назад +135

    I feel like because we grew up in the west, a lot of these historical figures and stories are pushed to the side, so glad this internet era is helping us discover the other side of the world's history!

    • @brianmessemer2973
      @brianmessemer2973 2 года назад +2

      Agreed well said

    • @HakimTheory
      @HakimTheory Год назад +1

      Get this book. 1001 Inventions: The Enduring Legacy of Muslim Civilization

    • @batsoup97
      @batsoup97 Год назад +3

      @@HakimTheory I've just bought "Lost Islamic History", heard good stuff about it, I'll check that out next, thanks!

    • @HakimTheory
      @HakimTheory Год назад

      @@batsoup97 Sweet! Have a pleasant reading :)

  • @arifrobbani3621
    @arifrobbani3621 2 года назад +158

    in 1346,before he reached Chittagong,Hazrat Shahjalal(ra:) a saint from Sylhet send a team to Chittagong for welcoming ibn batuta.It is locally known story in Bangladesh.🇧🇩from sylhet

    • @Devnath456
      @Devnath456 2 года назад

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Ibn batuta time Bangladesh doesn't exist🤡🤡🤡🤡

    • @thebangladesh6275
      @thebangladesh6275 2 года назад +1

      @@Devnath456 😅
      When Ibn Batuta came to Bangladesh, the name of Bangladesh was Bangla Sultanate. Bengali-Bangla Sultan-East Bengal-Bangladesh are all the same. Bangladesh means the country of Bengalis which was and is before and will remain InshaAllah.
      And those who are ignorant, those who have not yet got the touch of civilization, truth, justice, those who have no history of their own, it is natural that they do not know about it.

    • @aminemohammed884
      @aminemohammed884 2 года назад +11

      Brother there is no saints in Islam. this man probably was a righteous man.

    • @sazzadalwahed9594
      @sazzadalwahed9594 2 года назад

      sala bokchod
      Saits paisos koitte

    • @sujamahmudasad8548
      @sujamahmudasad8548 2 года назад +2

      Something like this is written in his book. But as far as I can remember Shah Jalal's(r) man didnot meet Ibn Batuta at Chittagong,but meet him on his way to Chittagong to Sylget.

  • @Srilankan2002
    @Srilankan2002 Год назад +28

    A great video. Love from Srilanka 🇱🇰
    He visited my country in 1344 during Gampola Kingdom

  • @insightfulrealm2866
    @insightfulrealm2866 2 года назад +126

    He was a Legend!
    Respect to Morocco from Pakistan. I'm glad that he visited our Country 🇵🇰💞🇲🇦

    • @GhGh-sj4wb
      @GhGh-sj4wb 2 года назад +6

      Ibn Battuta is the greatest traveler, explorer and traveler in history

    • @saidsd734
      @saidsd734 2 года назад +11

      I love pakistan very friendly people! I had the chance to visit it they treated me like a king. Love To my pakistani brothers from Morocco ❤

    • @tariqsyed6011
      @tariqsyed6011 2 года назад +15

      @RUclips Addict Us waqt India k rulers Muslims the.
      Is lye wo India aya. 😀

    • @princehamza890
      @princehamza890 2 года назад

      @Inaam Ulhaq 😀😀😀

    • @HH_754
      @HH_754 2 года назад +1

      @RUclips Addict India ko penta laga.

  • @TYD20
    @TYD20 2 года назад +618

    This man is one of the greatest men on Earth, he traveled using his two-leg may Allah grant him Jannah

  • @DisHappah
    @DisHappah 2 года назад +370

    Wish he posted these amazing travels on RUclips.

    • @printmedia1422
      @printmedia1422 2 года назад +23

      There is a scotish man who studied arabic and is reading ibn batuta and retracking all his trips.. Amazing you almost feel the times

    • @printmedia1422
      @printmedia1422 2 года назад +4

      @@YoussefTourki slm vids

    • @printmedia1422
      @printmedia1422 2 года назад

      @@YoussefTourki did you get the vedio

    • @noaha9604
      @noaha9604 2 года назад +1

      He did but chris crocker, told us to leave him alone!

    • @printmedia1422
      @printmedia1422 2 года назад

      @@YoussefTourki Tom Macintosh

  • @thegentlemamak
    @thegentlemamak Год назад +28

    Wow, just heard his name before and never knew about details of his journey. Now he is the greatest explorer of all time for me, he just explored the world without desire to colonize it. Amazing

  • @ColonelFluffles
    @ColonelFluffles 2 года назад +434

    I want a movie about him. A long movie. This guy literally lived an adventure

    • @benjonnyshirley4203
      @benjonnyshirley4203 2 года назад +18

      There is a great book called "Travels With a Tangerine" about following his footsteps....

    • @reteguy7338
      @reteguy7338 2 года назад +44

      A series would be much better than a movie, no? There are many stuff that can be added in a series such as character developement and detailed cultures compared to just a single movie.

