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The Arab world is enormously vast and diverse, in every imaginable way, and yet is deeply rooted in a lineage of shared values. Over three millennia, these evolving values have been transmitted from generation to generation, and traversed territories that stretch across the swathes of Western Asia and North Africa, connecting diverse Arab peoples.
Coming from an Arabised background, travelling across much of the Arabdome in the medieval Islamic world, Ibn Battuta's depictions of Arab cultures as he encountered them provides a perfectly inspired itinerary as we delve into the multi-layered and composite history of the Arab peoples, tribes, and empires.
Tim Mackintosh-Smith is an Arabist, historian, traveler, lecturer, and translator. Born in England and educated at Oxford University, he is one of the foremost scholars of the Moroccan traveler, Ibn Battuta. He has published a trilogy recounting his journeys in the footnotes of Ibn Battuta and made a three-part TV series for BBC on Ibn Battuta's travels. His most recent work Arabs: A 3,000-Year History of Peoples, Tribes and Empires overs three millennia of Arab history and shines a light on the Arab peoples and tribes.
What we cover in this episode
Conversation key insights
Terms
A passage from the book
After we had enjoyed the privilege of visiting [the tomb of] the Commander of the Faithful 'Ali (peace be on him), the caravan went on to Baghdad. But I set out for al-Basra, in company with a large troop of the Khafaja Arabs, who are the occupants of that country....We set out from Mashhad ‘Ali (peace be on him) and halted [first] at al-Khawarnaq, the seat of al-Nu'man b. al-Mundhir and his ancestors, the kings of the house of Ma' al-Sama'. It is still inhabited, and there are remains of vast domes, lying on a wide plain on a canal derived from the Euphrates. Travels of Ibn Battuta translated by Hamilton Gibbs published by Hakluyt Society
We acknowledge the Aboriginal peoples as the enduring Custodians of the land from where this podcast is produced.
The Arab world is enormously vast and diverse, in every imaginable way, and yet is deeply rooted in a lineage of shared values. Over three millennia, these evolving values have been transmitted from generation to generation, and traversed territories that stretch across the swathes of Western Asia and North Africa, connecting diverse Arab peoples.
Coming from an Arabised background, travelling across much of the Arabdome in the medieval Islamic world, Ibn Battuta's depictions of Arab cultures as he encountered them provides a perfectly inspired itinerary as we delve into the multi-layered and composite history of the Arab peoples, tribes, and empires.
Tim Mackintosh-Smith is an Arabist, historian, traveler, lecturer, and translator. Born in England and educated at Oxford University, he is one of the foremost scholars of the Moroccan traveler, Ibn Battuta. He has published a trilogy recounting his journeys in the footnotes of Ibn Battuta and made a three-part TV series for BBC on Ibn Battuta's travels. His most recent work Arabs: A 3,000-Year History of Peoples, Tribes and Empires overs three millennia of Arab history and shines a light on the Arab peoples and tribes.
What we cover in this episode
Conversation key insights
Terms
A passage from the book
After we had enjoyed the privilege of visiting [the tomb of] the Commander of the Faithful 'Ali (peace be on him), the caravan went on to Baghdad. But I set out for al-Basra, in company with a large troop of the Khafaja Arabs, who are the occupants of that country....We set out from Mashhad ‘Ali (peace be on him) and halted [first] at al-Khawarnaq, the seat of al-Nu'man b. al-Mundhir and his ancestors, the kings of the house of Ma' al-Sama'. It is still inhabited, and there are remains of vast domes, lying on a wide plain on a canal derived from the Euphrates. Travels of Ibn Battuta translated by Hamilton Gibbs published by Hakluyt Society
We acknowledge the Aboriginal peoples as the enduring Custodians of the land from where this podcast is produced.