READING HALLDOORS OF WISDOM 2022"THIRD MILLENNIUM LIBRARY" |
PRINCE HENRY THE NAVIGATOR
THE HERO OF PORTUGAL AND OF MODERN DISCOVERY. 1394-1460 A.D.
WITH AN ACCOUNT OF GEOGRAPHICAL PROGRESS THROUGHOUT
THE MIDDLE AGES AS THE PREPARATION FOR HIS WORK
BY
C. RAYMOND BEAZLEY
The Lusitanian
Prince who, heaven-inspired, THOMSON: Seasons, Summer TEXT BOOK //////// PDF
1-EARLY CHRISTIAN PILGRIMS (CIRCA 333-867)
2-VIKINGS OR NORTHMEN (CIRCA 787-1066)
3-THE CRUSADES AND LAND TRAVEL
(CIRCA 1100-1300
4-MARITIME EXPLORATION (CIRCA 1250-1410)
5-GEOGRAPHICAL SCIENCE IN CHRISTENDOM FROM THE FIRST
CRUSADES (CIRCA 1100-1460)
6-PORTUGAL TO 1400 (1095-1400)
7-HENRY'S POSITION AND DESIGNS
AT THE TIME OF THE FIRST VOYAGES, 1410-15
8-PRINCE HENRY AND THE CAPTURE OF CEUTA (1415)
9-HENRY'S SETTLEMENT AT SAGRES
AND FIRST DISCOVERIES (1418-28)
10-CAPE BOJADOR AND THE AZORES
(1428-41)
11-HENRY'S
POLITICAL LIFE (1433-41)
12-FROM BOJADOR TO CAPE VERDE (1441-5)
13-THE ARMADA OF 1445
14-THE AZORES (1431-60)
15-THE TROUBLES OF THE REGENCY
AND THE FALL OF DON PEDRO (1440-9)
16-CADAMOSTO (1455-6)
17-VOYAGES OF DIEGO GOMEZ (1458-60)
18-HENRY'S LAST YEARS AND DEATH
(1458-60)
19-THE RESULTS OF PRINCE HENRY'S
WORK
INTRODUCTION
THE GREEK AND ARABIC IDEAS OF THE WORLD, AS THE CHIEF
INHERITANCE OF THE CHRISTIAN MIDDLE AGES IN GEOGRAPHICAL KNOWLEDGE
Arabic science
constitutes one of the main links between the older learned world of the Greeks
and Latins and the Europe of Henry the Navigator and of the Renaissance. In
geography it adopted in the main the results of Ptolemy and Strabo; and many of
the Moslem travellers and writers gained some additional hints from Indian,
Persian, and Chinese knowledge; but, however much of fact they added to Greek
cartography, they did not venture to correct its postulates.
And what were
these postulates? In part, they were the assumptions of modern draughtsmen, but
in some important details they differed. And first, as to agreement. Three
continents, Europe, Asia, and Africa, an encircling ocean, the Mediterranean,
the Black Sea and Caspian, the Red Sea and Persian Gulf, the South Asiatic, and
North and West European coasts were indicated with more or less precision in
the science of the Antonines and even of Hannibal's age. Similarly, the Nile
and Danube, Euphrates and Tigris, Indus and Ganges, Jaxartes and Oxus, Rhine and
Ebro, Don and Volga, with the chief mountain ranges of Europe and Western Asia,
find themselves pretty much in their right places in Strabo's description, and
are still better placed in the great chart of Ptolemy. The countries and
nations from China to Spain are arranged in the order of modern knowledge. But
the differences were fundamental also. Never was there a clearer outrunning of
knowledge by theory, science by conjecture, than in Ptolemy's scheme of the
world (c. A.D. 130).
His chief predecessors, Eratosthenes and Strabo, had left much blank space in
their charts, and had made many mistakes in detail, but they had caught the
main features of the Old World with fair accuracy. Ptolemy, in trying to fill
up what he did not know from his inner consciousness, evolved a parody of those
features. His map, from its intricate falsehood, backed as it was by the
greatest name in geographical science, paralysed all real enlargement of
knowledge till men began to question, not only his facts, but his theories. And
as all modern science, in fact, followed the progress of world-knowledge, or
"geography," we may see how important it was for this revolution to
take place, for Ptolemy to be dethroned.
The Arabs,
commanding most of the centres of ancient learning (Ptolemy's own Alexandria
above all), riveted the pseudo-science of their predecessors on the learned
world, along with the genuine knowledge which they handed down from the Greeks.
In many details they corrected and amplified the Greek results. But most of their
geographical theories were mere reproductions of Ptolemy's, and to his mistakes
they added wilder though less important confusions or inventions of their own.
The result of all this, by the tenth century A.D., was a geography, based not on knowledge, but on ideas
of symmetry. It was a scheme fit for the Arabian Nights.
