SUMATRA AND JAVA ISLANDS IN MEDIEVAL OTTOMAN AND ARABIC LITERATURE

  • Muhammad Luthfi

Abstract

Sumatra and Java’s strategic locations have long attracted traders and explorers from around the world, particularly medieval Arab traders. The first Arab historian to mention the islands was

Zakariya Al Qazwiny, who wrote that “Jâwah,” located between China and India, was a source of sandalwood, lime, cloves, and Chinese medicine. One of the first Arab explorers to visit Indonesia was Ibn Battuta, who visited the Kingdom of Samudra Pasai in 1345 AD on his way from India to China after visiting Sri Lanka and other countries. As, according to Sartono Kartodirdjo, medieval travel records can be used as sources in historical studies, the surviving descriptions of Indonesia by Arab and Ottoman visitors should be more widely known among modern historians. This paper identifies several useful sources from the medieval period.

Published
2020-03-11
How to Cite
Luthfi, M. (2020). SUMATRA AND JAVA ISLANDS IN MEDIEVAL OTTOMAN AND ARABIC LITERATURE. International Journal of Advanced Science and Technology, 29(04), 1627 - 1637. Retrieved from http://sersc.org/journals/index.php/IJAST/article/view/6863