    • @ColonelFluffles
      @ColonelFluffles 2 года назад +9

      @@reteguy7338 true, good point

    • @blueboy3098
      @blueboy3098 2 года назад +3

      ewa geertje

    • @InfinitesimallyInfinite
      @InfinitesimallyInfinite 2 года назад +4

      You sure Geert? Heb je een hekel aan moslims? 🤪

  • @muryanicikgu
    @muryanicikgu 2 года назад +434

    Can you imagine how Ibnu Batutah travel around the world at that time? With camels or horses...not using modern transportation like car or plane. I think no one can beat his journey until now👍👍

    • @gameworld6740
      @gameworld6740 2 года назад +9

      he was on feat no transportation of any kind

    • @mike-waynedjangoii6971
      @mike-waynedjangoii6971 2 года назад +1

      he must have been very wealthy

    • @marioprawirosudiro7301
      @marioprawirosudiro7301 2 года назад +3

      @Son Of Rabat All jokes aside, this got me wondering: How DID he finance his journey? It couldn't have been cheap. While it was mentioned that he basically hitch-hiked for some length of his journey, there's still a large chunk remaining.

    • @marioprawirosudiro7301
      @marioprawirosudiro7301 2 года назад +9

      @Son Of Rabat I haven't read Ibnu Battuta's notes, but I've read the travel accounts of Tome Pires and Ludovico di Varthema. Didn't sound like they hunt much, if any. Of course, those two had sponsors, so they can just procure provisions from any merchants they meet.
      I mean, sure, more people back then could hunt, but then we must ask, whether or not it was feasible. Especially during those solo journeys, what if the hunt fails?
      The part where you said they were hosted by someone soundds plausible though. Semitic cultures like the Arabs do encourage people to host strangers.

    • @starman6468
      @starman6468 2 года назад +9

      @@marioprawirosudiro7301 many rulers gracefully received travelers and merchants with all sorts of gifts. They would later sell those gifts for a quick buck and continue traveling.

  • @Saidxplore
    @Saidxplore 2 года назад +82

    As a Moroccan traveler myself, Ibn battuta is definitely an inspiration

    • @CBbyamar
      @CBbyamar 2 года назад +11

      Much love for morocco from Pakistan.. I have many close friends from your country.. Great people..

    • @Saidxplore
      @Saidxplore 2 года назад +6

      @@CBbyamar Thanks man, same thing. Many of my close friends are from Pakistan and I hope to visit them soon. May Allah help you overcome the floods

    • @CBbyamar
      @CBbyamar 2 года назад

      @@Saidxplore 💜

  • @awadhinho3715
    @awadhinho3715 2 года назад +56

    The moment Mombasa my home town was mentioned my heart melted and tears dropped from my eyes. This man was destined to explore the world. He was the real explorer, a man alone with trust in God Almighty. Exploring not for greed.

    • @waryaawariiri1812
      @waryaawariiri1812 10 месяцев назад +2

      He might also have stayed in Lamu and Malindi after Mogadishu.

    • @hennaahananee1945
      @hennaahananee1945 9 месяцев назад

      The first i know mombasa from a moroccan traveler his name is yassine and he traveled all africa by cycling from in from 2018 to 2022 know he is travelling in asia

  • @cardenova
    @cardenova 2 года назад +337

    What an awesome episode! Great to learn of Ibn Battuta incredible legacy. Wow, much love and respect to Morocco. 🇺🇸🇲🇦

    • @GhGh-sj4wb
      @GhGh-sj4wb 2 года назад +5

      Ibn Battuta is the greatest traveler, explorer and traveler in history

    • @arihaqi8364
      @arihaqi8364 2 года назад +1

      ibn means "son (of)"

    • @h3w45
      @h3w45 2 года назад +3

      Don't put the Amertiard flag next to Morocco

    • @cardenova
      @cardenova 2 года назад +14

      @@h3w45 🇺🇸🇲🇦

    • @Cergun_
      @Cergun_ 2 года назад +3

      Man really called him “Ibn” 💀

  • @brokenbridge6316
    @brokenbridge6316 2 года назад +897

    A movie should be made about this man's life n journey's to distant lands. He would likely become very popular. Great video.

    • @ayoubhid
      @ayoubhid 2 года назад +28

      Already exists, but he deserves something epic

    • @brokenbridge6316
      @brokenbridge6316 2 года назад +10

      @@ayoubhid---What's the movie called?

    • @ayoubhid
      @ayoubhid 2 года назад +42

      @@brokenbridge6316 Journey to Mecca, in the footsteps of Ibn Battuta

    • @brokenbridge6316
      @brokenbridge6316 2 года назад +10

      @@ayoubhid---Sounds nice. Thanks for telling me. I'll try to catch it if I can.

    • @elsascridon7256
      @elsascridon7256 2 года назад

      I don t think so ,he was very racist like many arabs

  • @AfaqueAhmed_
    @AfaqueAhmed_ 2 года назад +99

    Someone :- How much priority can you give to your pilgrimage to Mecca even while travelling the world ?
    Ibn Battuta :- Yes !

  • @mohamedallouha3190
    @mohamedallouha3190 11 месяцев назад +331

    no visa, no passport, no customs
    what a beautiful life

    • @Ezdeharmediaa
      @Ezdeharmediaa 9 месяцев назад +20

      Yeah, walking through arabian desert in 40 degrees celcuss

    • @khanmoin5926
      @khanmoin5926 9 месяцев назад +63

      ​@@Ezdeharmediaa 40 degree is nothing my friend

    • @oddguyamaar9191
      @oddguyamaar9191 9 месяцев назад

      @@Ezdeharmediaa yeh lets talk 50s

    • @EliteBengalSultanate
      @EliteBengalSultanate 9 месяцев назад +6

      Good old days man

    • @MimiLola-h5y
      @MimiLola-h5y 9 месяцев назад

      Only in the Muslims world , in Christian World u would be killed for sure

  • @finalprophet813
    @finalprophet813 2 года назад +186

    Wow what a journey, this guy is the real definition of a Journeyman.

