Kristin Gore and Pre-Columbian Andalusian-Americas contact theories: Difference between pages

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'''Pre-Columbian Andalusian-Americas contact theories''' are theories which contend that [[Geography in medieval Islam|medieval Muslim explorers]] from [[Al-Andalus]] (Islamic [[Iberian Peninsula|Iberia]], comprising modern [[Portugal]] and [[Spain]]) and the [[Maghreb]] (Northwest [[Africa]]) may have reached the [[Americas]], and possibly made contact with the [[indigenous peoples of the Americas]], at some point before [[Christopher Columbus]]' first voyage to the Americas in 1492. Proponents of these theories cite as evidence reports of expeditions and voyages conducted by navigators and adventurers who they allege reached the Americas from the late 9th century onwards. These theories are generally not credited by mainstream historians, however.
{{Infobox Writer
|image = Kristin gore 2007.jpg
|imagesize = 150px |
| name = Kristin Gore
| caption = Kristin Gore at the 2007 Texas Book Festival
| pseudonym =
| birthdate = {{birth date and age|1977|6|5}}
| birthplace = [[Carthage, Tennessee]]
| deathdate =
| deathplace =
| occupation = Author, screenwriter
| nationality =
| period =
| genre =
| subject =
| movement =
| notableworks =''Sammy's Hill''<br> ''Sammy's House''<br>Screenwriter for ''[[Futurama]]'' and ''[[Saturday Night Live]]''
| influences =
| influenced =
| website =
}}


Proponents cite [[Arabic language|Arabic]] sources written during the [[Caliphate of Córdoba]] which report sailors from Al-Andalus traveling into the [[Atlantic Ocean]] between the 9th and 14th centuries. Proponents allege that some of these sailors may have traveled as far as the Americas.
'''Kristin C. Gore''' (born [[June 5]] [[1977]]) is an [[United States|American]] author and screenwriter. She is the second daughter of [[Al Gore|Al]] and [[Tipper Gore]] and the sister of [[Karenna Gore Schiff]].


The earliest report cited by proponents is the ''Muruj adh-dhahab wa maadin aljawhar'' (''The meadows of gold and quarries of jewels'') of the [[Sociology in medieval Islam|Muslim historian]] and geographer [[Ali al-Masudi]] (871-957). Ali al-Masudi stated that during the rule of the Muslim [[Caliph]] of Al-Andalus, [[Abdullah Ibn Mohammad]], a [[Muslim]] navigator [[Khashkhash Ibn Saeed Ibn Aswad]], from [[Córdoba, Spain|Cordoba]], sailed from Delba (Palos) in 889, crossed the Atlantic, reached an unknown territory (Ard Majhoola) and returned with fabulous treasures.<ref>Tabish Khair (2006). ''Other Routes: 1500 Years of African and Asian Travel Writing'', p. 12. Signal Books. ISBN 1904955118.</ref><ref>[[Ali al-Masudi]] (940). ''Muruj Adh-Dhahab'' (''The Book of Golden Meadows''), Vol. 1, p. 138.</ref> Ali al-Masudi, in ''The Book of Golden Meadows'' (947), wrote:
==Background==
Gore was raised in [[Washington, D.C.]], graduated from [[National Cathedral School]] in 1995 and from [[Harvard University]] in 1999 <ref>[http://www.harvardmag.com/ja99/jhj.images.html July-August 1999: Images of Commencement]</ref>. While at Harvard she was an editor for the '' [[Harvard Lampoon]]'': "Until her senior year, at Harvard, she was the only woman on the literary board of the ''Harvard Lampoon''. 'I didn't know its reputation at all,' she says. 'It was just that the funniest people I knew at Harvard were on the ''Lampoon'', so I looked into it and it ended up being one of the best things I did.' <ref>[http://www.timesargus.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20040919/NEWS/409190322/1013 Books & Authors: A capital idea from a Gore daughter: Times Argus Online]</ref>In 2005, she married Paul Cusack.<ref>[http://www.boston.com/ae/sidekick/insidekick/2007/07/kristin_gore.html Kristin Gore - InSidekick – Boston.com]</ref>


