For centuries it was believed that Christopher Columbus was the first
man from the Old continent to cross the Atlantic to the New World, but
new evidence from a research team from the University of Rhode
Island suggests Muslim seafarers might just be the first people to have
settled on the shores of America, a possibility that could rewrite
history as we know it.
The discovery completely took the researchers by surprise admits professor Evan Yuriesco, in charge of the research team.The team of researchers fell upon what could be the mass tomb of 9th century seafarers. The four skeletons that have been found on the site are in a state of advanced decomposition which could make DNA testing impossible, warns the expert, although the teeth showed premature decay which could explain the cause of death by a poor diet or an unknown illness.“We were expecting to find traces of prehistoric Native American settlements, as we have in the area for the past decades. We were not prepared to find 9th century clay pots containing ancient manuscripts written in the Arabic language” he explains.
Researchers from Rhode Island University were not expecting a discovery of such a controversial nature
Islamic medieval scholar Karim Ibn Fallah from the University of Massachusetts has determined that the age of the manuscripts is from the 9th century based on the Kufic script of the manuscripts. “Kufic is the oldest calligraphic form of the various Arabic scripts and consists of a modified form of the old Nabataean script” he explains. “Kufic developed around the end of the 7th century in Kufa, Iraq, from which it takes its name. The discovery of Kufic scripts in pre-Columbus America is extremely fascinating” he adds, visibly excited.Two clay pots were also found in a surprisingly good state, one of them containing the precious manuscripts and the other a mixture of unidentified dried spices which, when identified, could bring further proof of the origin of these sea dwellers.
The documents are thought to be of the 9th century based on the Kufic script of the manuscripts, claim experts
Byron Kent, museologist at the Smithsonian, admits the find is
extremely troubling. “There is no question that Arab maps were the best
in the world, but none of the existing early maps demonstrates any
knowledge of the Americas” he ponders. Even though the burden of
historical evidence has been against the idea of Muslim populations
traveling across the Atlantic in pre-Columbus times, the expert does not
dispute that Muslims could have beaten Columbus to the New World.
“They certainly possessed the technological expertise to have done so; but, until now, there was no reliable evidence that they did. This discovery, however, is compelling proof that they, in fact, did” admits the expert.
Richard Francaviglia of Willamette University and Best Selling author of “Far Beyond the Western Sea of the Arabs…’: Reinterpreting Claims about Pre-Columbian Muslims in the Americas” also admits the discovery is unexpected.
“The premise of pre-Columbian Islam in the New World is attractive because it is so plausible. The navigational accomplishments of Muslims were significant indeed. The record confirms that they rapidly explored and colonized a substantial portion of the Old World by the ninth and tenth centuries CE. Columbus himself was clearly indebted to Muslim seafaring skills, and there is little doubt that Muslims had the technological expertise to have reached the New World”.
Muslim historian and geographer Abul-Hassan Ali Ibn Al-Hussain Al-Masudi (871-957 CE) wrote in his book Muruj adh-dhahab wa maadin aljawhar (The meadows of gold and quarries of jewels) that during the
rule of the Muslim caliph of Spain Abdullah Ibn Mohammad (888-912 CE), a
Muslim navigator, Khashkhash Ibn Saeed Ibn Aswad, from Cortoba, Spain
sailed from Delba (Palos) in 889 CE, crossed the Atlantic, reached an
unknown territory (ard majhoola)
and returned with fabulous treasures. In Al-Masudi’s map of the world
there is a large area in the ocean of darkness and fog which he referred
to as the unknown territory, which many scholars believe to be the
Americas.
It is known that other Europeans and Asians as well came to the Americas centuries before Columbus so the post's premise is faulty from the get go. The above voyage referenced is not known to science, however, it is entirely possible that a voyage by a Moor of Spain could have taken place as described.
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Although this post IS NOT an 'article' from The ONION you might want to take it with a few grains of salt.It is known that other Europeans and Asians as well came to the Americas centuries before Columbus so the post's premise is faulty from the get go. The above voyage referenced is not known to science, however, it is entirely possible that a voyage by a Moor of Spain could have taken place as described.
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