    • @GhGh-sj4wb
      @GhGh-sj4wb 2 года назад +8

      Ibn Battuta is the greatest traveler, explorer and traveler in history

    • @jihadi-against-oppression
      @jihadi-against-oppression 2 года назад +6

      Final prophet is the one and only prophet Muhammad (pbuh)

    • @finalprophet813
      @finalprophet813 2 года назад

      @@jihadi-against-oppression yeah and that’s who I am referring to s.a.w
      All you idiots from the sub continent are too thick headed to understand that

    • @titansfitness3393
      @titansfitness3393 2 года назад

      😆😆😆

  • @mr420joker3
    @mr420joker3 2 года назад +170

    A film has to be made for this great explorer. I have seen that most Moroccans love to travel around the world mainly throughout Europe. Perhaps that's the reason behind nature of moroccan people for loving to travel? Respect from Albania.

    • @beffardo4740
      @beffardo4740 2 года назад +13

      Unfortunately, lately the history of the Berbers has been ignored. There are many characters and legends, but this is ignored because they are not Arabs

    • @La_vraie_Soupe
      @La_vraie_Soupe 2 года назад +29

      As Moroccan I have traveled to many countries (in Africa, Europe, Middle East, Asia and North America). Now I want to visit Latin America if God allows me (Insha'Allah)

    • @nafislavigne
      @nafislavigne 2 года назад +5

      @@La_vraie_Soupe take me with you bro whenever you visit Indonesia 🇮🇩 😂

    • @zakariadalil
      @zakariadalil 2 года назад +11

      True.. Moroccans love to travel.. I visited 31 countries and that's just the beginning.. targeting 100 before age 40

    • @syedkhalil9630
      @syedkhalil9630 2 года назад

      Netflix series

  • @Ahnaf_R01
    @Ahnaf_R01 2 года назад +175

    I am happy he visited our country ❤️🇧🇩

    • @Historyexplorebd
      @Historyexplorebd 2 года назад +23

      Yes Bengal sultanate time 1342.
      He also visit Bengal capital Sonargone.

    • @Ankit-d9f4u
      @Ankit-d9f4u 2 года назад +1

      @@Historyexplorebd bengal capital was gauda not sonargaon
      Sonargaon was capital for very little time

    • @timepasstubee
      @timepasstubee 2 года назад +2

      how could he not, the Indian Subcontinent was known as the golden bird of the planet. if anyone that had an opportunity to go there they would. it's a pity that today the subcontinent is not really reffered as the golden bird.

    • @Ahnaf_R01
      @Ahnaf_R01 2 года назад +5

      @@Ankit-d9f4u gauda was the capital long long ago

    • @Ankit-d9f4u
      @Ankit-d9f4u 2 года назад

      @@Ahnaf_R01 sonargone was not even a major capital
      It was capital for only 20 years

  • @redmoor1852
    @redmoor1852 2 года назад +99

    Fun fact: everything is named after him in tangier city in Morocco to this day, airports, stadiums, schools, universities, hospitals... etc

    • @user-ilhemdjaalab
      @user-ilhemdjaalab 2 года назад +24

      We have places and streets named after him in Algeria as well because he well deserves it. Such an iconic man.

    • @redmoor1852
      @redmoor1852 2 года назад +15

      He is iconic, glad to see he is well respected in Algeria as well. But I see a lot of Algerians claim that he's Algerian.

    • @weatherloops
      @weatherloops 2 года назад +13

      @@redmoor1852 ikr it makes me laugh when people claim Moroccan history as theirs

    • @aq4356
      @aq4356 2 года назад +11

      how can you even claim someone who lived 1000 years ago to be Algerian or Morrocan lol, both of these countries are made up post colonial states. People didn't identify as "morrocan" or "algerian" but they identified firstly with religion, then they identified through either the language they spoke, tribe, city they came from etc.

    • @aq4356
      @aq4356 2 года назад +9

      @@weatherloops it's not "Moroccan" history, it's north African and Muslim history, don't nationalize history, this is how people start fighting and arguing for no reason, like Algerians and Moroccans do. Morocco and Algeria as nations and states did not exist in the past, certainly not when Ibn Batuta was alive. If the colonizers didn't have their way, Algeria and Morocco would have likely been 1 country now.

  • @giyu0606
    @giyu0606 2 года назад +319

    What a great explorer ibn battuta was , actually very proud to be a Moroccan as he was , , thank you so much for covering the entire journey

    • @GhGh-sj4wb
      @GhGh-sj4wb 2 года назад +2

      Ibn Battuta is the greatest traveler, explorer and traveler in history

    • @h3w45
      @h3w45 2 года назад +6

      Ibn battuta is the pride of Muslims not Moroccans alone stop toxic nationalism

    • @graybow2255
      @graybow2255 2 года назад

      Pride is something YOU achieve.

    • @kodvavi150
      @kodvavi150 2 года назад

      He wasn't a Moroccan. He was a Muslim and believe in Islamic Nationalism, unlike todays illiterate Muslim and this is also a reason why they r facing oppression worldwide

    • @lamenace5579
      @lamenace5579 2 года назад +9

      @@h3w45 Wtf, he doesnt have the right to be proud of his country ?

