Bayt Al Fann Profile picture
Jul 12, 2023 24 tweets 10 min read Read on X
Timbuktu’s long lasting contribution to world–civilization is its scholarship. For more than 600 years, Timbuktu was a significant religious, cultural & commercial center & the brilliance of education in Timbuktu was world famous!

A thread on Timbuktu & the manuscripts of Mali…
1/ Mansa Musa (Musa I of Mali) was the ruler of the kingdom of Mali from 1312 C.E. to 1337 C.E. During his reign, Mali was one of the richest kingdoms of Africa & Mansa Musa was among the richest individuals in the world, his net worth is believed to have been around $400 billion
2/ Mansa Musa has remained engrained in the imagination of the world as a symbol of wealth. However, his riches are only a part of his legacy. He is also known for his Islamic faith, promotion of scholarship, patronage of culture & transforming Timbuktu into a centre of learning
3/ During Mansa Musa's rule, the Malian Empire contained countries such as Mauritania, Senegal, Gambia, Guinea, Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, Nigeria & Chad. This enormous Empire stretched up to 2000 miles from the Atlantic Ocean in the West to Lake Chad to the East of its borders
4/ As a devoted Muslim Mansa Musa prepared for pilgrimage soon after he took his position from Abu Bakri II in 1312. Through Malian scholars, who helped plan the Hajj, he was well prepared & knew a lot about the cities he would travel through & how to navigate his way to Mecca
5/ After his return from Mecca, Mansa Musa began to revitalize cities in his kingdom. He built mosques & large public buildings in cities like Gao & most famously, Timbuktu. Timbuktu became a major Islamic university center during the 14th century due to his developments
6/ Under Mansa Musa I and his successors, Timbuktu transformed from a small but successful trading post into a center of commerce and scholarship, making the Mali empire one of the most influential of the Golden Age of Islam
7/ Timbuktus status as an Islamic oasis is echoed in its three great mud & timber mosques: Sankoré, Djingareyber & Sidi Yahia, which recall Timbuktu's golden age. These 14th & 15th-century places of worship were also the homes of Islamic scholars known as the Ambassadors of Peace
8/ While the Tuaregs built the first mosque, the Sankoré Mosque in Timbuktu in the 1100s A.C., Mansa Musa I made significant improvements to it inviting important Islamic scholars, or Ulama, to enhance its prestige. The mosque had a huge library containing educational manuscripts
9/ Mansa Musa I then built the Djinguereber Mosque, paying the renowned Islamic scholar Abu Ishaq Al Saheli 200 kilograms of gold to oversee its construction. A famous learning centre of Mali, cited as Djingareyber or Djingarey Ber in various languages.
10/ Together, these three centers of learning, or Madrasas, still function today as Koranic Sankore University, making it the oldest higher-education facility in Sub-Saharan Africa.
11/ Sacred Muslim texts, in bound editions, were carried great distances to Timbuktu for the use of eminent scholars from Cairo, Baghdad, Persia, and elsewhere who were in residence at the city to learn
12/ Mali's education system standard was so high in the 1400s that when an Arab Scholar, Abd al-Rahman al-Tamimi came to Mali in Timbuktu to teach, he was not qualified to even study there.
13/ The great teachings of Islam, from astronomy and mathematics to medicine and law, were collected and produced in Timbuktu in several hundred thousand manuscripts
14/ Books in Timbuktu were prized possessions, passed down from generation to generation. The practice mirrors the West African tradition of oral histories passed down by griots, esteemed West African musicians and storytellers who were the keepers of the history of the empires
15/ Timbuktu's manuscripts were still used to educate in Qur'anic schools & mosques during the Saadian occupation of the Songhai empire. But when the French arrived in West Africa in the 17th century, many of these manuscripts were taken to Europe
16/ Libraries in Timbuktu continue the tradition of the families who established them preserving & making available these works which until recently were unknown outside Mali. Scholars in Islamic studies & African studies are awed by the wealth of information of these manuscripts
17/ Ancient manuscripts preserved at Timbuktu’s Ahmed Baba Center & in its private family libraries, such as the Mamma Haidara Commemorative Library & the Library of Cheick Zayni Baye of Boujbeha, serve as eloquent witnesses to the influence of Timbuktu in the 15 & 16th centuries
18/ This is the Mamma Haïdara Commerative Library, Timbuktu, Mali. The number of manuscripts in the collections has been estimated as high as 700,000. An illustrated Koran from the 12th century is seen inside the glass case in front of Abdel Kader Haidara who is the curator
19/ Some of the stacks of over 700,000 ancient manuscripts from Timbuktu, Mali. They date from the 13th century to the early 20th Century. Many of these manuscripts were written way before most European universities were founded.

20/ Meet one of Mali’s few remaining copyists who painstakingly replicates precious manuscripts to preserve history.
21/ Between 2009 & 2017 the manuscripts of Djenne have been digitized in a major effort by the British Library’s Endangered Archives Programme are now available for scholars online, while the physical manuscripts are kept in Djenne https://t.co/WDdse9cNXgeap.bl.uk
22/ Over 40,000 ancient manuscripts from private collections and libraries in Timbuktu have been digitized, curated, and made publicly available. Discover the library with Google Arts & Culture: https://t.co/1NMsHOkkqPartsandculture.google.com/experiment/the…
Want to know more about heritage & archaeology across the Muslim World?