And how did
Ptolemy lend himself to this?
His chief mistakes
were only two;—but they were mistakes from which at any rate Strabo and most of
the Greek geographers are free. He made the Indian Ocean an inland sea, and he
filled up the Southern Hemisphere with Africa, or the unknown Antarctic land in
which he extended Africa. The Dark Continent, in his map, ran out on the one
side to the south-east of China, and on the other to the indefinite west,
though there was here no hint of America or an Atlantic continent. It was a
triumph of learned imagination over humdrum research. Science under Hadrian was
ambitious to have its world settled and known; it was not yet settled or fully
known; and so a great student constructed a mélange of fact
and fancy mainly based on a guess-work of imaginary astronomical reckonings. On
the far east, Ptolemy joined China and Africa; and on this imaginary western
coast, fronting Malacca and Further India, he placed various gratuitous towns
and rivers. Coming to smaller matters, he cut away the whole of the Indian
peninsula proper, though preserving the Further or "Golden"
Chersonesus of the Malays, and he enlarged Taprobane, or Ceylon, to double the
size of Asia Minor. Thus the southern coast of Asia from Arabia to the Ganges
ran almost due east, with a strait of sea coming through the modern Carnatic,
between the continent and the Great Spice Island, which included most of the
Deccan. The Persian Gulf, much greater on this map than the Black Sea, was made
equal in length and breadth; the shape of the Caspian was, so to say, turned
inside out and its length given as from east to west, instead of from north to
south; while the coast line, even of the familiar Euxine, Aegean, and Southern
Mediterranean, was anything but true. Scandinavia was an island smaller than
Ireland; Scotland represented a great eastern bend of Britain, with the
Shetlands and Färoes (Thule) lying a short distance to the north, but on the
left-hand side of the great island. The Sea of Azov, hardly inferior to the
Euxine, stretched north half way across Russia. All Central Africa and the
great Southern or Antarctic continent was described as pathless desert—"a
land uninhabitable from the heat"; and the sources of the Nile were
accounted for by the marshes and Mountains of the Moon.
Thus all the
problems of ancient geography were explained: where Ptolemy's knowledge failed
him altogether, no Western of that time had ever been, or was likely to go. The
whole realised and unrealised world was described with such clearness and
consistency, men thought, that what was lacking in Aristotle was now supplied.
Yet it is
worthwhile observing how, centuries before Ptolemy, in the ages nearer to
Aristotle himself, the geography of Eratosthenes and Strabo, by a more balanced
use of knowledge and by a greater restraint of fancy, had composed a far more
reliable chart.
This earlier and
discredited map avoided all the more serious perversions of Ptolemy. Africa was
cut off at the limit of actual knowledge, about Cape Non on the west and Cape
Guardafui on the east; and the "Cinnamon-bearing Coast," between
these points, was fringed by the Mountains of Ethiopia, where the Nile rose.
This was the theory which revived on the decline of the Ptolemaic, and which
encouraged the Portuguese sailors with hopes of a quick approach to India round
Africa, as the great eastern bend of the Guinea coast seemed to suggest. Further,
on this pre-Ptolemaic map the Southern Ocean was left untouched by a supposed
Southern Continent, and except for an undue shrinkage of the Old World in
general as an island in the midst of the vast surrounding ocean, a reliable
description of Western Asia and Central Europe and North Africa was in the
hands of the learned world two hundred years before Christ.
It is true that
Strabo's China is cramped and cut short; that his Ceylon (Taprobane) is even
larger than Ptolemy's; that Ireland (Ierne) appears to the north of
Britain; and that the Caspian joins the North Sea by a long and narrow channel;
but the true shape of India, of the Persian Gulf and the Euxine, of the Sea of
Azov and the Mediterranean, is marked rightly enough in general outline. This
earlier chart has not the elaborate completeness of Ptolemy's, but it is free
from his enormous errors, and it has all the advantage of science, however
imperfect, over brilliant guessing.
Of course, even in
Ptolemy, this guess-work pure and simple only comes in at intervals and does
not so much affect the central and, for his day, far more important tracts of
the Old World, but we have yet to see how, in the mediæval period and under
Arabic imagination, all geography seemed likely to become an exercise of fancy.
The chief Greek
descriptions of the world, we must clearly remember, were before the medieval
workers, Christian and Moslem, from the first; these men took their choice, and
the point is that they, and specially the Arabs, chose with rare exceptions the
last of these, the Ptolemaic system, because it was the more ambitious,
symmetrical, and pretty.
Let us trace for a
moment the gradual development of this geographical mythology.