  • @beastbabyboss1005
    @beastbabyboss1005 2 года назад +52

    Huge fan and follower of knowledgia from Bangladesh 🇧🇩

  • @ninabessaiah1388
    @ninabessaiah1388 Год назад +35

    I'm so glad that ibn-battuta has written down his magnificent story so people like us could learn from his journey, as an Algerian a Morocco neighbor country we started learning about him since elementary school with small text as "IBN_Battuta on his journey to Hadj" which every Algerian is familiar with, but also dived into some of his stories in different regions in middle school's history and french/English classes

    • @AdamBer-ir6eg
      @AdamBer-ir6eg Год назад +3

      But I've watched couple of your Algerian national channel that literally said that he's Algerian lol , just why !!!!! I can share the links with you .. I mean the world knows he's Moroccan.. why they keep lying to you and some of you like that !!!!

    • @ninabessaiah1388
      @ninabessaiah1388 Год назад +1

      @@AdamBer-ir6eg link them cuz I don't believe you I'm Algerian who grew up watching historical stories and documentaries but I've never encountered what you're talking about and if you just trying to Create grudges between peoples I won't talk to you

    • @Blvcknwhite16
      @Blvcknwhite16 Год назад

      ​​@@AdamBer-ir6egprove it post the link come on or you just a brainwashed by your makhzen or from the group of non educated people Algeria never claimed ibn battuta stop lying

    • @0badre
      @0badre Год назад

      @@ninabessaiah1388😂😂😂😂😂 there is a lot of them … you are the biggest liar in the whole world

    • @simo-gu4rv
      @simo-gu4rv 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@ninabessaiah1388me also i see the video

  • @tikn03
    @tikn03 2 года назад +94

    He reached the port of Chittagong in modern-day Bangladesh intending to travel to Sylhet to meet Shah Jalal, who became so renowned that Ibn Battuta, then in Chittagong, made a one-month journey through the mountains of Kamaru near Sylhet to meet him.

    • @sabertalha6945
      @sabertalha6945 2 года назад +4

      my hometown

    • @starkgamer4845
      @starkgamer4845 2 года назад +5

      As an Indian sylheti,I was always told about Ibn battuta and Shah Jalal stories in my childhood.

    • @nahin5080
      @nahin5080 2 года назад +2

      @@starkgamer4845 I didnt know there is anything called Indian sylheti

    • @fulltimetravelersftt2232
      @fulltimetravelersftt2232 2 года назад +2

      @@nahin5080 There is, people from Silchar which is India speaks pure Sylheti.

    • @ajjahabi
      @ajjahabi 2 года назад

      From Chittagong

  • @xainm2831
    @xainm2831 2 года назад +77

    He made such an incredible impact on the maldives with his time here too , truly an incredible person

    • @dradenhaven1549
      @dradenhaven1549 2 года назад +1

      Can you elaborate please ?

    • @e.r.578
      @e.r.578 2 года назад +1

      @@dradenhaven1549 look up ibn battuta story about maldives , and how the country became a muslim country

    • @batako7234
      @batako7234 Год назад

      ​@@dradenhaven1549 Now Maldives become a moslem country

  • @rajavelusekaran1474
    @rajavelusekaran1474 2 года назад +34

    What a wonderful traveller. His travel experiences are an immense treasure to world. Truly a global citizen some 900 years back.

  • @ishthi
    @ishthi 2 года назад +34

    Ibn Batuta entered Sri Lanka through the lagoon port of my hometown Puttalam and he mentioned the name of the city in his book. Also, he has visited the famous Adam's peak mountain in the central province as a part of his itinerary

    • @Faceon6790
      @Faceon6790 11 месяцев назад +1

      I think that mountain is called sripada..I have visited there...

  • @hikodzu
    @hikodzu 2 года назад +87

    Being a traveler back then especially without today's technology always interested me

  • @antikseyyah
    @antikseyyah 2 года назад +65

    Great traveller, visited his tomb in Tangier back in 2017. I read his notes before my travels. Huge respect!

  • @Jaffar540
    @Jaffar540 2 года назад +24

    Ibn Battuta is one of my favourite historical personalities. I have collected some very interesting books on and about his historical voyages around the globe. He was a brave, daring, and determined person to have successfully explored the world and to put down in his diary all the people, culture, and experiences he had learned during his sojourn. No one before or after Ibn Battuta had explored the world single-handedly and returned home safe. My prayers for his soul and for the parents he had lost.

  • @kamilialebnani8626
    @kamilialebnani8626 2 года назад +55

    As a Moroccan 🇲🇦🇲🇦, I love seeing my country's history getting recognition ❤🇲🇦❤🇲🇦❤🇲🇦

    • @Hmmm0x
      @Hmmm0x 2 года назад

      جزائري هو

    • @kamilialebnani8626
      @kamilialebnani8626 2 года назад +9

      @@Hmmm0x 😂😂😂 wakha alkarghouli 😂

    • @Hmmm0x
      @Hmmm0x 2 года назад

      @@kamilialebnani8626 جزائري وبالظبط من خنشلة

    • @kamilialebnani8626
      @kamilialebnani8626 2 года назад +7

      @@Hmmm0x 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @AdamAzzr
      @AdamAzzr 2 года назад

      @@kamilialebnani8626
      غلط، جزائري من عين دفلة

  • @turankubus
    @turankubus 2 года назад +148

    I have read his 1300-pages book. His journey is amazing

    • @extrahot31
      @extrahot31 2 года назад +3

      What is it called?