Embark on a remarkable journey through time and culture, where the city itself becomes a canvas of artistic expression and historical significance at "The City as Art: Islamic Archaeology & Heritage."

Join… https://t.co/xscf5SZNERtwitter.com/i/web/status/1…

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More from @BaytAlFann

Apr 20
‘Traveling leaves you speechless, then turns you into a storyteller’

- Ibn Battuta

The most famous explorer in the Muslim World, Ibn Battuta, travelled more than any other explorer in pre-modern history - around 117,000 km!

A thread on the 14th century explorer Ibn Battuta… Image
1/ Ibn Battuta was born in 1304 CE in Tangier, Morocco. His travelogue the Rihla is his most important work. His journeys in the Rihla lasted for a period of almost thirty years, covering nearly the whole of the known Islamic world & beyond. Image
2/ Ibn Battuta travelled more than any other explorer in pre-modern history, surpassing Zheng He with 50,000 km (31,000 mi) and Marco Polo with 24,000 km. His total distance travelled was approximately 117,000 km (73,000 mi) (15,000 mi). Image
Read 15 tweets
Feb 28
The Qur’an was first revealed during the month of Ramadan. This blessed month is also known by Muslims as the month of Fasting

To celebrate the arrival of #Ramadan here are 24 beautiful Qur’anic manuscripts found in museum collections across the world #RamadanMubarak

A thread… Image
1/ Folio from a Manuscript of the Qur'an
Iran, Shiraz, 1550-1575
Ink, colors and gold on paper

@LACMA #Ramadan Image
@LACMA 2/ Double Folio from a Qur'an
c. 1330-1350, Central Asian or Turkish

Early Muslim settlers from central and western Asia carried Islamic book traditions into India, especially in the form of Qur'ans, such as the one from which these pages come

@philamuseum #Ramadan Image
Read 25 tweets
Jan 19
Shah-i-Zinda is one Samarkand’s most beloved sites, which contains some of the richest tile work in the world. The magnificent architecture draws inspiration from multiple periods & styles, taking you back through time & across cultures
 
A thread on the beauty of Shah-i-Zinda… Image
1/ The Shah-i-Zinda ensemble includes mausoleums, mosques & other ritual buildings of 11-15th & 19th centuries. The name Shah-i-Zinda (meaning The living king) is connected with the legend that Qutham ibn Abbas, a cousin of the Prophet Muhammad PBUH is buried here

📷 Ash Diler Image
2/ Shah-i-Zinda is a world-famous example of a continuously constructed historical site. Over 1,000 years ago, it was founded with a single religious monument.  Between the 11th & 19th centuries, mosques & mausoleums were continuously added

📷 Fulvio Spada Image
Read 20 tweets
Jan 17
From Spain to Azerbaijan, to Germany to Bosnia, Europe has some of the finest mosques.

The presence of Islam in Europe is not a new phenomenon, with Muslims residing in the continent as early as the 8th century.

Here are 24 mosques across Europe #JummahMubarak

A thread… Image
1/ Koski Mehmed-Pasha Mosque, Mostar, Bosnia

Dates back to 1617 & features numerous multicolored windows, a minaret with a lookout spot & a courtyard with several tombs. Although the original Ottoman mosque was heavily damaged during the attacks of the 1990s it has been restored Image
2/ The Shah Jahan Mosque, Woking, England

This is the first purpose built mosque that was built in the UK.

It was built in 1889 by Dr Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner, an orientalist of Jewish descent from Hungary. Money was donated by Begum Shah Jahan, the Nawab Begum of Bhopal. Image
Read 25 tweets
Jan 15
Welcome to Al-Mutanabbi Street the ‘Book Market of Baghdad’, where books remain in the street at night because Iraqis say:

“The reader does not steal and the thief does not read.”

A thread on the rich heritage of the historic book market on Al-Mutanabbi Street… Image
1/ Al-Mutanabbi Street is the historic center of Baghdad bookselling, that dates back to the time of the Abbasids. Located near the old quarter of Baghdad, Al-Mutanabbi Street was Baghdad’s first book traders’ market. Image
2/ Al-Mutanabbi Street has been, since time immemorial, the historic heart and soul of the Baghdad literary and intellectual community. Image
Read 12 tweets
Jan 13
Libraries developed in the Islamic Golden Age due to a commitment to literacy & seeking knowledge. One of the oldest libraries in the world Al-Qarawiyyin library, was founded by a Muslim woman, more than 12 centuries ago!

A thread on the greatest libraries in Islamic history… Image
1/ Al-Qarawiyyan Library, Fez, Morocco
 
Founded by a Muslim woman, Fatima El-Fihriya in 859, it is one of the oldest libraries in the world & the oldest library in Africa. It also holds the distinction of being the world’s oldest working library, & is still in use today… Image
1.1/ The Al-Qarawiyyan Library houses a collection of 4,000 rare books & ancient Arabic manuscripts written by renowned scholars of the region. The manuscripts include a 9th century version of the Quran and a manuscript on Islamic jurisprudence written by philosopher Averroes. Image
Read 25 tweets

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