Mansa Musa: The Richest Man Who Ever Lived
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Beschrijving
Bol
Did a single ruler once hold enough wealth to crash an entire economy? For centuries, historians have debated whether Mansa Musa's famed opulence was legendary exaggeration or historical fact, leaving behind a figure whose financial power dwarfed even modern billionaires. This account cuts through the myth to reveal the true scope of the fourteenth-century Malian Empire, where gold flowed as freely as water and salt commanded the highest price in the world. Readers will trace the massive caravan that traversed the Sahara, unleashing an economic shockwave in Cairo that devalued gold across the Mediterranean for a decade. The narrative explores how this pilgrimage transformed Timbuktu from a regional outpost into a global hub of Islamic scholarship, erecting the renowned Sankore madrasah and inviting scholars from across the known world. It also examines the mysterious 1375 Catalan Atlas, which first introduced this African monarch to a European public oblivious to his existence, and rigorously evaluates the competing theories used to calculate his staggering net worth against contemporary fortunes. Historian Harold Carver, known for his rigorous ancient-history scholarship, synthesizes archaeological data with medieval travelogues to construct the definitive portrait of this enigmatic sovereign. By balancing academic rigor with gripping narrative, the text challenges the long-held assumption that Africa's golden age occurred only in antiquity, proving that the Middle Ages witnessed a rise of power that reshaped global finance. For anyone seeking to understand the origins of today's wealth debates or the forgotten empires that once ruled Africa, this essential history offers a corrective to the record that cannot be ignored.
Did a single ruler once hold enough wealth to crash an entire economy? For centuries, historians have debated whether Mansa Musa's famed opulence was legendary exaggeration or historical fact, leaving behind a figure whose financial power dwarfed even modern billionaires. This account cuts through the myth to reveal the true scope of the fourteenth-century Malian Empire, where gold flowed as freely as water and salt commanded the highest price in the world. Readers will trace the massive caravan that traversed the Sahara, unleashing an economic shockwave in Cairo that devalued gold across the Mediterranean for a decade. The narrative explores how this pilgrimage transformed Timbuktu from a regional outpost into a global hub of Islamic scholarship, erecting the renowned Sankore madrasah and inviting scholars from across the known world. It also examines the mysterious 1375 Catalan Atlas, which first introduced this African monarch to a European public oblivious to his existence, and rigorously evaluates the competing theories used to calculate his staggering net worth against contemporary fortunes. Historian Harold Carver, known for his rigorous ancient-history scholarship, synthesizes archaeological data with medieval travelogues to construct the definitive portrait of this enigmatic sovereign. By balancing academic rigor with gripping narrative, the text challenges the long-held assumption that Africa's golden age occurred only in antiquity, proving that the Middle Ages witnessed a rise of power that reshaped global finance. For anyone seeking to understand the origins of today's wealth debates or the forgotten empires that once ruled Africa, this essential history offers a corrective to the record that cannot be ignored.
AmazonPagina's: 377, Paperback, Independently published
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