Archives Islamic History
This is the final episode of the Mansa Musa series. It is the legacy story. Not the gold in Cairo. The books in Timbuktu. Mansa Musa returned to Mali in 1325 with an Andalusian scholar named al-Sahili, possibly four Hashimite Sharifs, and an unrecorded number of Egyptian and Maghrebi jurists, calligraphers, and copyists. The chronicle tradition says al-Sahili built the great mosque of Timbuktu, the Djinguereber, but modern architectural history says the Sudano-Sahelian style is indigenous and what al-Sahili really built was a single domed audience hall at the capital. What he and the other foreign scholars actually anchored was an institution: a slowly-compounding diaspora of Maliki jurists who would teach the Mande converts who would teach the Sanhaja jurists who would teach Ahmad Baba two and a half centuries later. This episode covers the Djinguereber and the annual crepissage ritual in which the community climbs the wooden palm-beams every year and replasters the walls by hand. It covers the Sankore quarter and the Maliki jurists who taught there generation after generation, training students in fiqh and hadith and Quranic studies and Arabic grammar by sitting on a leather mat in a courtyard with a manuscript open across the sheikh's knees. It covers the Catalan Atlas of 1375, made in Majorca, in which a Jewish cartographer painted Mansa Musa with a gold orb in his lifted hand, fifty years after his death, and inscribed beside him in fine red Catalan: this king is the richest and most noble lord of all this region, on account of the abundance of gold which is gathered in his land. And it covers the long fall. Mansa Musa's death around 1337. Mansa Sulayman's reign and Ibn Battuta's complaint about miserly hospitality. The slow weakening of Mali. The rise of Songhai. The Battle of Tondibi in 1591, when a Moroccan army with eight cannon and four thousand musketeers broke a Songhai cavalry of thirty thousand in two hours. The arrest of Ahmad Baba and seventy of his Aqit relatives in 1593. The march to Marrakesh in chains. The 1,600 books taken from the man who, in his own description, owned the fewest of his friends. The librarians of Timbuktu who, four hundred years later in 2012-13, smuggled three hundred and fifty thousand manuscripts in metal trunks down the Niger to save them from al-Qaeda-affiliated militants, using the same logic that had survived 1591: pre-distribute, refuse the central library that can be sacked. The Catalan Atlas remembered Musa for the metal. The city he helped build remembered him for the institution. Sources include the Tarikh al-Sudan (al-Sa'di) and Tarikh al-Fattash (Ka'ti / Ibn al-Mukhtar), Ibn Khaldun's Kitab al-Ibar, Ibn Battuta's Mali chapter, Ahmad Baba al-Timbukti's own writings, the original Catalan inscription on the 1375 atlas, Michael Gomez's African Dominion, Elias Saad's Social History of Timbuktu, John Hunwick's Timbuktu and the Songhay Empire, Labelle Prussin's Hatumere, Jonathan Bloom's Architecture of the Islamic West, and Levtzion and Hopkins' Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West African History. Part four of a four-part Mansa Musa series. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.
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