    • @AzelVonAzrael
      @AzelVonAzrael 2 года назад +24

      @@extrahot31
      "A Gift to Those Who Contemplate the Wonders of Cities and the Marvels of Travelling" or as commonly know as "the rihla"

    • @annukimuni3389
      @annukimuni3389 Год назад +26

      His books inspired me to travel all the road from my hometown (Kobe) in japan, to his hometown (Tanger) in Morocco.

    • @reteguy7338
      @reteguy7338 Год назад +2

      I'd really love to read his complete travellogue, but sadly i can't find his book online for free.

  • @printemps31
    @printemps31 2 года назад +147

    This is so mind blowing taking into consideration the amount of logistics, energy, courage and perseverance needed for such an incredible journey, this guy deserves all our respect.
    Btw how did he communicate with the people he met ?

    • @marioprawirosudiro7301
      @marioprawirosudiro7301 2 года назад +42

      Through translators I think. Islam was already spreading at the time, and so there would usually be some muslim merchants who can speak both Arabic and the local language. For me, the financing part is more mind-boggling.

    • @sadiqrahman2961
      @sadiqrahman2961 2 года назад +27

      He travelled in the Muslim world. Even though he was a Berber, Arabic was the de facto educational language in the diverse Muslim world from Morocco to Indonesia. Non Muslim nations such as India and Russia were under Muslim rule at that period of time and Ibn Battuta ususally stayed with Muslim community such as from his travel in China, Southern India and Sri Lanka.

    • @satriorama4118
      @satriorama4118 2 года назад +19

      Arabs Muslim were avid travelers and merchants. They even travel as far as Indonesia and China in search of wealth and spreading Islam. They also thirsting of knowledge. One passage is Quran even told everyone to seek knowledge as far as the kingdom of silk.

    • @Homoerectus1548
      @Homoerectus1548 2 года назад +23

      @@marioprawirosudiro7301 He is basically a travelling lawyer. A certified expert at islamic law are really sought after at that times because, well, high education is not as widespread as it is today. There is a reason why local rulers keep inviting him, someone like him are too good to let through. He got paid and acomodation in return for his services.

    • @kiwin9488
      @kiwin9488 2 года назад +4

      how did he manage to travel such long distances through forests and deserts under harsh conditions by foot

  • @lazovkalazovovska5119
    @lazovkalazovovska5119 2 года назад +44

    What is Ibn Battuta famous for?
    Резултат со слика за Ibn Battuta
    What is Ibn Baṭṭūṭah known for? Ibn Baṭṭūṭah was a medieval Muslim traveler who wrote one of the world's most famous travel logs, the Riḥlah. This great work describes the people, places, and cultures he encountered in his journeys along some 75,000 miles (120,000 km) across and beyond the Islamic world.20.2.2022

  • @scentsoftravelmeditation
    @scentsoftravelmeditation 2 года назад +239

    Ibn Batuta completed all side quests in game of life & unlocked trophy level 100 😂

    • @smd9591
      @smd9591 2 года назад +12

      Birds killed: 199/200

  • @MaksudAlNazirNoyon
    @MaksudAlNazirNoyon 2 года назад +28

    He was a great man
    Love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩

  • @RoshenRRujj
    @RoshenRRujj 2 года назад +40

    in the most of middle eastern countries his legacy is still greatly revered! I studied in Azerbaijan and i still remember our history books have hundreds of references to his travel notes as they provide an invaluable window to the middle ages of Azerbaijani history, shahs, cities, poets and life. He described Tabriz - Southern Azerbaijan in great details and talked about the ancient empires who ruled Azerbaijan. His travels and life was an inspiration for a lot of us when we were kids, we all dreamt about travelling far and beyond like him. Maybe thats why i ended up here in Australia now 10 years later, 10k km away from Azerbaijan.
    This Video is amazing btw, thank you so much!

  • @eliasalekai3626
    @eliasalekai3626 2 года назад +39

    Your voice, the background music the style and presentation top class! Absolutely loved this video.
    It would be interesting if you did more videos on Islamic history like the battle of badr, ohod and khandaq

    • @prisondaddy5037
      @prisondaddy5037 2 года назад +1

      How he pronounces the cities are very funny hahahah

  • @Aazammm
    @Aazammm Год назад +12

    I've seen a documentary of many hours on Ibn Batuta and believe me thats one of the most epic real travel stories I've ever seen.
    The guy has seen everything

  • @ramio1983
    @ramio1983 2 года назад +60

    Ibn Battuta was unapologetically himself, i really admire that about him. Even though his amazing travels are what makes him famous and well loved- there are aspects of him that will trigger you- that's not to say he was a bad man by any stretch of the imagination, but his encounters and opinions were brutally honest. He DID expect gifts from the Elite and got upset when he didn't get any, he DID expect good food and a lavish care upon him upon his arrival, he DID take advantage of his status and had wives and kids that he knew he would abandon, he DID get offended at the sight of naked tribes and church bells ringing- but that's what i love about him- his honesty in his adventures, he really let the World know who he truly was- a remarkable traveller that had a taste of the good life and really couldn't get enough of it :)

    • @الطيرالحر-خ8خ
      @الطيرالحر-خ8خ 2 года назад +1

      120000 kms and books of memories.

    • @maxk880
      @maxk880 2 года назад

      You mean: He's an arrogant snub asshole who just cares about himself? WHy do you admire that about him? That's the entire problem with the world and has been for 1000s of years..

    • @greatexpectations6577
      @greatexpectations6577 2 года назад +4

      That is an honest man with pride and dignity.