Starting with the
notion of the world as a disc, or a ball, the centre of the universe, round
which moved six celestial circles, of the Meridian, the Equator, the Ecliptic,
the two Tropics, and the Horizon, the Arab philosophers on the side of the
earth's surface worked out a doctrine of a Cupola or Summit of the world, and on
the side of the heavens a pseudo-science of the Anoua or Settings of the
Constellations, connected with the twelve Pillars of the Zodiac and the
twenty-eight Mansions of the Moon.
With Arabic
astrology we are not here concerned; it is only worth noting in this connection
as the possible source of early Christian knowledge of the Southern Cross and
other stars famous in the story of exploration, such as Dante shows in the
first canto of his Purgatorio. But the geographical doctrines of
Islam, compounded from the Hebrew Pentateuch and the theoretical parts of
Ptolemy, had a more immediate and reactionary effect on knowledge. The
symmetrical Greek divisions of land into seven zones or climates; and of the
world's surface, into three parts water and one part terra firma;
the Indian fourfold arrangement of "Romeland" and the East; the
similar fourfold Chinese partition of China, India, Persia, and Tartary: all
these reappeared confusedly in Arabic geography. From India and the Sanscrit
"Lanka," they seem to have got their first start on the myth of
Odjein, Aryn, or Arim, "the World's Summit"; from Ptolemy the sacred
number of 360 degrees of longitude was certainly derived, beautifully
corresponding to the days of the year, and neatly divided into 180 of land or habitable
earth and 180 of sea, or unharvested desert. With the seven climates they made
correspond the great Empires of the world—chief among which they reckoned the
Caliphate (or Bagdad), China, Rome, Turkestan, and India.
The sacred city of
Odjein had been the centre of most of the earlier Oriental systems; in the
Arabic form of Arim ("The Cupola of the Earth"), it became the fixed
point round which circled medieval theories of the world's shape.
"Somewhere in the Indian Ocean between Comorin and Madagascar,"
became the compromise when the mountain could not be found off any of the known
coast-lines; it was mixed up with notions of the Roc, and the Moon Mountains in
Africa, of the Magnet Island and of the Eastern Kingdom made out of one vast
pearl; and even in Roger Bacon it serves as an algebraic sign for a
mathematical centre of the world.
The enlargement of
knowledge, though forcing upon Arabic science a conviction of Ptolemy's mistake
in over-extending the limits of the world known to him, only led to the
invention of a scholastic distinction between the real and the traditional East
and West, while the confusion was made perfect by the travestied history always
so popular among Orientals. The "Gades of Alexander and Hercules,"
the farthest points east and west, were named after the mythical conquests of
the real Iskander and the mythical hero of Greeks and Phoenicians. Arim in the
middle, with the pillars of Hercules and Alexander, and the north and south
poles at equal distance from it—the centre and the four corners of the world as
neatly fixed as geometry could define—this was the map, first of the Arabs, and
then of their Christian scholars.
To form any idea
of the complete spell thus cast over thought both in Islam and Christendom, we
may look at the words of European scholars of the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries, living far from Islam, long after its intellectual glory had begun
to decay, and at a time when Christian scholastic philosophy had reached an
independent position. Gerard of Cremona and Adelard of Bath (the translator of
the great Arabic geographer, Mohammed Al-Kharizmy) in the twelfth century,
Roger Bacon and Albertus Magnus in the later thirteenth, are all as clear about
their geographical postulates as about their theological or ethical rules. And
what concerns us here is that they exactly reflect the mind of the Arabic
science or pseudo-science of the time just preceding, so that their words may
represent to us the state of Mohammedan thought between the eighth and twelfth
centuries, between the writers at the Court of Caliph Almamoun (813-833) and
Edrisi at the Court of King Roger of Sicily (1150).
(1.) Adelard,
summarising Mohammed Al-Kharizmy with the results of his Paris education, tells
us of the Arabic "Examination of planets and of time, starting from the
centre of the world, called Arim, from which place to the four ends
of the earth the distance is equal, viz., ninety degrees, answering to the
fourth part of the world's circumference. It is tedious and unending to attempt
to place all the countries of the world and to fix all the marks of time. So
the meridian is taken as the measure of the latter and Arim of
the former, and from this starting-point it is not hard to fix other
countries." "Arim," he concludes, "is under the equator, at
the point where there is no latitude," and he plainly implies that there
were then existing among the Arabs tables calculating all the chief places of
every country from the meridian of Arim.
(2.) Gerard of
Cremona, who, though for some time a resident at Toledo, is essentially an
Italian, tells us about the "Middle of the World," from which
longitudes were calculated, "called Arim," and "said to be in
India," whose longitude from west to east or from east to west is ninety
degrees.
