Home Asian Studies Ibn Baṭṭūṭa’s Buddhists: Monuments, Memory, and the Materiality of Travel
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Ibn Baṭṭūṭa’s Buddhists: Monuments, Memory, and the Materiality of Travel

  • Tamara I. Sears
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Abstract

In the 1340s, a group of Chinese emissaries arrived at the Tughluq court in Delhi to request permission to rebuild a Buddhist temple that purportedly had been destroyed by the sultan’s armies. Although their request was denied, the then ruler Muḥammad b. Tughluq sent them back with a caravan laden with gifts for the Mongol emperor. To ensure their safe return, he assigned the task of accompanying them to the Moroccan traveler Ibn Baṭṭūṭa, who had interrupted his journeys for nearly a decade to take up residence as judge in the Tughluq court. Taking this incident as a point of departure, I question how categories of religious difference were articulated in Ibn Baṭṭūṭa’s famed Riḥla [Journey] through his treatment of sacred monuments, landscapes, and living practitioners. More specifically, I look at the ways in which encounters with non-Muslim monuments and religious practitioners functioned in Ibn Baṭṭūṭa’s account of his travels through India: as narrative catalysts, as refractions of a geospatial imagination, and as transformative agents in the Islamicization of regions far beyond the dār al-islām.

Abstract

In the 1340s, a group of Chinese emissaries arrived at the Tughluq court in Delhi to request permission to rebuild a Buddhist temple that purportedly had been destroyed by the sultan’s armies. Although their request was denied, the then ruler Muḥammad b. Tughluq sent them back with a caravan laden with gifts for the Mongol emperor. To ensure their safe return, he assigned the task of accompanying them to the Moroccan traveler Ibn Baṭṭūṭa, who had interrupted his journeys for nearly a decade to take up residence as judge in the Tughluq court. Taking this incident as a point of departure, I question how categories of religious difference were articulated in Ibn Baṭṭūṭa’s famed Riḥla [Journey] through his treatment of sacred monuments, landscapes, and living practitioners. More specifically, I look at the ways in which encounters with non-Muslim monuments and religious practitioners functioned in Ibn Baṭṭūṭa’s account of his travels through India: as narrative catalysts, as refractions of a geospatial imagination, and as transformative agents in the Islamicization of regions far beyond the dār al-islām.

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