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Archives Islamic History

Archives Islamic History

By: Archives
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Summary

Islamic history is one of the most important stories in the world. And most people have never heard it properly. Archives is here to change that. Each episode, we break down a key era, event, or figure from Islamic history. From the rise of the first caliphate to the Golden Age of Baghdad to the fall of great empires, we cover it all. Whether you're learning for the first time or filling in the gaps, this is the podcast for you.


© 2026 Archives Islamic History
Islam Spirituality World
Episodes
  • The Silk Road's Muslim Merchants (part 3): The Trust Network
    May 3 2026

    In a moneychanger's office in Basra around 950 CE, a merchant could hand over 100 gold dinars and whisper a password. Two months of desert travel away, in Samarkand, the moneychanger's counterparty would pay 100 dinars to whoever produced the password. No gold crossed the desert. The ledger would balance later against a reverse flow. This was a hawala, and it predated modern wire transfer by a thousand years. It worked because if either broker cheated, he would be excommunicated from a merchant network that stretched from Cordoba to Quanzhou, and economic death would follow.

    This third and final episode of a three-part series asks the question the first two have been setting up. How did any of this work? How did a Tunisian Jew in Mangalore send a shipment to his brother in Sicily and expect it to arrive, to be paid for, and to be legally enforceable if it didn't? The answer is not a technology. It is an institution, built out of contracts, notaries, qadi courts, endowed caravansaries, standard coinage, shared law, and the annual synchronization of the Hajj.

    The episode walks through the legal frame. The Quranic prohibition of riba and the invention of profit-sharing instruments, the mudaraba and musharaka that are the ancestors of modern venture capital. The hawala and the suftaja. The wakala, the agency contract that let a merchant's representative act for him abroad. The waqf, the perpetual charitable endowment that paid for the Sultanhani caravanserai near Aksaray in 1229, where three nights of lodging, food, fodder, and a doctor came free to any traveler.

    It walks through the Cairo Geniza, the storeroom in the Ben Ezra Synagogue where Solomon Schechter in 1896 discovered 400,000 fragments of medieval daily life. Through S.D. Goitein's five-volume reconstruction of this world. Through the detailed biography of Abraham Ben Yiju, a Tunisian Jewish merchant who spent seventeen years in Mangalore, freed and married a South Indian woman named Ashu on October 17, 1132, and corresponded with his brothers in Sicily about pepper, cardamom, and brass bowls.

    It argues that women were not peripheral to this economy. Ottoman archives show more than 2,300 of 30,000 surviving waqf deeds were founded by women. Nearly 30% of Istanbul's 491 Ottoman public fountains were registered under women's awqaf.

    And it asks the hardest question in the field. Why did this system stall while Dutch and English joint-stock capitalism exploded? The honest answer is contested. Timur Kuran's legal rigidity thesis, Janet Abu-Lughod's world-system disruption after the Black Death, Portuguese naval firepower, American silver from Potosi. Probably all four together.

    Sources drawn on include the Cairo Geniza corpus as edited by S.D. Goitein and Mordechai Friedman, al-Sarakhsi's Kitab al-Mabsut, al-Dimashqi's merchant manual, Ibn al-Attar's notarial formulary, and modern scholarship by Abraham Udovitch, Janet Abu-Lughod, Avner Greif, Jessica Goldberg, and Timur Kuran.


    Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes.

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    If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

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    37 mins
  • The Silk Road's Muslim Merchants (part 2): Sufis, Gold, and Shahada
    May 1 2026

    In July 1324, Mansa Musa of Mali crossed the Nile into Egypt at the head of a caravan of 60,000 people, with 500 enslaved attendants in silk, each carrying a six-pound gold staff. He stayed in Cairo for three months, giving away gold. By the time he left, the Egyptian dinar had lost roughly 12% of its value, and the market would take twelve years to recover. Al-Umari, the Mamluk bureaucrat who recorded the episode from Cairene eyewitnesses, described what they saw: "He left no court emir nor holder of a royal office without a gift of a load of gold."

