Al
Idrisi Ahli Geografi Islam
Also Known As: Abu
Abd Allah Muhammad Al-Idrisi Al-Qurtubi Al-Hasani Al-Sabt, Al Idrisi
Gender: Men
Famous As: Cartographer,
Geographer, Traveler
Nationality: Moroccan
Born: 1100
Died At Age: 65
Born In: Ceuta,
(Present-Day Spain)
Died On: 1165
Place Of Death: Ceuta
Muhammad al-Idrisi also known as Abu Abd Allah Muhammad
al-Idrisi al-Qutubi al-Hasani al-Sabti was a Muslim cartographer, geographer,
traveler and Egyptologist famous for his travels all over Europe, Africa and
Asia and mapping the regions he travelled in. The maps drawn by him were often
corrections of the existing maps at that time which showed inaccurate geography
of the regions in question. He was the descendant of a long line of Princes,
Sufi leaders and Caliphs down to the Prophet Muhammad. He was the immediate
descendant of the ‘Hammudis’ who ruled Andalusia around 1016 to 1058 AD and
were an offshoot of the ‘Idrisids’ who ruled during the period 789-985 AD. He
acquired geographic information by sending men to far off lands accompanied by
draftsmen. When these men returned with the information about these lands he
used the data collected by them to update the geographical treatise he had
created with the information received from Greek and Arabic geographers. He
took almost eighteen years to compile all the information and create a map of the
world which was very accurate and had never been created before. This map was
one of his greatest creations in the pre-modern era. The voluminous treatise
has a large amount of detail about Europe in the 12th century.
Childhood & Early Life
- Muhammad
al-Idrisi was born in the Andalusian city of Ceuta, a Spanish enclave in
Morocco, in 1100 AD where his grandfather had settled after fleeing from
Malaga in the year 1057 AD.
- Al-Idrisi
was the descendant of Idrisid, the ruler of Morocco, who was a direct
descendant of Hazrat Hasa, the grandson of Prophet Muhammad.
- He studied
for a number of years in at the University of Cordoba, Spain, also known
as Al-Andalus, which was famous for its Spanish Muslim scholars. He spent
much of his early life in travelling through Spain and North Africa to
acquire geographical knowledge about the regions.
- He
travelled to Anatolia or Asia Minor when he was barely sixteen-year-old.
- He covered
the Muslim regions in many parts of Europe in his travels which included
the Pyrenees, the French coast on the Atlantic, Portugal, Hungary and York
in England.
- With the
information he collected from his travels in Europe, Asia and Africa, he
could create a rough map of the whole world.
Career
- Muhammad
aI-Idrisi taught geography at Constanine, Algeria at one point of time.
- He had to
move to Palermo, Sicily, as the environment in Andalusia was unstable and
conflict-ridden. There he joined Abu al-Salt and other contemporary
people. He was welcomed by the Normans who had overthrown the Arabs loyal
to the ‘Fatimids’ and allowed some of the Muslims to stay on in exchange
of the knowledge they provided.
- Al-Idrisi
used the information gathered by explorers and Islamic merchants, Islamic
maps, Norman voyagers and his own knowledge while traveling in Africa, the
Far east and the regions of the Indian Ocean to create the most accurate
maps to be found during the time before the modern age.
- He stayed
at the court of the Norman king Roger II of Sicily for eighteen years and
in 1154 AD created a map of the Eurasian region containing a part of North
Africa, western Asia and Southern Europe for the King. The map was created
on a pure silver disk almost 80 inches in diameter weighing almost 300
pounds and had legends written in Arabic. The book accompanying the map is
known as the ‘Book of Roger’.
- He
corrected the wrong interpretation of the Indian Ocean enclosed by land on
all sides and the wrong concept that the Caspian Sea was a part of the
larger ocean. He also determined the course of the rivers Danube and Niger
in his maps. In his opinion the Southern hemisphere was so hot that it was
inhabitable.
- He also
created an enlarged version of the book for William I, Roger’s son and
successor, but this work was lost.
- He left
Sicily in 1161 AD probably due to the Anti-Muslim riots that took place.
- Later he
made a world map on a sphere weighing almost 400 kilos. He recorded the
seven continents with their major cities, rivers and lakes and trade
routes on this global map which was perhaps the most accurate map created
in the Middle ages. He incorporated the five different climatic zones -
one torrid, two temperate and two cold zones in his map.
- Unlike the
belief in the Christian world that the Earth was a flat plate-like
formation, Muhammad al-Idris was the first person to claim that the Earth
was round, waters adhered to its surface, and was surrounded by a blanket
of air.
- He even
calculated the circumference of the Earth to be 22,900 miles which was off
by only eight percent from the calculations made during the modern times.
- Islamic
geographers such as Ibn Khaldun, Piri Reis and Ibn Battula were all
inspired by the maps drawn by Muhammad al-Idrisi. Explorers like Vasco Da
Gama and Christopher Columbus consulted maps drawn by Muhammad before
starting on their voyages.
- His comprehensive
work with the title ‘Rawd-Unnas wa-Nuzhat al-Nafs’ provides a lot of
accurate details about Sudan, the Niger above Timbuktu and the river Nile.
He corrected the earlier mistakes about the location of the lakes from
where the Nile started its journey and the path it followed. His earlier
representations of the river do not differ very much from a modern map.
His maps were considered a standard for almost three centuries.
- He had found that not much had been added to the knowledge of medical plants since the time of the Greeks. He collected medicinal plants wherever he went and added them to the existing list in various languages such as Latin, Berber, Arabic, Hindi, Greek and Persian.
Major Works
- An
abridged version of ‘Kitab Nuzhat al-mushtaq fi dhikr al-amsar wa-al-aqtar
wa-al-budan wa-al-juzurwa-al-mada in wa-al-afaq’ was translated into Latin
and published in Rome in 1592 AD, translated into French and published in
Paris in 1619 AD. The complete Arabic text of the book was translated into
French by Pierre Amedee Jaubert in the middle of the nineteenth century. A
critical edition of the full Arabic text was published in 1970.
- His book
‘Rawd-Unnas wa-Nuzhat al-Nafs’ was a detailed account of the Niger, Sudan
and Egypt especially the river Nile.
- The book
‘Kitab al-Jami-li-Sifat Ashtat al-Nabatat’ is based on medical plants. He
also wrote books on fauna and on zoology and was an accomplished poet.
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