    • @afrobian1
      @afrobian1 Год назад

      what is the book name? im a moroccan and ashamed of this question

    • @Ginzo111
      @Ginzo111 Год назад

      @@afrobian1 Rihla

  • @Learnomo12
    @Learnomo12 2 года назад +29

    As a Moroccan it’s something inside us we just love travelling, I am grown up in a very poor area but yet I always had the dream to travel around the world, I studied hard and got a good job and now I visited, Malta, Italy, Spain, Turkey, Tunisia, UK, Netherlands, and Now living in Hungary, planning to continue the journey after that to the Middle East, u see it’s just something in us

    • @Spinooza07
      @Spinooza07 Год назад

      God be with you, enjoy the journey akhay

  • @rituparna6133
    @rituparna6133 2 года назад +81

    Fortunately he is highly adorned in India. From the time I began learning history Ibn Batuta, Megasthenes , Hiuen Tsang, Fa Hien, these names are etched in my mind.

    • @justinamusyoka4986
      @justinamusyoka4986 2 года назад +3

      I studied him in my History class as an explorer,what exactly was his mission about ? Just asking.

    • @faiz9112
      @faiz9112 2 года назад +3

      @@justinamusyoka4986 traveller and historian

    • @rituparna6133
      @rituparna6133 2 года назад +10

      @@justinamusyoka4986 Started with the holy Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca but then his quest for knowledge of the distant and myriad lands and cultures didn't let him cease.

    • @truthandreason8394
      @truthandreason8394 2 года назад +10

      @@justinamusyoka4986 Unlike European explorers Ibn Batuta do not have a solid cause. He has a thirst for knowledge and experience.

    • @CBbyamar
      @CBbyamar 2 года назад +1

      Muslims of this region will always have great admiration for him..
      Sadly he was robbed by hindu mobs twice in the region...

  • @ahmadhussain-Fitness
    @ahmadhussain-Fitness 2 года назад +33

    I read his book Safarnama (biography) in urdu language in early 90s very interesting. Specially when he went to india and saw "satti* a widow burnt alive with her died husband after seeing this ibni batuta said in his biography that he fall and unconscious for hours there, when he woke up he saw only dust of burnt woods.

    • @zafar5059
      @zafar5059 2 года назад +4

      The same I have heard about a Muslim traveller who has similar name to ibn battuta
      Idk it was in Viking land where a girl was burned alongside an old man or woman who died of natural causes and they claimed it to be their ritual

    • @Magicallstore
      @Magicallstore Год назад +2

      @@zafar5059 it's ibn fadlan who traveled to viking land

  • @aditiamaulana1419
    @aditiamaulana1419 2 года назад +29

    pure explorer and traveler without any bad motive (golden, glory & gospel)

  • @mouadeljaouhari4738
    @mouadeljaouhari4738 2 года назад +41

    I feel so proud after watching this video, I honestly never recognised how much greatness he has achieved before as a Moroccan I could not be more thankful for introducing our icon to the world viewers, we are so thankful for the efforts made to make this amazing video ❤️

  • @adventuresofpodinilame
    @adventuresofpodinilame 2 года назад +357

    He was a great explorer no doubt about that but imagine his parents waited nearly 24 years to see his son coming back home even though couldn't make it and that's heartbreaking,

    • @Navk23
      @Navk23 2 года назад +46

      Maybe he was able to send a letter to them at some point in his travels. But that is sad!

    • @justinamusyoka4986
      @justinamusyoka4986 2 года назад +5

      And his wife and children ,if he had ?

    • @rahasyatreasure
      @rahasyatreasure 2 года назад

      भारत के धार्मिक स्थलों से जुड़ी रहस्यमयी अनसुनी कहानियाँ-ruclips.net/video/hp7mNjPuCto/видео.html

    • @Navk23
      @Navk23 2 года назад +11

      ​@@justinamusyoka4986 ehhhhh One wife every country don't sound to bad of a life to me. 🤪😂🤣. No ofcourse, is sad very sad.

    • @Rvc546
      @Rvc546 2 года назад +5

      @@justinamusyoka4986 if he had any ?? He had so many wifes and kids 😂😂

  • @MrxGamex69
    @MrxGamex69 2 года назад +36

    Crazy how one can travel around the globe on foot in a lifetime. Respect to Ibn Batuta

  • @theawesomeman9821
    @theawesomeman9821 2 года назад +33

    Kings and Generals released a video on Ibn Fadlan today I was able to watch. And now I'm watching a video from Knowledgia about Ibn Bttuta! RUclips has blessed me with two great videos!

    • @NatureSurfer
      @NatureSurfer 2 года назад +2

      Watch the story of both on the Extra Credit channel , it’s awesome.

    • @dante666jt
      @dante666jt 2 года назад

      There is heaven and hell difference between Ibn Battuta and Ibn Faldan. One was peaceful and other was quite violent

    • @loqasheltner120
      @loqasheltner120 2 года назад

      @@dante666jt like Kings and Generals choose the wrong person

  • @Bruh73129
    @Bruh73129 2 года назад +67

    His tomb is in Tangier Morocco were he was from I visited it

  • @foxpro3002
    @foxpro3002 2 года назад +11

    never heard of this channel but its nice your talking about this man, I feel he is very underrated when it comes to RUclips so its nice to see more channels talking about him.

