Caption
Islam in China, 9th-20th Centuries
Summary
This map illustrates the variety of linguistic regions that prevailed during the extension of the Muslim World.
As it rose in the Center of the World, the Muslim world rapidly built economic, linguistic, and cultural connections with parts of Europe, Asia and Africa.
Legend indicates:
- Islamic influence
- Semitic
- Indo-European
- Ural-Altaic (Turkic)
- Dravidian
- Hamitic
- Malay
- Sinitic
- Bantu-Sudanese
- Caucasian
Source
An Historical Atlas of Islam – Atlas Historique de l’Islam, Second Edition. Edited by Hugh Kennedy, Tuta sub Aegide Pallas 1683,
Brill, Leiden-Boston-Koeln, 2002, page 4.
Cartography by Marc Bel, Peter van der Donck.
Copyright
© 2002 Koninklijke Brill NV, The Netherlands. All rights reserved.
Series
This map is one in a series:
- Image:MG©Environments and Mineral Resources of the Islamic World circa 390-1000.jpg
- Image:MG©Al-Andalus and Al-Maghrib- The Muslim Conquest, 44-732.jpg
- Image:MG©Islam in China, 9th-20th Centuries.jpg
- Image:MG©Linguistic Regions of the Islamic World circa 900-1500.jpg
- Image:MG©Ottoman Expansion 1362-1402 A.D. The First Conquest of Rumelia and Anatolia.jpg
- Image:MG©The Indian Ocean circa 390-1000.jpg
- Image:MG©The Muslim World circa 403-1100.jpg
- Image:MG©The Muslim World circa 700-1300.jpg
- Image:MG©The Muslim World circa 905-1500.jpg
- Image:MG©The Muslim World circa 1111-1700.jpg
- Image:MG©The Muslim World circa 1317-1900.jpg
- Image:MG©The Turks and Portuguese in the Indian Ocean 10th-16th Centuries.jpg
- Image:MG©The Western Mediterranean in the 3rd-9th C..jpg
- Image:MG©The World on the Eve of the Muslim Conquests circa 600 A.D..jpg
- Image:MG©The World According to Al-Idrisi 549-1154.jpg
- Image:MG©The World According to Al-Sharfi 986-1579.jpg