World-maps for finding the direction and distance to Mecca : innovation and tradition in Islamic science

Bibliographic Information

World-maps for finding the direction and distance to Mecca : innovation and tradition in Islamic science

by David A. King

(Islamic philosophy, theology, and science, v. 36)

Brill , Al-Furqān Islamic Heritage Foundation, 1999

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [373]-410) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Two remarkable Iranian world-maps were discovered in 1989 and 1995. Both are made of brass and date from 17th-century Iran. Mecca is at the centre and a highly sophisticated longitude and latitude grid enables the user to determine the direction and distance to Mecca for anywhere in the world between Andalusia and China. Prior to the discovery of these maps it was thought that such cartographic grids were conceived in Europe ca. 1910. This richly-illustrated book presents an overview of the ways in which Muslims over the centuries have determined the sacred direction towards Mecca (qibla) and then describes the two world-maps in detail. The author shows that the geographical data derives from a 15th-century Central Asian source and that the mathematics underlying the grid was developed in 9th-century Baghdad.

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