Through the Eyes of Travellers
Chapter 5 of Themes in Indian History Part II examines Indian society from the tenth to the seventeenth century through the accounts of three foreign travellers: Al-Biruni (11th century), Ibn Battuta (14th century) and François Bernier (17th century), covering customs, cities, trade, the caste system and women's lives.
- 1Three travellers are studied: Al-Biruni (born 973, Khwarizm/Uzbekistan; 11th century), Ibn Battuta (from Tangier, Morocco; 14th century) and François Bernier (French; in India 1656–1668).
- 2Al-Biruni's Kitab-ul-Hind is written in Arabic and divided into 80 chapters on subjects including religion, philosophy, festivals, astronomy, alchemy, manners, social life, weights and measures, iconography, laws and metrology.
- 3Al-Biruni identified three barriers to understanding India: the great difference between Sanskrit and Arabic/Persian; differences in religious beliefs and practices; and the self-absorption and insularity of the local population.
- 4Ibn Battuta's Rihla describes Delhi as the largest city in India, praises the productivity of Indian agriculture (two crops a year), and notes Indian textiles — cotton cloth, fine muslins, silks, brocade and satin — were in great demand across West Asia and Southeast Asia.
- 5Ibn Battuta described India's two-tier postal system: the horse-post (uluq) with royal horses every four miles, and the foot-post (dawa) with three stations per mile; while normal travel from Sind to Delhi took fifty days, spy reports reached the Sultan in just five days.


