Ibn Battuta, a 14th-century Moroccan scholar, traveled over 75,000 miles across Africa, Asia, and the Indian Ocean in a 30-year journey that began as a pilgrimage to Mecca, documenting markets, rituals, and daily life across diverse civilizations; his written accounts provide historians with a valuable window into the interconnected nature of the medieval world, revealing how different societies were linked through trade, culture, and travel.
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The Traveler Who Outpaced Marco PoloHinzugefügt:
Narrator: Ibn [music] Battuta traveled over 75,000 miles, more than Marco Polo, across the medieval world. He left Tangier for Mecca, but one pilgrimage became [music] 30 years through African deserts, Indian Ocean ports, and Asian courts.
Facing danger, he recorded markets, [music] rituals, and daily life across Africa and Asia.
Back in Morocco, his book became a window into a connected Middle Ages.
Spotlight this [music] video and subscribe for more journeys.
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