{{quote|"In the ocean of fogs [the Atlantic] there are many curiosities which we have mentioned in detail in our Akhbar az-Zaman, on the basis of what we saw there, adventurers who penetrated it on the risk of their life, some returning back safely, others perishing in the attempt. Thus a certain inhabitant of Cordoba, Khashkhash by name, assembled a group of young men, his co-citizens, and went on a voyage on this ocean. After a long time he returned back with booty. Every Spaniard knows this story."<ref name=Hamidullah>Professor Mohammed Hamidullah (Winter 1968). "Muslim Discovery of America before Columbus", ''Journal of the Muslim Students' Association of the United States and Canada'' '''4''' (2): 7-9 [http://www.muslimheritage.com/topics/default.cfm?ArticleID=646]</ref><ref>http://www.muslimheritage.com/topics/default.cfm?ArticleID=646 shorter version of Professor Mohammed Hamidullah's "Muslim Discovery of America before Columbus"</ref>}}
==Career==
Gore has published two novels, ''[[Sammy's book series|Sammy's Hill]]'' (2004) and ''[[Sammy's book series|Sammy's House]]'' (2007). <ref>[http://forum.wgbh.org/wgbh/forum.php?lecture_id=3885 WGBH Forum]</ref><ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/22/books/review/Douthat-t.html Young Climbers in Love]</ref> She co-wrote the screenplay for the upcoming film ''[[Nailed (film)|Nailed]]'' and the narration for the documentary ''[[Arctic Tale]]''. She was also a writer for the FOX animated sitcom ''[[Futurama]]'' and the long-running NBC sketch comedy show ''[[Saturday Night Live]]''.<ref>[http://www.timesargus.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20040919/NEWS/409190322/1013 Books & Authors: A capital idea from a Gore daughter: Times Argus Online]</ref>


In Ali al-Masudi's map of the world (between 896-956), there is a large area in the ocean, southwest of Africa, which he referred to as "Ard Majhoola" (Arabic for "the unknown territory"). Some have alleged that "Ard Majhoola" may be a reference to the Americas.<ref>Agha Hakim, Al-Mirza, ''Riyaadh Al-Ulama'' (Arabic), Vol. 2 (p. 386) and Vol. 4 (p. 175).</ref>
==Awards and nominations==
''Winner'':
*2007: [[Writers Guild of America Award]] - ''[[Saturday Night Live]]''


According to the Muslim historian Abu Bakr Ibn Umar Al-Gutiyya, another Muslim navigator, Ibn Farrukh, from [[Granada]], sailed across the Atlantic in February 999, landed in Gando ([[Canary islands]]) where he visited the [[Guanches|guanche]] King Guanariga, and continued westward where he eventually saw and named two islands, Capraria and Pluitana. He arrived back in the Al-Andalus in May 999.
''Nomination'':
*2003: [[Emmy Award]] - ''[[Saturday Night Live]]''


The cartographer and geographer [[Muhammad al-Idrisi]] (1100-1166), in his geographical text ''Nuzhatul Mushtaq'', wrote the following on the Atlantic Ocean:
==References==
{{reflist}}


{{quote|"The Commander of the Muslims Ali ibn Yusuf ibn Tashfin sent his admiral Ahmad ibn Umar, better known under the name of Raqsh al-Auzz to attack a certain island in the Atlantic, but he died before doing that. [...] Beyond this ocean of fogs it is not known what exists there. Nobody has the sure knowledge of it, because it is very difficult to traverse it. Its atmosphere is foggy, its waves are very strong, its dangers are perilous, its beasts are terrible, and its winds are full of tempests. There are many islands, some of which are inhabited, others are submerged. No navigator traverses them but bypasses them remaining near their coast. [...] And it was from the town of Lisbon that the adventurers set out known under the name of Mugharrarin [seduced ones], penetrated the ocean of fogs and wanted to know what it contained and where it ended. [...] After sailing for twelve more days they perceived an island that seemed to be inhabited, and there were cultivated fields. They sailed that way to see what it contained. But soon barks encircled them and made them prisoners, and transported them to a miserable hamlet situated on the coast. There they landed. The navigators saw there people with red skin; there was not much hair on their body, the hair of their head was straight, and they were of high stature. Their women were of an extraordinary beauty."<ref name=Hamidullah/>}}
==External links==
*{{imdb name|id=0330751}}
*[http://www.observer.com/2007/more-you-ever-wanted-know-about-kristin-gore-s-writing-process More Than You Ever Wanted to Know About Kristin Gore’s Writing Process]