  • @arianitonline8748
    @arianitonline8748 Год назад +23

    I have read some paper from a historian professor, that the muslim sailors helped columbus during his sailing, and even guided him towards america. this paper goes much deeper, explaining that south america was visited many times by arab speaking people long before the spaniards went there. and it makes sense when we look at people like ibn battuta.
    also worth mentioning. ibn battuta was a scientist. he wrote about the universe, solar system, and other physical laws. some can say he inspired people like galile and newton

    • @IrishCinnsealach
      @IrishCinnsealach Год назад

      To start with your claim Muslims guided Columbus to the Americas is so ignorant and hysterical
      He was trying to get to India instead of going round Africa
      So if they guided him to the Americas they didn't have a clue where they were
      And battuta didn't write anything
      He dictated his travels to a scholar and that's the extent of his work
      He didn't write about the universe or the solar system and no one with an ounce of credibility would claim he inspired Galileo Galilei or Newton
      And no Arab ever documented anything about the Americas
      Not one zero zilch

    • @arianitonline8748
      @arianitonline8748 Год назад +4

      @@IrishCinnsealach I will get into the details about galileo not being the first to talk about the solar system and to prove that he was inspired by people before him. same for newton. he was propably reading ibn haythm's notes about gravity when the apple feel on his head.
      but as for columbus, yes, he might have had a muslim navigator. doesn't matter where columbus destination was, what matters is who was the navigator. maybe he too by accident guided columbus towards america or by purpose

    • @IrishCinnsealach
      @IrishCinnsealach Год назад

      @@arianitonline8748 @ArianitOnline why are you talking about ibn haythm
      When this video is about ibn battuta
      But since you mention him and claim he inspired Newton well seems you missed the fact that his total gravitational theory was nothing but what Aristotle already proposed in 1BC
      No surprise considering the middle age Muslims had all the classical Greek and Roman texts translated
      After Aristotle the 6th century Byzantine Alexandrian scholar John Philoponus modified the Aristotelian concept of gravity with the theory of impetus.
      then you say it doesn't matter where the destination was only who the navigator was
      That's just pathetic.
      He might of guided him to the Americas on purpose
      😂😂
      Well the thing is I was simply humouring you before but because your comment is even more unfounded than your first let me tell you that the pilot of the Santa Maria wasn't even a Muslim he was mixed race Spanish and African

    • @arianitonline8748
      @arianitonline8748 Год назад +1

      @@IrishCinnsealach wait a minute. did you say that the pilot wasn't muslim but spanish and african??!?!? oh man. first of all, africa is a continent, so was he morrocean, algerian, egyptian, nigerian, what was he? and muslim is a person who follows a religion and has nothing to do with nationality.
      as I said, I have read a theory about columbus, I didn't say it was history!

    • @rififienforce
      @rififienforce Год назад

      ​@@IrishCinnsealach thé pilots were berbers from Gibraltar, not 'black 'african'.

  • @yecly
    @yecly 2 года назад +17

    He was such a fiery, crazy dude for doing what he did yet respectable due to his knowledge.
    I would love to host and chat with him if he is alive today.
    To travel and be accepted in many nations shows that he is humble yet accommodating every new culture he encountered.
    Sure, he got paid for jobs he took around the nation and received gifts due to being guest of important people but how he maintained all that through different culture, that is magnificent.
    Man got skills!

    • @Elthorr149
      @Elthorr149 11 месяцев назад

      He was educated but not very accommodating , he created many problems for local rulers of islamic countries, since he was a judge he was able to see everything wrong and acted like a Karen whenever he had the chance. I find these parts of his story very funny.

  • @Vifvd
    @Vifvd 2 года назад +43

    This has got to be the most fascinating video I've seen on this channel, and that's saying something, watching how far Ibn Battuta travelled is simply awe inspiring even in this day and age with all our technology.

  • @depekthegreat359
    @depekthegreat359 2 года назад +229

    I like this documentary extremely so much as the late Ibn Batuta sir was extremely so bold in travelling from his country to most of the respective countries,mainly in Asia tirelessly and my massive respect and salute are on him for willing to sacrifice his family's happiness to travel around the world to explore the good people and places,good friends!!!REST IN PEACE AND YOU WILL AND MUST NEVER EVER BE FORGOTTEN BY ALL OF US IN THIS WORLD AND OTHER PLACES,IBN BATTUTA SIR!!!🙏

    • @mohmu9
      @mohmu9 2 года назад +12

      I believe you to be a nice person in real life as you are in the comment section, stay blessed

    • @Ludovicus1769
      @Ludovicus1769 2 года назад +7

      Stay weird

    • @MerkhVision
      @MerkhVision 2 года назад +7

      I think you’d enjoy the Extra History series about Ibn Batuta over on the Extra Credit channel a lot more! They go into a lot more detail and make the whole story a lot more interesting :)

    • @kiwuuspurr1927
      @kiwuuspurr1927 2 года назад

      @@Ludovicus1769 what

    • @atanuchakraborty8155
      @atanuchakraborty8155 2 года назад +5

      @@mohmu9 apart from the identity Depek you too seems to be another good person. In this era of trolling / humiliating & underestimating you have set a great precedence. Long live the mankind & their mutual co learning and enlightening along with mere co existence 🙏.

  • @dovicdc9806
    @dovicdc9806 2 года назад +10

    Great Moroccan traveler from a great old nation 🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦

  • @artemismoonbow2475
    @artemismoonbow2475 2 года назад +21

    I remember having to read his traveler's tales as an undergrad longer ago than I wish to admit. I remember being entranced by him, then exhausted by him, then sorry for him, and then I forgot about him. Enough of my own travels later I see this and see him differently. There is an Odinic quality to his seeking and that spirit moves me too. I wonder in an age of global communications and map completion is the journey that needs exploring is the one within? I'm sure now, with miles under my feet, that the inner journey is the point, and now I wonder if the inner journey was always possible from the start? I'm happy to hear the name of the traveler Ibn Battuta again.