In his Theory
of the Planets Gerard tells us still more wonderful things. Arim was a
geographical centre known and used by Hermes Trismegistus and by Ptolemy, as
well as by the great Arab geographers; Alexander of Macedon marched just as far
to the east of Arim as Hercules to the west; both reached the encircling ocean,
and accordingly "Arim is equidistant from both the Gades, 90 degrees;
likewise from each pole, north and south, the same, 90 degrees." This all
recurs in the tables of Alphonso the Wise of Castille about A.D. 1260, and two of the greatest
of medieval thinkers, Albert and Roger Bacon, reproduced the essential points
of this doctrine, its false symmetry, and its balance of the true and the
traditional, with variations of their own.
(3.) Albert
the Great, Albertus Magnus, second only to Aquinas among the Continental
Schoolmen, in his View of Astronomy, repeats Adelard upon the
question of Arim, "where there is no latitude," while (4) Roger
Bacon discusses not only the true and the traditional East and West, but
even a twofold Arim, one "under the solstice, the other under the
equinoctial zone." Arim he finds not to be in the centre of the real
world, but only of the traditional. In another passage of the Opus
Majus, Bacon, our first English worker in the exact sciences, allows the
world-summit not to be exactly 90 degrees from the east, although so placed by
mathematicians. Yet there is no contradiction, he urges, because the men of
theory are "speaking of the habitable world known to them, according to
the true understanding of latitude and longitude," and this "true
understanding" is "not as great as has been realised in travel by
Pliny and others." "The longitude of the habitable world is more than
half of the whole circuit." This, reproduced in the Imago Mundi of
Cardinal Peter Ailly (1410), fell into the hands of Columbus and helped to fix
his doctrines of the shape of the world ("in the form of a pear") of
the terrestrial paradise, and of the earth's circumference,—so enormously
contracted as practically to abolish the Pacific.
To return to the
Arabs: We have seen how they not merely followed Greek theories, which their
own experience as conquerors in the Further East went to discredit, but, in the
great outlines of geography, added to earlier errors, put prejudice in the
place of knowledge, and handed on to Christendom a half-fanciful map of the
world. It only remains for us to illustrate their leading fault, of a too vivid
fancy, with a few details on minor points.
(1.) Ptolemy's
"Habitable Quarter" of the world, amounting to just half the
longitude of the globe, was literally accepted by the Moslem world, as it
accepted the Pentateuch from the moment when it began its study of science at
the Court of Almamoun (813-833). But, as the conquests of the Caliphs disclosed
districts in the east far beyond Ptolemy's limits, it was necessary, in case of
keeping his data for the whole, to compress the part which alone was to be
found fully described in his chart: "On the west, unhappily, there were no
countries newly discovered to compensate for this abridgment." By
Massoudy's time,—by the tenth century,—fact and theory were thus hopelessly at
variance.
(2.) On the shape
of Africa, the mass of Arabic opinion confirmed Ptolemy, but among the more
enlightened there is traceable from Massoudy's time a tendency either to react
towards Strabo's partly agnostic position, or to invent some new theory rather
more in harmony with the known facts. That is, either their later map-makers
cut off Africa at Cape Non or Bojador and Cape Guardafui, and gave away the
rest to the "Green Sea of Darkness," or, like Massoudy, they sketched
a great Southern Continent, divided from Africa by a narrow channel, which
connected the Western Ocean with the Sea of Habasch—of Abyssinia or India. In either
case Africa was left an island.
(3.) The words
"Gog and Magog" from Jeremiah, describing the nomades of Central
Asia, appear in the Koran as Yadjoudj and Madjoudj. The complete story, in the
tenth century and in Edrisi's day, connects them with Alexander the Great, who
is also found in the Koran as Doul-Carnain, and with the Wall of China.
"When the Conqueror," said the Arabs, "reached the place near
where the sun rose, he was implored to build a wall to shut off the marauders
of Yadjoudj and Madjoudj from the rich countries of the South." So he
built a rampart of iron across the pass by which alone Touran joined Iran, and
henceforth Turks and Tartars were kept outside. Till the Arabs reached the
Caucasus, they generally supposed this to answer to Alexander's wall; when
facts dispelled this theory, the unknown Ural or Altai Mountains served
instead; finally, as the Moslems became masters of Central Asia, the Wall of
China, beyond the Gobi desert, alone satisfied the conditions of shadowy but
historic grandeur, beyond all practical danger of verification.
(4.) In striking
contrast with the steady advance of Arabic exploration and trade in the Eastern
Sea is the Moslem horror of the Western Ocean beyond Europe and Africa, the
"Green Sea of Darkness" or the Atlantic. And what we have to note is
that they imparted much of this paralysing cowardice to the Christian nations.
Only the Northmen of Scandinavia, living a life apart, and forced to make their
way over the wild North Sea, were untouched by this southern superstition, and
ventured across the ocean by the Färoes, Iceland, and Greenland, to the coast
of Labrador.
