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Hall of a Thousand Columns

Tim Mackintosh-Smith

All the best armchair travellers are sceptics. Those of the fourteenth century were no exception: for them, there were lies, damned lies, and Ibn Battutah's India.

Born in 1304, Ibn Battutah left his native Tangier as a young scholar of law; over the course of the thirty years that followed he visited most of the known world between Morocco and China. Here Tim Mackintosh-Smith retraces one leg of the Moroccan's journey -- the dizzy ladders and terrifying snakes of his Indian career as a judge and a hermit, courtier and prisoner, ambassador and castaway. From the plains of Hindustan to the plateaux of the Deccan and the lost ports of Malabar, the author reveals an India far off the beaten path of Taj and Raj.

Ibn Battutah left India on a snake, stripped to his underpants by pirates; but he took away a treasure of tales as rich as any in the history of travel. Back home they said the treasure was a fake. Mackintosh-Smith proves the sceptics wrong. India is a jewel in the turban of the Prince of Travellers. Here it is, glittering, grotesque but genuine, a fitting ornament for his 700th birthday.

  • Classification : Travel & Travel Writing
  • Pub Date : JAN 1, 2007
  • Imprint : John Murray
  • Page Extent : 352
  • Binding : PB
  • ISBN : 9780719565878
  • Price : INR 799
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Tim Mackintosh-Smith

Tim Mackintosh-Smith studied Classical Arabic at Oxford. At the age of 21 he headed east for the real Arabia. For the past 17 years he has lived in the Yemeni capital San`a - a place which has missed out on many of the more awful aspects of the post medieval period. His first book Yemen: Travels in Dictionary Land won the 1998 Thomas Cook/Daily Telegraph Travel Book Award and his next book Travels with a Tangerine was critically acclaimed.

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