    This second episode of a three-part series covers the overland and archipelago half of the Islamic trading world. It covers the camel's introduction to North Africa and the ninety-day caravan crossings from Sijilmasa to Timbuktu. It covers the gold-salt exchange at the forest edge of the Niger, where Wangara brokers weighed Saharan salt slabs against alluvial gold from Bambuk and Bure weight-for-weight. It covers Ghana, Mali, and Songhai. It covers Ibn Battuta's 1352 visit to Taghaza, the Saharan village where the houses and the mosque were built of blocks of rock salt. It covers Timbuktu at its intellectual peak under Askia Muhammad, where, Leo Africanus reported in 1526, "more profit is made from the book trade than from any other line of business."

    The episode then makes the argument of the series. What happened in West Africa through caravan and scholar also happened in Southeast Asia through ship and Sufi. The Wali Sanga, the nine saints of Java, Islamized the island not with armies but with shadow plays and gamelan orchestras. Sunan Kalijaga staged the Mahabharata with the shahada slipped in as the Pandavas' secret mantra. Malacca's king converted around 1400. Ternate and Tidore followed. By 1500, Islam stretched from the Atlantic shore of Morocco to the Spice Islands of the Moluccas, and almost nowhere had it traveled by sword.

    It closes with the Battle of Tondibi on March 13, 1591, when Moroccan arquebusiers destroyed the Songhai Empire in two hours, and with Abdel Kader Haidara smuggling 350,000 Timbuktu manuscripts out of the city in 2012, one step ahead of Ansar Dine, proving that the network those caravans built was still alive enough, four centuries later, to save itself.

    Sources drawn on include Ibn Battuta's Rihla, al-Bakri's Kitab al-Masalik, al-Umari's eyewitness Cairo account, Ibn Khaldun's history of Mali, Leo Africanus's Description of Africa, the Tarikh al-Sudan, Tomé Pires's Suma Oriental, and modern scholarship on the Wali Sanga tradition.


    Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes.

    📲 Download the Archives app here
    🌐 Learn more
    here
    📸 Follow Basel on Instagram
    here

    If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

    Show More Show Less
    36 mins
  • The Silk Road's Muslim Merchants (part 1): Dhow Sailors and the Muslim Quarter
    Apr 29 2026

    On a hill above the Chinese port city of Quanzhou in the spring of 1417, a Ming admiral named Zheng He burned incense at the tombs of two men whom tradition identified as Companions of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him). His father and grandfather had made the Hajj. His ancestors had come from Bukhara. In a few days he would raise a Chinese-language stele and take 28,000 men and 317 ships south on the northeast monsoon, the largest navy the world had ever seen, to a port on the coast of East Africa.

    This first episode of a three-part series walks through the Indian Ocean trading world that Zheng He represented at its peak. From the stitched-hull dhow, flexing like a basket in a monsoon swell, to the Swahili coast city of Kilwa under Sultan al-Hasan ibn Sulaiman. From the Malabar port of Calicut, where Muslim merchant guilds served a Hindu king and dominated the spice trade, to Quanzhou itself, the largest port in the world under the Song and Yuan, where Ibn Battuta in 1345 counted a hundred big junks in the harbor and gave up counting the small ones.

    The episode covers Pu Shougeng, the Muslim merchant-official who ran Quanzhou's Maritime Trade Bureau for thirty years and in 1276 betrayed the fleeing Song royal family to the Mongols. It covers the 1357 Ispah Rebellion and the destruction of Quanzhou's Muslim community that followed. It covers Zheng He's seven treasure voyages between 1405 and 1433. And it ends at Calicut on May 20, 1498, when a Portuguese ship arrived carrying cannon that would end the thousand-year cosmopolitanism Muslim merchants had built across the Indian Ocean.

    Sources drawn on include Ibn Battuta's Rihla, al-Masudi's Muruj al-Dhahab, the Kilwa Chronicle, Ahmad ibn Majid's navigational manuals, the Cairo Geniza India-trade letters, and modern scholarship by S.D. Goitein, K.N. Chaudhuri, Janet Abu-Lughod, and Ross Dunn.


    Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes.

    📲 Download the Archives app here
    🌐 Learn more
    here
    📸 Follow Basel on Instagram
    here

    If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

    Show More Show Less
    34 mins
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