The doctors of the
Koran indeed thought that a man mad enough to embark for the unknown, even on a
coasting voyage, should be deprived of civil rights. Ibn Said goes further, and
says no one has ever done this: "whirlpools always destroy any
adventurer." As late as the generation immediately before Henry the
Navigator, about A.D. 1390,
another light of Moslem science declared the Atlantic to be "boundless, so
that ships dare not venture out of sight of land, for even if the sailors knew
the direction of the winds, they would not know whither those winds would carry
them, and as there is no inhabited country beyond, they would run a risk of
being lost in mist, fog, and vapour. The limit of the West is the Atlantic
Ocean."
This was the final
judgment of the Arabic race and its subject allies upon the western limits of
the world, and in two ways they helped to fix this belief, derived from the
timid coasting-traders of the Roman Empire on Greek and Latin Christendom.
First, the Spanish Caliphate cut off all access to the Western Sea beyond the
Bay of Biscay, from the eighth to the twelfth centuries. Not till the capture
of Lisbon in 1147, could Christian enterprise on this side gain any basis, or
starting-point. Not till the conquest of the Algarve in the extreme south-west
of the peninsula, at the end of the twelfth century, was this enterprise free
to develop itself. Secondly, in the darkest ages of Christian depression, the
seventh, the eighth, the ninth, the tenth centuries, when only the brief age of
Charlemagne offered any chance of an independent and progressive Catholic
Empire in the west, the Arabs became recognised along with the Byzantines as
the main successors of Greek culture. The science, the metaphysic, the abstract
ideas of these centuries came into Germany, France, and Italy from Cordova and
from Bagdad, as much as from Byzantium. And on questions like the South
Atlantic or Indian Ocean, or the shape of Africa,—where Islam had all the field
to itself, and there was no positive and earlier discovery which might
contradict a natural reluctance to test tradition by experiment—Christendom
accepted the Arabic verdict with deference.
In the same way,
on still more difficult points, such as the theory of a canal from the Caspian
to the Black Sea, or from the Caspian to the Arctic circle, or from the Black
Sea to the Baltic, Paris and Rome and Bologna and Oxford accepted the Arabic
descriptions.
It has been
necessary for us to attend to the defects of Arabic geography, in order to
understand how in the long Saracen control of the world's trade routes and of
geographical tradition, science and seamanship were so little advanced. Between
Ptolemy and Henry of Portugal, between the second and the fifteenth centuries,
the only great extension of men's knowledge of the world was: (1) in the
extreme north, where the semi-Christian, semi-Pagan Vikings reached perhaps as
far as the present site of New York and founded, on another side, the Medieval
Kingdom of Russia; (2) on the south-east coast of Africa, from Cape Guardafui
to Madagascar, which was opened up by the trading interest of the Emosaid
family (800-1300); (3) in the far east, in Central and Further Asia, by the
discoveries of Marco Polo and the Friar preachers following on the tracks of
the earlier Moslem travellers. The first of these was a Northern secret, soon
forgotten, or an abortive development, cut short by the Tartars; the second was
an Arabic secret, jealously guarded as a commercial right; the third alone
added much direct new knowledge to the main part of the civilised world.
But throughout
their period of commercial rule from the eighth to the twelfth centuries, the
Arabs took a keen interest in land traffic, conquest, and exploration. They
were of small account at sea; it took them some time to turn to their own
purposes Hippalus' discovery (in the second century A.D.) of the monsoon in the Indian
Ocean; but, on land, Moslem travellers and writers—generally following in the
wake of their armies, but sometimes pressing on ahead of them—did not a little
to enlarge the horizon of the Mohammedan world, though it was not till Marco
Polo and the Franciscan missionaries of the thirteenth and fourteenth
centuries, that Christian Europe shared in this gain.
As the early Caliphs
conquered, they made surveys of their new dominions. Thus after Tarik and Mousa
had overrun Spain, Walid at Damascus required from them an account of the land
and its resources. The universal obligation of the Mecca pilgrimage compelled
every Moslem to travel once in his life; and many an Arab, after the Caliphate
was settled in power from the Oxus to the Pyrenees, journeyed to and fro with
the joy of a master going over vast estates, shewing his dreaded turban to
subjects of every nation.
This, however, was
not geographical science, or even pseudo-science. Before Mohammed the Arabs had
possessed some knowledge of the stars and used it for astrology; but it was at
the Court of Almamoun (813-833) that their inquiring spirits first set
themselves to answer the great question of geography—Where? Through the ninth
and tenth centuries there arose a succession of travellers and thinkers who,
with all their wild dreamings, preserved the best results of Greek maps and
would have made much greater advances but for their helplessness in original
work. As they could not recast Aristotle in philosophy, so they could not with
all their new knowledge of the Further East recast the geography of Ptolemy and
Strabo.
