26 Matching Annotations
  1. Jul 2019
    1. All told, he was traveling for nearly thirty years.

      Its amazing Ibn Battuta traveled so long and experienced so many different cultures

    2. These were his own maxims or sayings, known in Mongolian as biligs or bileks. The maxims were not laws but were used to guide proper behavior and conduct. A person who did not follow or who strayed from them was often viewed in a negative light, while someone who adhered to them was considered a paragon of virtue.

      Along with a set of laws that citizens did not see, another set of rules was set in place along side the laws.

    3. lunar]

      What is the significance of counting lunar years?

    4. most widely traveled man in the ancient world

      the significance of Ibn Buttuta

    5. He forbade Emirs to address themselves to anyone except the sovereign. Whoever addressed himself to anyone but the sovereign was to be put to death, and anyone changing his post without permission was also to be put to death.

      Emirs cannot talk to anyone but the ruler at the time or was put to death

    1. The king speaks to this effect: — ‘Ye numerous officers who remain from the dynasty of Yin, great ruin came down on Yin from the want of pity in compassionate Heaven, and we, the princes of Chow, received its favouring decree.

      The Chow was blessed by God to rule while the Yin was doomed to fall

    2. the notion of tianming (“heavenly will” or “heavenly mandate”) has been used across the centuries to legitimate power, whether in imperial, republican, or Communist China, from 221 BCE to the present day.

      This idea of divine power still exists today where people believe that they are in power because God appointed them.

    3. If you can reverently obey, Heaven will favour and compassionate you. If you cannot reverently obey, you will not only not have your lands, but I will also carry to the utmost Heaven’s inflictions on your persona.

      The king says if you obey me God will reward you but if you disobey I will be "forced" to punish you.

    4. Then Heaven no longer regarded nor heard him, but disallowed his great appointment, and inflicted extreme punishment

      The "mandate of heaven" is basically a way of justifying ones actions by manipulating the Bible.

    5. It is recognized as perhaps the most important extant work for the study of ancient Chinese political thought — thought that still has wide influence on contemporary political structure in China.

      I recently wrote a paper in another class that was about the Tiananmen Square Massacre and how the Chinese Government has enforced censorship of all of its media, so reading about the Mandate of Heaven helps to put these events into context

    1. When Mongol power declined in the middle of the fourteenth century, those trade routes shifted from land based to oceanic.

      The Mongol Empire created policies to help with long distance trade. When their reign was over long distance trade still existed, but now people were not only trade across land but water as well.

  2. Jun 2019
    1. We stayed there [in Mogadishu] three days, food being brought to us three times a day, and on the fourth, a Friday, the q̣ádí and one of the wazírs brought me a set of garments.

      He was really treated well in Mogadishu and he was always brought stuff and was treated like loyalty.

    2. At length on April 5th (1326) we reached Alexandria. It is a beautiful city, well-built and fortified with four gates and a magnificent port.

      According to him, it seems that he really enjoyed the city of Alexandria and what it had to offer.

    3. the Italian explorer Marco Polo (at least in the Western world), his extensive travels throughout Africa and Asia took him farther than anyone had journeyed up to that time.

      It seems that Marco Polo was a really influential person in Ibn Battuta's life back in those times.

    4. 11. He ordered that all religions were to be respected and that no preference was to be shown to any of them. All this he commanded in order that it might be agreeable to God.

      This one surprises me because most rulers in this time, and throughout most of history honestly, forbade their people from practicing any religion other than the one the ruler practiced.

    5. At its height, the Mongol Empire was the largest contiguous kingdom in history, stretching from the Sea of Japan to the Carpathian Mountains in central and eastern Europe.

      Is there anything that these people could do that wasn't punishable by death?!?!

    6. Unlike Hammurabi, the Babylonian ruler who is often credited with devising the first codified law (in the eighteenth century BCE), Genghis Khan did not have his laws carved onto stelae (inscribed stones erected throughout the empire) but rather kept them on scrolls that were viewed only by the Mongol nobility.

      If only Mongol nobility were allowed to see these laws, how could the citizens ever know if what they were being told was actually law or just what the people in power wanted them to do? Did this lead to some kind of rebellion or the people wanting to know the truth?

    7. 17. He forbade them to show preference for any sect, to pronounce words with emphasis, to use honorary titles; when speaking to the Sultan or anyone else simply his name was to be used.
    8. Local laws remained in place as long as they did not run contrary to the desires of the Mongols. In many aspects, the Mongols ruled, but their subjects did not know what the law of the land was.
    9. 1. An adulterer is to be put to death without any regard as to whether he is married or not.

      it is so interesting to me that adultery is the very first topic addressed.

    1. But Heaven was not with Yin, for indeed it would not strengthen its misrule. It therefore helped us; — did we dare to seek the throne of ourselves? God was not for Yin, as appeared from the conduct of our inferior people, in which there is the brilliant dreadfulness of Heaven.

      The duke of Chow was basically saying that heaven was on his side and not on Yin's side.

    2. The first use of the Mandate of Heaven to justify the takeover of a government is traditionally attributed to Zhou Gong, the duke of Zhou.

      It seems that the Duke of Zhou was a really powerful leader when he took use of the Mandate of Heaven

    1. Several large states in Mesoamerica had already collapsed from a combination of outside pressures, the most recent of which was the Toltec Empire

      What were these pressures that the large states in Mesoamerica had collapsed from? Were they huge ones?

    2. The rise of the Mongol Empire and their conquest of China made the Asian power once again the center of the world

      At this point in time, it seemed pretty clear that the Mongol Empire was in charge of the Asian power.

    3. The founder of Mali, the Mandinka leader Sundiata (ca. 1217 — ca. 1255), overthrew the empire of Ghana using cavalry techniques adapted to West African conditions.

      What exactly were these techniques? Are these techniques still used today in some parts of the world?

    4. The fourteenth century saw Europe develop into a series of monarchical states — the forerunners of modern Europe.

      At this point and time, was there any competition between the countries in Asia and the frontrunners in Europe? It is hard to think of a time before the 20th century where Europe wasn't the dominating area.