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Ubaydallah ibn
Abdallah ibn
Khordadbeh (Arabic: ابوالقاسم عبیدالله ابن خرداذبه; 820/825–913),
commonly known as Ibn
Khordadbeh (also
spelled Ibn Khurradadhbih;...
- is a 9th-century
geography text
written by the
Persian geographer Ibn
Khordadbeh. It maps and
describes the
major trade routes of the time
within the Muslim...
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place names.[4] The
activities of the
Radhanites are do****ented by Ibn
Khordadbeh – the postmaster,
chief of
police (and spymaster) for the
province of...
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Abdallah ibn
Khordadbeh (Persian: عبدالله بن خرداببه) was a
Persian general and
governor for the
Abbasid Caliphate. He was the son of
Khordadbeh, a Zoroastrian...
- himself, but also
reused Khordadbeh's work to a
considerable extent.
Unlike the
Balkhi school,
geographers of the
Khordadbeh–Jayhani
tradition sought...
-
conquest of Bengal. The
writings of Al-Idrisi, Ibn Hawqal, Al-Masudi, Ibn
Khordadbeh and
Sulaiman record the
maritime links between Arabia,
Persia and Bengal...
- Book of
Roads and
Kingdoms (al-Bakrī) Book of
Roads and
Kingdoms (ibn
Khordadbeh)
Tabula Rogeriana Kitab al-Rawd al-Mitar Mu'jam Al-Buldan
Rihla The Meadows...
- most
other medieval Muslim geographers such as
Qudama ibn Ja'far and Ibn
Khordadbeh refer to it and give
distances along its
various stretches in
their works...
-
first known writer to call this
country Malabar.
Authors such as Ibn
Khordadbeh and Al-Baladhuri
mention Malabar ports in
their works. The Arab writers...
- work's cir****stances, are known. The 9th-century
Persian geographer Ibn
Khordadbeh, in his
lexicographical discussion of instruments,
cited the lyra (lūrā)...