A few great ages,
the age for instance of Almamoun in Bagdad (A.D. 830),
of Mahmoud in Ghazneh (A.D. 1000),
of Abderrahman III in Cordova (A.D. 950),
give us the history of Arabic geography.
Beginning in the
latter years of the eighth century, Moslem science was reformed and organised,
in the New Empire, by the patronage of the Caliphs of the ninth. Itineraries of
victorious generals, plans and tables prepared by governors of provinces, and a
freshly acquired knowledge of Greek and Indian and Persian thought, made up the
subject-matter of study. The barbarism of the first believers was passing away,
and Mohammed's words were recalled: "Seek knowledge, even in China."
By the end of the eighth century Ptolemy's Geography and the now lost work of
Marinus of Tyre had already been translated. Almamoun drew to his Court all the
chief "mathematicians" or philosophers of Islam, such as Mohammed
Al-Kharizmy, Alfergany, and Solyman the merchant. Further he built two
observatories, one at Bagdad, one at Damascus, and procured a chart fixing the
latitude and longitude of every place known to him or his savants. Al-Kharizmy
interpolated the new Arabic Ptolemy with additions from the Sanscrit, and made
some use of Indian trigonometry. Alfergany wrote the first Arab treatise on the
Astrolabe and adopted the Greek division of the seven Climates to the new
learning. Solyman, at the time of closest intercourse between China, India, and
the Caliphate, travelled in every country of the Further East, sailed in the
"Sea of Pitchy Darkness" on the east coast of Asia, and by his
voyages became the prototype of Sinbad the Sailor.
The impulse given
by Almamoun did not die with him. About 850 Alkendy made a fresh version of
Ptolemy; as early as 840 the Caliph Vatek-Billah sent to explore the countries
of Central Asia, and his results have been preserved by Edrisi. A few years
later (c. 890) Ibn-Khordadbeh, "Son of the Magi,"
described the principal trade-routes, the Indian by the Red Sea from Djeddah to
Scinde, the Russian by the Volga and North Caspian, the Persian by way of Balkh
to China. It was by this last that some have thought the envoys of the English
King Alfred went in 883, till they turned south to seek India and the
Christians of San Thomé.
The early
scientific movement in Islam reached its height in Albateny and Massoudy at the
beginning of the tenth century. The former determined, more exactly than
before, various problems of astronomical geography("the Obliquity of the
Ecliptic, the Eccentricity of the Sun, the Precession of the
Equinoxes"). The latter visited every country from Further India to
Spain;—even China and Madagascar seem to have been within the compass of his
later travels; and his voyages in the Indian Ocean bring us to the real Sinbad
Saga of the tenth century.
Sinbad, as his
story appears in the Arabian Nights, has been traced to an original
in the Indian tales of The Seven Sages, in the voyages of the age
of Chosroes Nushirvan or of Haroun-Al-Rashid, but the tale appears to be an
Arabic original, the real account, with a little more of mystery and
exaggeration than usual, of the ninth-and tenth-century travellers, from
Solyman to Massoudy, reproduced in form of a series of novels (with the Sinbad
story is connected the historical extension of the Arab settlements in the East
African coast through the enterprise of the Emosaid family).
With Massoudy
begins also the formal discussion of geographical problems affecting Islam. Was
the Caspian a land-locked sea? Did it connect with the Euxine? Did either or
both of these join the Arctic Ocean? Was Africa an island? If so, was there
also an unknown Southern Continent? What was the shape of South-Eastern Asia?
Was Ptolemy's longitude to be wholly accepted, and if not, how was it to be
bettered? By a use of Strabo and of Albateny rather than of Ptolemy, Massoudy
arrived at fairly accurate and very plausible results. His chief novelties were
the long river channel from the Sea of Azov to the North Sea, and the strait
between South Africa and the shadowy Southern Continent. On his scheme the
Indian Ocean, or Sea of Habasch, contains most of the water surface of the
world, and the Sea of Aral appears for the first time in Moslem geography.
Lastly his account of the Arab coasting voyages from the Persian Gulf to
Socotra and Madagascar proves, implicitly, that as yet there was no use of the
compass.
Massoudy cut down
the girth of the world even more than Ptolemy. The latter had left an ocean to
the west of Africa: the former made the Canaries or Fortunate Islands, the
limit of the known Western world, abut upon India, the limit of the Eastern.