If this translationis correct where it says 'red skin', it raises questions as to who they were. Early descriptions of Native Americans rarely referred to them as red. For instance, "a 1702 history of New Sweden, which did not describe Indians as red but as differing "in their colour; in some places being black, and in others, brown or yellow," and "the earliest European explorers of the Southeast, the Spanish, and described Indians as "brown of skin".<ref>How Indians Got to be Red, Nancy Shoemaker, The American Historical Review, Vol.&nbsp;102, No.&nbsp;3. (Jun.,&nbsp;1997), pp.&nbsp;625–644.</ref> This is both a possible explanation of 'blacks' seen by early European explorers and settlers and casts doubt about comments on 'red skin' referring to Native Americans.
{{Al Gore}}


== See also ==
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gore, Kristin}}
*[[Geography in medieval Islam]]
[[Category:1977 births]]
**[[Khashkhash Ibn Saeed Ibn Aswad]]
[[Category:American novelists]]
**[[Piri Reis map]]
[[Category:American television writers]]
*[[Islamic Golden Age]]
[[Category:California writers]]
*[[Pre-Columbian Africa-Americas contact theories]]
[[Category:Gore family|Kristin Gore]]
*[[Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact]]
[[Category:Harvard University alumni]]
**[[Timeline of pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact]]
[[Category:Living people]]
*[[Zheng He]]
**[[1421: The Year China Discovered the World]]

==Notes==
{{reflist}}

==References==
*Dr Youssef Mroueh. [http://www.mediamonitors.net/youssefmroueh1.html Pre-Columbian Muslims in the Americas].
*[http://www.muslimsinamerica.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=14&Itemid=28 Pre Columbus & Pre Slavery Years]
*Amir Nashid Ali Muhammad. ''Muslims in America - Seven Centuries of History 1312-2000''. ISBN 0-915957-75-2.
*Salih Yucel. [http://www.fountainmagazine.com/articles.php?SIN=f33a07b0a2&k=823&15713013&show=part1 ''Islam and Muslims in America before Columbus''].


[[Category:Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact]]
[[es:Kristin Gore]]
[[Category:Islam in the United States]]
[[Category:Pseudohistory]]

Revision as of 22:59, 12 October 2008

Pre-Columbian Andalusian-Americas contact theories are theories which contend that medieval Muslim explorers from Al-Andalus (Islamic Iberia, comprising modern Portugal and Spain) and the Maghreb (Northwest Africa) may have reached the Americas, and possibly made contact with the indigenous peoples of the Americas, at some point before Christopher Columbus' first voyage to the Americas in 1492. Proponents of these theories cite as evidence reports of expeditions and voyages conducted by navigators and adventurers who they allege reached the Americas from the late 9th century onwards. These theories are generally not credited by mainstream historians, however.

Proponents cite Arabic sources written during the Caliphate of Córdoba which report sailors from Al-Andalus traveling into the Atlantic Ocean between the 9th and 14th centuries. Proponents allege that some of these sailors may have traveled as far as the Americas.

