yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

A day in the life of a teenager in medieval Baghdad - Birte Kristiansen and Petra Sijpesteijn


3m read
·Nov 8, 2024

As the morning sun shines on the Golden Gate Palace, brother and sister Hisham and Asma prepare for the journey of a lifetime. It is 791 CE, and the Abbasid Caliphate is at the height of its power, stretching from India to North Africa. With over half a million inhabitants, its capital city of Madinat al-Salaam, also known as Baghdad, is the largest in the Islamic Empire, possibly the world. And it's only 30 years old.

Asma and Hisham will leave at sunset for the hajj, the holy pilgrimage to Mecca. Most people make the journey when they’re older and wealthier, but Hisham and Asma have wanted to make this journey together since they were children. They intend to travel with the big hajj caravan that is protected by the caliph soldiers. The caliph Al-Rashid himself is also traveling with the caravan this year.

The hajj caravan is like a massive mobile city, with soldiers, cooks, doctors and merchants, servants and enslaved people. The journey is long, with dangers like disease, robbery, and dehydration. Because of these perils, Hisham and Asma want to travel with the larger group— but a last-minute mishap threatens to undo months of careful planning.

When the siblings visit the market to check on the supplies they’ve purchased, the merchant tells them one of their camels has fallen ill, and he doesn't have any replacements. Without the camel, the siblings won't be able to depart with the caravan. They search the marketplace, bustling with people from different ethnic backgrounds, such as Persians, Arabs, Turks, Africans, and Indians, and following different religions like Islam, Judaism, Christianity, and Zoroastrianism.

The market sells everything from locally made pottery, Egyptian glass, and paper from Samarkand, to Chinese silk, gold from Africa, and fox fur from the distant north. But with the caravan leaving tonight, no one has a camel available. Though the hajj is primarily a religious journey, the siblings have other, personal hopes for it.

Hisham and Asma come from a wealthy family and both had tutors as children. Hisham is studying to become a scholar, progressing from Arabic grammar to Islamic law and Persian love poetry, then to Indian-inspired mathematics and Greek philosophy and medicine. With scholars from all over the empire traveling to Mecca and important intellectual centers on the way, the hajj is a great learning opportunity.

Asma, meanwhile, has literary ambitions. As a woman, a life of formal scholarship is not available to her. Instead, she is honing her skills as a poet. She hopes to compose poetry about the journey that will catch the attention of important women in the city, and maybe even Queen Zubayda.

The siblings split up to search for a camel. Hisham heads toward the library complex to ask the scholars’ advice. An elderly scholar studying Galen and Hippocrates tells him how to treat a wound. An Aramaic translator from Damascus shares a list of useful herbs for upset stomach on the road. A Persian poet wants to share his latest poetry, but Hisham doesn’t see how that will get him the camel for tonight, so he kindly refuses.

As he says goodbye, they give him the names of important theology scholars to visit in Medina, on the way to Mecca. But to get there, he’ll need a camel. Meanwhile, Asma visits an older, married cousin. An enslaved girl opens the door, and takes Asma to the women’s quarters, where men cannot enter. Her cousin wants to hear Asma’s latest poetry, but Asma tells her she’s in a hurry and explains their predicament.

She’s in luck— her cousin’s husband has a camel to offer them. With their arrangements secure at last, they make their final preparations. At the designated times for men and women, each performs a ritual ablution at one of Baghdad’s many public bathhouses. As the sun sets, the city’s criers announce the caravan’s departure, and the townspeople flock to watch the pilgrims leave.

More Articles

View All
15 Ways Successful People Stay Motivated
While most people struggle to get off the couch and start doing the work, successful people are masters at staying motivated and keep pushing the ball forward, and this is exactly how they do it. Welcome to Alux. First up: vision setting. Every journey n…
The Stock that's Getting Worse as the Economy Gets Better...
Well, things are starting to look up. Vaccines are being distributed, lockdowns are being lifted—unless, of course, you live in Australia. But businesses are opening up, and the economy is starting to recover. However, for one very well-known company, th…
Reflecting functions: examples | Transformations of functions | Algebra 2 | Khan Academy
What we’re going to do in this video is do some practice examples of exercises on Khan Academy that deal with reflections of functions. So, this first one says this is the graph of function f. Fair enough. Function g is defined as g of x is equal to f of …
Exponential model word problem: medication dissolve | High School Math | Khan Academy
Carlos has taken an initial dose of a prescription medication. The relationship between the elapsed time T, in hours, since he took the first dose, and the amount of medication m, in milligrams, in his bloodstream is modeled by the following function: In…
Will the stock market crash again?
Hey guys, welcome back to the channel! In this video, we’re going to be doing a bit of an update video on my thoughts around where the market is at the moment and whether we might see some poorer market conditions going out into the future. You probably …
Diffraction and interference of light | Physics | Khan Academy
Take a look at these beautiful pictures from the Hubble Space Telescope. One of the reasons why it’s beautiful is because of these nice streaks that you get for all the stars. But why do you get them? Now, if you’re thinking that this effect happens beca…