Ibn Hawqal was a tenth century Arab writer, geographer, and chronicler. wat doe je hier?!?!? ...
His famous work is called "Surat ul-Ardh" (The face of the Earth) (صوره الارض) written in 977.
In it, among other things, the Encyclopedia of Ukraine mentions that he gives a description of Kiev, and is said to have mentioned the route of the Volga Bulgars and the Khazars, perhaps by Sviatoslav I of Kiev.[1] A monument to St. ... Bulgaria, known today as Volga Bulgaria, is a historic state that existed between the 7th and 13th centuries around the confluence of the Volga and Kama Rivers in what is now the Russian Federation. ... The Khazars were a Turkic semi-nomadic people from Central Asia who adopted Judaism. ... Kniaz Sviatoslav I, Prince of Kiev (c. ...
Ibn Tulun's appointment as prefect of Egypt came in 868 and at the end of a long period of political strife.
Ibn Tulun was a great horseman and an enthusiastic soldier, so he used the midan for parades and polo, and the historian Makrizi says that everybody in Fustat loved this big square.
Ibn Tulun immediately grasped the inventiveness of the idea and freed the Christian, paying him 110,000 dinars for his work, which was not bad considering the mosque itself cost only 120,000 dinars.