Sulaiman Al Mahri

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Sulaiman Al Mahri ibn Ahmad ibn Sulayman (Arabic: سليمان المهري ابن أحمد ابن سليمان‎‎) (1480–1550) was a 16th-century Arab navigator.[1] He was called "Al-Mahri" because he was a descendant of the Arabic tribe of Mahara. He was a student of the philosopher and scientist Ibn Majid[2] and lived during the reign of Ottoman Turks.[3]

Works

Sulaiman Al Mahri ibn Ahmad ibn Sulayman was born in Shihr in 1480. He was a 16th-century Arab navigator. He was called "Al-Mahri" because he was a descendant of the Arabic tribe of Mahara. He was a student of the philosopher and scientist Ibn Majid and lived during the reign of Ottoman Turks.He died in 1550.

He sailed across the Indian Ocean and wrote a book on the geography of the Indian Ocean and the islands of Maritime Southeast Asia.[citation needed] He is best known for reducing Ibn Majids's list of stars for navigation from 70 to 15.[4] Combinations of these lists of stars were used by Arab navigators and mariners up to the early 16th century.[5]

The 15th-century Arabic book Kitab al-Fawa'id fi wal al-ilmi al bahri wa'l qawa'id (Book of Useful Information on the Principles and Rules of Navigation) was compiled by Ibn Majid and his student Sulaiman Al Mahri.[6] In his journals, Al Mahri noted the islands off the west coast of Siam (Malaya). The most important destination covered by these navigational texts is Malacca, which had become the region's principal trading center for Arab navigators during the 15th century.[citation needed] Singapore, parts of Samarra, Java, China, the coasts of Burma and Andaman and Nicobar Islands were the fiscal points of his texts.[citation needed]

He grouped the shores of Malaya with Siam, and the mainland to the east with China as a single kingdom. This passage from Al-Mahri's book illustrates the limits of Arab navigators:

Know that to the south of the Island of Jawa are found many Islands called Timor and that to the east of Timor are the Islands of Bandam, also a large number. The latter are places sandalwood, aloeswood and mace. The island is called Isles of Clove as airs of Jawa are called Maluku islands.

Since many of the islands have not been identified with confidence, the extent of his travel and familiarity with the region is not known.[7]

Al Mahri's division of Andaman and Nicobar Islands into two parts helped Arab and Portuguese navigators.[8] Even in the mid-16th century Sidi Ali Celeb translated Al Mahri's texts into Turkish and embroidered his work.[9]

References

  1. History of Islam, Volume 1 By Masudul Hasan pg. 642
  2. Sindh, studies historical By Nabī Baḵẖshu Ḵẖānu Balocu pg. 363
  3. Geography in the Middle Ages – Page 58 by S. M. Ziauddin Àlavi
  4. Medieval Arab Navigation on the Indian Ocean: Latitude Determinations Journal article by Alfred Clark; The Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 113, 1993
  5. Between east and west: the Moluccas and the traffic in spices up to the Arrival of Europeans. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society By R. A. Donkin
  6. The Persian Gulf States: a general survey By Alvin J. Cottrell pg 16.
  7. Early mapping of Southeast Asia By Thomas Suárez pg. 52
  8. Al-Hind: the making of the Indo-Islamic world By André Wink pg. 214
  9. The Persian Gulf States: a general survey By Alvin J. Cottrell pg 16

See also