  • @WahidAzizi1
    @WahidAzizi1 2 года назад +16

    What a crazy person. Thank you for making this video. It was well explained. I like how you connected his travel using the arrow-like routes.

  • @ray101892
    @ray101892 2 года назад +237

    Three questions: how did he have money to complete such a trip after getting robbed and nonstop detours? Why does every ruler like him? And how did he communicate with other nationalities?

    • @luco-3po878
      @luco-3po878 2 года назад +226

      Usually scholars, lawyers and explorers were hosted by merchants and royals since they were very prestigious people. Also pilgrims were seen as sacred (at least in Europe, idk if it was the same in the Muslim culture but I think that they were as well).
      About the language, if you notice, he traveled mostly in Muslim countries, so it was likely that even if they were from different countries, they were all able to speak Arabic.
      Also he was robbed while he was actually working as a judge, so I guess he had some kind of salary and I honestly don't know if he actually was working also during his staying in some cities

    • @abdiabdi3225
      @abdiabdi3225 2 года назад +125

      @@luco-3po878 little bit of extra info I want to add 1 there were translators just like anywhere else during any other time secondly Pilgrimage is one of the 5 pillars of islam and of course helping such people was a good way of gaining ajir meaning reward as it is seen as charity and you're expected to do hajj once in your life

    • @napolien1310
      @napolien1310 2 года назад +80

      Just like the guy above says, the guy was a religious scholar and studied so he worked as a judge in Morocco, and in his travels most of the middle east talks Arabic and it is the language of the government and the fact he is hosted by royals,officials merchants is nothing out of the ordinary as he is a scholar and a judge so he can find work easily and get sponsored and the fact he bring news, even in india and china he meets a lot of Arabs there and the Chinese city was famous to host a lot of Arabs and south eastern Asians there under the Yuan's and ming.
      He will finds some people who talks Arabic and they will help him finds translators...etc.

    • @jamshidb
      @jamshidb 2 года назад +36

      Arabic was his mother thoung and he was able to speak persian so i think it will cover 90 percent of his journey as much as language is concerned.

    • @napolien1310
      @napolien1310 2 года назад +39

      @@jamshidb he learned Arabic for sure at a young age, but he was an Amazigh/Berber so I'm guessing Arabic his second language.

  • @Younsse-1
    @Younsse-1 Год назад +7

    As a Moroccan, I am very proud of him and I am happy to see many people praising him, whether Muslims or non-Muslims. I love you very much❤🇲🇦

  • @SunsetNova
    @SunsetNova 2 года назад +56

    Ibn Battuta the Moroccan legend 🇲🇦❤🇲🇦

    • @SunsetNova
      @SunsetNova 2 года назад +15

      @Haider Ali Ibn Akhlaq Not true. He lived under the Moroccan Marinid dynasty. Go read up on history pls before embarrassing yourself.

    • @realhades9178
      @realhades9178 2 года назад +2

      @Haider Ali Ibn Akhlaq ??????????Lmao what are you even saying

    • @saidsd734
      @saidsd734 2 года назад +7

      @Haider Ali Ibn Akhlaq ignorance at its finest !

    • @saidsd734
      @saidsd734 2 года назад +4

      @Haider Ali Ibn Akhlaq you made a claim without doing some reseach, its a shame in the time of internet.

    • @specialone3209
      @specialone3209 2 года назад +8

      @Haider Ali Ibn Akhlaq Morocco is second oldest kingdom in the world and it has the oldest university

  • @TheSuperhafizh
    @TheSuperhafizh 2 года назад +39

    It was impossible to not mention his name in history book. Even in Indonesia, when it seems like he just had a short transit, he is able to somehow manage to meet important people and store everything (well, most of it) perfectly in his mind, and write it down in a book.

    • @Elthorr149
      @Elthorr149 11 месяцев назад

      He didn't wrote the book himself, even if he was educated he took writers and narrated his stories to to them so they can properly put it in a book.

    • @ahmedkas4298
      @ahmedkas4298 11 месяцев назад

      people used to have better memory before the digital age .

  • @Dreamerlanf
    @Dreamerlanf 2 года назад +24

    I am heading to Tangiers to visit his tomb. His legacy is an inspiration to the world not just Moroccans

    • @Jadido7
      @Jadido7 2 года назад +1

      He died in Marrakesh, but I don’t think his tomb is known

    • @Dreamerlanf
      @Dreamerlanf 2 года назад +3

      It is indeed in Tangiers. You can google its location.

    • @Jadido7
      @Jadido7 2 года назад

      @@Dreamerlanf i just googled it, thanks

  • @scrumptiouspickle
    @scrumptiouspickle 2 года назад +5

    my ancient world history teacher taught us so much this year, everything about the paleolithic era, neolithic era, out of africa theory, ancient mesopotamia, ancient egypt, ancient rome, ancient china, the han dynasty, qin dynasty, shang dynasty, the byzantine empire, the roman republic, the carolingian empire, the babylonians, the middle ages (dark ages), the crusades, the ottoman empire, early christianity, judaism, zoroastrianism, buddhism, hinduism, taoism, early islam, and like so much more, im so thankful that i actually have a history teacher who teaches us more than american history.