Saturday University—Asia Crossings: Travel Accounts Through Asia’s History
Morocco to Mecca, Malaya and More: The Fourteenth Century Travels of Ibn Battuta, Ross Dunn
March 23, 2013
9:30–11 am
Stimson Auditorium


Ross Dunn, Professor Emeritus of History, San Diego State University

Ibn Battuta of Morocco, known as the greatest traveler of premodern times, spent 29 years travelling to the Middle East, Russia, throughout Asia, and within Africa. His travel accounts are also a commentary on the widespread Islamic civilization of his time.

Other lectures in this series:
Feb. 16: China and India are One: An Indian Soldier's Travelogue of Beijing in 1890–1901
Feb 23: The Politics of Pilgrimage: Xuanzang and His Meetings with Indian Kings
March 2: How and Why did Mount Emei in China Become a “Buddhist Mountain?”
March 9: Ibn-Sina and the Flow of Medical Information Across Asia
March 16: Ming China Goes Abroad: The Zheng He Voyages of the 15th Century
March 23: Morocco to Mecca, Malaya and More: The Fourteenth Century Travels of Ibn Battuta
March 30: Women on the Road: Pilgrims, Puppeteers, and Prostitutes from 11th to 14th Century Japan
April 6: Pathways to Bliss: Reinventing Buddhist Pilgrimage in Andhra Pradesh
April 13: Gentility on the Move: Travelogues and Fictions of Foreign Travel by Chinese Women, Circa 1900

Members: $5.00
Adults: $10.00

SAM member series: $43
Nonmember series: $86


Gardner Center for Asian Art and Ideas

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