- Source: Maalim Ibrahim
Maalim Ibrahim was a 17th-century Somali captain and navigator who was considered an expert in the medieval maritime trade routes of the Indian Ocean region between Mogadishu and the city of Cambay in the Gujarat Sultanate of India.
Background
Maalim was born in the Sultanate of Mogadishu, whose capital at the time was the richest city on the Eastern African coast. In 1615, on the return leg of a trade voyage to Madagascar, Maalim docked at one of the Islands of the Comoros and encountered the English explorer Thomas Roe, who during their encounter noted Maalim's fluency of the Portuguese language.
Influence on English cartography
Roe provided Maalim with a nautical map of the region, and was intrigued when the Somali captain pointed out numerous cartographic errors in his map, and then revealed his own, which Roe summarised as a “graduated map of high quality” drawn on parchment and subsequently began adjusting his own map based on that of Maalim.
Family
His brother was also a sailor and a mercenary that had participated at the naval Battle of Swally between the English and the Portuguese, on the side of the latter, off the coast of the Indian subcontinent.
See also
Sultanate of Mogadishu
Maritime history of Somalia
Abd al-Aziz of Mogadishu
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Abu Muhammad al-Baghawi
- Maalim Ibrahim
- Thomas Roe
- Samantha Lewthwaite
- Mandera County
- Saransoor
- Shifta War
- Sayyid Qutb
- Captain Phillips (film)
- List of Somalis
- Seif Sharif Hamad