The earliest report cited by proponents is the Muruj adh-dhahab wa maadin aljawhar (The meadows of gold and quarries of jewels) of the Muslim historian and geographer Ali al-Masudi (871-957). Ali al-Masudi stated that during the rule of the Muslim Caliph of Al-Andalus, Abdullah Ibn Mohammad, a Muslim navigator Khashkhash Ibn Saeed Ibn Aswad, from Cordoba, sailed from Delba (Palos) in 889, crossed the Atlantic, reached an unknown territory (Ard Majhoola) and returned with fabulous treasures.[1][2] Ali al-Masudi, in The Book of Golden Meadows (947), wrote:

"In the ocean of fogs [the Atlantic] there are many curiosities which we have mentioned in detail in our Akhbar az-Zaman, on the basis of what we saw there, adventurers who penetrated it on the risk of their life, some returning back safely, others perishing in the attempt. Thus a certain inhabitant of Cordoba, Khashkhash by name, assembled a group of young men, his co-citizens, and went on a voyage on this ocean. After a long time he returned back with booty. Every Spaniard knows this story."[3][4]

In Ali al-Masudi's map of the world (between 896-956), there is a large area in the ocean, southwest of Africa, which he referred to as "Ard Majhoola" (Arabic for "the unknown territory"). Some have alleged that "Ard Majhoola" may be a reference to the Americas.[5]

According to the Muslim historian Abu Bakr Ibn Umar Al-Gutiyya, another Muslim navigator, Ibn Farrukh, from Granada, sailed across the Atlantic in February 999, landed in Gando (Canary islands) where he visited the guanche King Guanariga, and continued westward where he eventually saw and named two islands, Capraria and Pluitana. He arrived back in the Al-Andalus in May 999.

The cartographer and geographer Muhammad al-Idrisi (1100-1166), in his geographical text Nuzhatul Mushtaq, wrote the following on the Atlantic Ocean:

"The Commander of the Muslims Ali ibn Yusuf ibn Tashfin sent his admiral Ahmad ibn Umar, better known under the name of Raqsh al-Auzz to attack a certain island in the Atlantic, but he died before doing that. [...] Beyond this ocean of fogs it is not known what exists there. Nobody has the sure knowledge of it, because it is very difficult to traverse it. Its atmosphere is foggy, its waves are very strong, its dangers are perilous, its beasts are terrible, and its winds are full of tempests. There are many islands, some of which are inhabited, others are submerged. No navigator traverses them but bypasses them remaining near their coast. [...] And it was from the town of Lisbon that the adventurers set out known under the name of Mugharrarin [seduced ones], penetrated the ocean of fogs and wanted to know what it contained and where it ended. [...] After sailing for twelve more days they perceived an island that seemed to be inhabited, and there were cultivated fields. They sailed that way to see what it contained. But soon barks encircled them and made them prisoners, and transported them to a miserable hamlet situated on the coast. There they landed. The navigators saw there people with red skin; there was not much hair on their body, the hair of their head was straight, and they were of high stature. Their women were of an extraordinary beauty."[3]

If this translationis correct where it says 'red skin', it raises questions as to who they were. Early descriptions of Native Americans rarely referred to them as red. For instance, "a 1702 history of New Sweden, which did not describe Indians as red but as differing "in their colour; in some places being black, and in others, brown or yellow," and "the earliest European explorers of the Southeast, the Spanish, and described Indians as "brown of skin".[6] This is both a possible explanation of 'blacks' seen by early European explorers and settlers and casts doubt about comments on 'red skin' referring to Native Americans.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Tabish Khair (2006). Other Routes: 1500 Years of African and Asian Travel Writing, p. 12. Signal Books. ISBN 1904955118.
  2. ^ Ali al-Masudi (940). Muruj Adh-Dhahab (The Book of Golden Meadows), Vol. 1, p. 138.
  3. ^ a b Professor Mohammed Hamidullah (Winter 1968). "Muslim Discovery of America before Columbus", Journal of the Muslim Students' Association of the United States and Canada 4 (2): 7-9 [1]
  4. ^ http://www.muslimheritage.com/topics/default.cfm?ArticleID=646 shorter version of Professor Mohammed Hamidullah's "Muslim Discovery of America before Columbus"
  5. ^ Agha Hakim, Al-Mirza, Riyaadh Al-Ulama (Arabic), Vol. 2 (p. 386) and Vol. 4 (p. 175).
  6. ^ How Indians Got to be Red, Nancy Shoemaker, The American Historical Review, Vol. 102, No. 3. (Jun., 1997), pp. 625–644.

References