The first age of
Arabic geography ends with Massoudy, its greatest name, in the middle of the
tenth century. The second age is summed up in the work of the Eastern sage
Albyrouny and of Edrisi, the Arabic Ptolemy (A.D. 1099-1154),
who found a home at the Christian Court of Roger of Sicily. In the far East and
West alike, in Spain and Morocco, in Khorassan and India, Moslem science was
now driven to take refuge among strangers on the decay of the Caliphates of Bagdad
and Cordova. The Ghaznevides Mahmoud and Massoud in the first half of the
eleventh century, attracted to their Court not only Firdusi and Avicenna, but
Albyrouny, whose "Canon" became a text-book of Mohammedan science,
and who, for the range of his knowledge and the trained subtlety of his mind,
stands without a rival for his time. The Spanish school, as resulting
directly in Edrisi, half Moslem, half Christian, like his teachers, is of still
more interest. One of its first traces may be found in the Latin translation of
the Arab Almanack made by Bishop Harib of Cordova in 961. It
was dedicated and presented to Caliph Hakem—one of our clearest proofs of the
conscious interworking of Catholic and Mahometan philosophy in the age of Pope
Sylvester II. and of our own St. Dunstan. A century later, on the recapture of
Toledo by Alfonso VI. (1084), an observatory was built, served by Jews and
Moslems, who had been steadily producing, through the whole of the eleventh
century, astronomical and geographical tables and dictionaries. A whole tribe
of commentators on place-names, on the climates and constellations, and on
geographical instruments was at work in this last age of the Spanish Caliphate,
and their results are brought together by Abou Hamid of Granada and by Edrisi.
Born at Ceuta in
1099, this great geographer travelled through Spain, France, the Western
Mediterranean, and North Africa before settling at the Norman Court of Palermo.
Roger, the most civilised prince in Christendom, the final product of the great
race of Robert Guiscard and William the Conqueror, valued Edrisi at his proper
worth, refused to part with him, and employed men in every part of the world to
collect materials for his study. Thus the Moor gained, not only for the Moslem
world but for Southern Europe as well, an approximate knowledge even of Norway,
Sweden, Finland, and the coasts of the White Sea. His work, dedicated to Roger
and called after him, Al-Rojary, was rewarded with a peerage, and
it was as a Sicilian Count that he finished his Celestial Sphere and
Terrestrial Disc of silver, on which "was inscribed all the circuit of the
known world and all the rivers thereof."
Each of his great
Arabic predecessors, along with Eratosthenes, Ptolemy, and Strabo, was welded
into his system—the result of fifteen years of abstract study, following some
thirty of practical activity in travel (the world divided by climates in the
Greek manner, taking no account of political divisions, or of those resting on
language or religion. Each climate was further subdivided into ten sections).
A special note may
be made on Edrisi's account of the voyage of the Lisbon "Wanderers"
("Maghrurins") some time before 1147, the date of the final Christian
capture of the Portuguese capital. For this is the earliest recorded voyage,
since the rise of Islam, definitely undertaken on the Western Ocean to learn
what was on it and what were its limits. The Wanderers, Edrisi tells us, were
eight in number, all related to one another. They built a transport boat, took
on board water and provisions for many months, and started with the first east
wind. After eleven days, they reached a sea whose thick waters exhaled a fetid
odour, concealed numerous reefs, and were but faintly lighted. Fearing for
their lives, they changed their course, steered southwards twelve days, and so
reached an island, possibly Madeira,—which they called El Ghanam from the sheep
found there, without shepherd or anyone to tend them. On landing, they found a
spring of running water and some wild figs. They killed some sheep, but found
the flesh so bitter that they could not eat it, and only took the skins.
Sailing south twelve more days, they found an island with houses and cultivated
fields, but as they neared it they were surrounded, made prisoners, and carried
in their own boats to a city on the sea-shore, to a house where were men of
tall stature and women of great beauty. Here they stayed three days, and on the
fourth came a man, the King's interpreter, who spoke Arabic, and asked them who
they were and what they wanted. They replied they were seeking out the wonders
of the ocean and its limits. At this the King laughed heartily, and said to the
interpreter: "Tell them my father once ordered some of his slaves to
venture out on that sea and after sailing across the breadth of it for a month,
they found themselves deprived of the light of the sun and returned without
having learnt anything." Then the Wanderers were sent back to their prison
till a west wind arose, when they were blindfolded and put on board a boat, and
after three days reached the mainland of Africa. Here they were put ashore,
with their hands tied, and so left. They were released by the Berbers, and
after their reappearance in Spain, a "street at the foot of the hot bath
in Lisbon," concludes Edrisi, "took the name of Street of the
Wanderers."
On the other
extremity of the Moslem world, on the south-east coast of Africa, there was
more real progress. By Edrisi's day that important addition of Arabic
travellers and merchants to the geographical knowledge of the world, by the
remarkable trade-ventures of the Emosaids, had been already made.
It had taken long
in the making.
