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Al-Idrisi's world map from 1154. Note that south is at the top of the map.
'Abu Abd Allah Muhammad al-Idrisi' (
Arabic أبو عبد الله محمد الإدريسي; b.
1100-d.
1165 or
1166) was an
Arab cartographer,
geographer and traveller who lived in
Sicily, at the court of King
Roger II. Muhammad al-Idrisi was born in
Ceuta, then belonging to the
Almoravid Empire (nowadays
Ceuta,
Spain) and died in
Sicily, or maybe in
Sabtah. Al Idrisi claimed that he was a direct descendant of the prophet
Muhammad.
Works
Al Idrissi's best known work is his map of the world "lawh al-tarsim" (plank of draught), of 1154. He worked on the commentaries and illustrations for eighteen years at the court of King
Roger II of Sicily. His map is now known as the 'Tabula Rogeriana', his book as the 'Geografia'. Taken together, they were named ''Nuzhat al-Mushtak fi Ikhtiraq al-Afaq'' by Roger, but ''
al-Kitab al-Rujari'' ("Roger's Book") by al-Idrisi. His maps were used extensively during the explorations of the era of the
renaissance like the journeys of
Christopher Columbus.
Roger II of Sicily had his world map drawn on a circle of silver weighing about 400 pounds. The works of Al-Idrissi include ''Nozhat al-mushtaq fi ikhtiraq al-afaq'' a compendium of the geographic and sociologic knowledge of his time as well as descriptions of his own travels illustrated with over seventy maps; ''Kharitat al-`alam al-ma`mour min al-ard'' (Map of the inhabited regions of the earth) wherein he divided the world into 7 regions, the first extending from the
equator to 23 degrees
latitude, and the seventh being from 54 to 63 degrees followed by a region uninhabitable due to cold and snow.
He firmly believed that the earth was spherical. He proved this by stating that "an equilibrium which experiences no variation" keeps these bodies of water in place.
Al-Idrisi constructed a world globe map of 400
kg pure
silver and precisely recorded on it trade routes, lakes and rivers, major cities, and plains and mountains. In his ''Geography'', he even described the large seafaring
Chinese junks of the
Song Dynasty, the ports of call they came to in the
Indian Ocean, and the usual goods aboard their ships.
His world map was used in
Europe for centuries to come. It is worth mentioning that
Christopher Columbus used the world maps, which was originally taken from Al-Idrisi's work.
A second, expanded edition was produced in 1161 with the remarkable title ''The Gardens of Humanity and the Amusement of the Soul'', but all copies of it have been lost. An abridged version of this edition, named ''Garden of Joys'' -- but usually referred to as the ''Little Idrisi'' -- was published in 1192.
The book is not a perfect historical source, as al-Idrisi (as was common then and for many more centuries) relied on other sources for it. For example, when writing about
Poland he has conflated it with the land that is the modern-day
Czech Republic, because he wrote about "a country surrounded by mountains".
Legacy
A widely used and well known
Geographical Information Systems (GIS) software, developed by
Clark Labs in USA, is named
Idrisi as a dedication to the Arab geographer.
References
★
Profile at IslamOnline
★
Britannica
See also
★
List of Arab scientists
★
History of cartography
★
Pre-Columbian Islamic contact theories