- Shams al-Din al-Ansari al-Dimashqi
-
Arab geographer
Shams al-Din al-Ansari al-Dimashqi
شمس الدين الأنصاري الدمشقيTitle al-Dimashqi Born 1256 CE Died 1327 CE Ethnicity Arab Region Greater Syria Main interests History and Geography Sheikh Shams al-Din al-Ansari al-Dimashqi or simply al-Dimashqi (Arabic: شمس الدين الأنصاري الدمشقي) (1256–1327) was a medieval Arab geographer, completing his main work in 1300. Born in Damascus—as his name "Dimashqi" implies—he mostly wrote of his native land, the Greater Syria (Bilad ash-Sham), upon the complete withdrawal of the Crusaders. He became a contemporary of the Mamluk sultan Baibars, the general who led the Muslims in war against the Crusaders. His work is of value in connection with the Crusader Chronicles. He died while in Safad, in 1327.[1]
Al-Dimashqi (1325) gives very detailed accounts of each island in the Malay archipelago, its population, flora, fauna and customs. He mentions "the country of Champa...is inhabited by Muslims and idolaters. The Islam came there during the time of Caliph Uthman...and Ali, many Muslims who were expelled by the Umayyads and by Al-Hajjaj, fled there, and since then a majority of the Cham have embraced Islam ".
Of their rivals the Khmer, Al-Dimashqi (1325) mentions they inhabit the island of Komor (Khmer), also called Malay Island, are many towns and cities, rich-dense forests with huge, tall trees, and white elephants; they supplemented their income from the trade routes not only by exporting ivory and aloe, but also by engaging in piracy and raiding on Muslim and Chinese shipping.
Al-Dimaski's writings on Syria were published in St. Petersburg in 1866 by M.A.F Mehren, and this edition was later used for the English translation by Guy le Strange in 1890.[1]
References
Bibliography
- leStrange, Guy (1890), Palestine Under the Moslems: A Description of Syria and the Holy Land from A.D. 650 to 1500, Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund, http://www.archive.org/details/palestineundermo00lestuoft, London,
External links
- August Ferdinand M. Mehren (1862): Syrien og Palestina, Studie efter en arabisk Geograph (Shams al-Dîn Dimashḳî).
- August Ferdinand Mehren (ed) (1866): Cosmographie de Chems-ed-Din Abou Abdallah Mohammed ed-Dimichqui
Geography and cartography in medieval Islam Geographers 9th century10th centuryIbn Khordadbeh • Ahmad ibn Rustah • Ahmad ibn Fadlan • Abu Zayd al-Balkhi • Abū Muhammad al-Hasan al-Hamdānī • Al-Masudi • Istakhri • Khashkhash Ibn Saeed Ibn Aswad • Ibn Hawqal • Ibn al-Faqih • Al-Muqaddasi11th centuryAbū Rayḥān al-Bīrūnī • Abu Saʿīd Gardēzī • Al-Bakri • Mahmud al-Kashgari12th centuryAl-Zuhri • Muhammad al-Idrisi13th century14th century15th centuryAhmad ibn Mājid16th centuryWorks Schools Balkhi school • Iraqi school
Influences Geography (Ptolemy)Categories:- 1256 births
- 1327 deaths
- People from Damascus
- Medieval Arab geographers
- Arab historians
- Arab explorers
- Syrian historians
- 13th-century historians
- Geographers of medieval Islam
- 14th-century geographers
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.