About A.D. 742, ten years after the
battle of Tours, the Emosaid family, descended from Ali, cousin and son-in-law
of Mahomet, tried to make Said, their clan-chieftain, Ali's great-grandson,
Caliph at Damascus. The attempt was foiled, and the whole tribe fled, sailed
down the Red Sea and African coast, and established themselves as traders in
the Sea of India. First of all, Socotra seems to have been their mart and
capital, but before the end of the tenth century they had founded merchant
colonies at Melinda, Mombasa, and Mozambique, which, in their turn, led to
settlements on the opposite coasts of Asia. Thus the trade of the Indian Ocean
was secured for Islam, the first Moslem settlements arose in Malabar, and when
the Portuguese broke into this mare clausum, in 1497-8, they found
a belt of "Moorish" coast towns, from Magadoxo to Quiloa, controlling
both the Indian and the inland African trades, as Ibn Batuta had found in 1330.
By Edrisi's day,
moreover, the steady persistence and self-evident results of Arabic overland
exploration had become recognised by a sort of "Traveller's
Doctorate." It was not enough for the highest knowledge to study the
Koran, and the Sunna, and the Greek philosophers at home; for a perfect
education, a man must have travelled at least through the length and breadth of
Islam. All the successors of Edrisi, in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries,
shew this mingling of science and religion, of practical and speculative
energy.
Tradition still
governed Moslem thought, but there had come into being a sort of
half-acknowledged appendix to tradition, made up of real observations on men
and things. And in these observations, geographical interest was the main
factor.
The Life of Al
Heravy of Herat (1173-1215), the "Doctor Ubiquitus" of Islam in the
age of the Crusades, gives us a picture of another Massoudy. The friend of the
Emperor Manuel Comnenus, the "first man among Christians," Heravy
seems able in his own person to break down the partition wall of religious feud
by the common interest of science. In 1192 he was offered the patronage of the
Crusading princes, and Richard Coeur de Lion begged for the favour of an
interview, and begged in vain. Heravy, who had been on one of his exploring
journeys, angrily refused to see the King whose men had broken his quiet and
wasted his time. Before his death, he had run over the world (men said) from
China to the Pyrenees and from Abyssinia to the Danube, "scribbling his
name on every wall," and his survey of the Eastern Empire was the single
matter in which Turks and "Romans" made common cause,—for Greeks and
Latins at Byzantium alike read Heravy, like a Christian doctor. Another example
of the same catholic spirit is "Yacout the Roman," whose Dictionary,
finished in the earlier half of the thirteenth century, was a summary of
geographical advance since Edrisi, like the similar work of Ibn Said, of the
same period.
But as a matter of
fact, the balance both of knowledge and power was now shifting from Islam to
Christendom. The most daring and successful travellers after the rise of the
Mongols were the Venetian Marco Polo and the Friar Preachers who revived
Chinese Christianity (1270-1350); Madeira and the Canaries (off Moslem Africa)
were finally rediscovered not by Arabic enterprise, but by the Italian
Malocello in 1270, by the English Macham in the reign of our Edward III, and by
Portuguese ships under Genoese captains in 1341; in 1291 the Vivaldi ventured
beyond Cape Bojador, where no Moor had ever been, except by force of storm, as
in the doubtful story of Ibn Fatimah, who "first saw the White
Headland," Cape Blanco, between Cape Bojador and Cape Verde.
In the fourteenth
century the map of Edrisi was superseded by the new Italian plans and
coast-charts, or Portolani. As the Moslem world fell into political disorder,
its science declined. "Judicial astrology" seemed gaining a stronger
and stronger hold over Islam, and the irruption of the Turks gradually resulted
in the ruin of all the higher Moslem culture. Superstition and barbarism shared
the honour and the spoils of this victory.
But two great
names close the five hundred years of Arab learning.
1. Ibn Batuta (c. 1330),
who made himself as much at home in China as in his native Morocco, is the last
of Mohammedan travellers of real importance. Though we have only abridgments of
his work left to us, Colonel Yule is well within his rights in his deliberate judgment,
"that it must rank at least as one of the four chief guide books of the
Middle Ages," along with the Book of Ser Marco Polo and
the journals of the two Friar-travellers, Friar Odoric and Friar William de
Rubruquis.
2. With Abulfeda the
Eastern school of Moslem geography comes to an end, as the Western does with
Ibn Batuta. In the early years of the fourteenth century he rewrote the
"story and description of the Land of Islam," with a completeness
quite encyclopædic. But his work has all the failings of a compilation, however
careful, in that, or any, age. It is based upon information, not upon
inspection; it is in no sense original. As it began in imitation, so it ended.
If it rejects Ptolemy, it is only to follow Strabo or someone else; on all the
mathematical and astronomical data its doctrine is according to the
Alexandrians of twelve hundred years before, and this last précis of
the science of a great race and a great religion can only be understood in the
light of its model—in Greek geography.
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