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  2. Geography of the Arab world - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_of_the_Arab_world

    Most of the Arab world falls in the driest region of the world. Almost 80% of it is covered in desert (10,666,637 of 13,333,296 km2), stretching from Mauritania and Morocco to Oman and the UAE. [ citation needed ] The second most common terrain is the semi-arid terrain , which found in all Arab countries except Lebanon and Comoros.

  3. Hudud al-'Alam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hudud_al-'Alam

    The Ḥudūd al-ʿĀlam (Arabic: حدود العالم, lit. "Boundaries of the World," "Limits of the World," or in also in English "The Regions of the World" [1]) is a 10th-century geography book written in Persian by an anonymous author from Guzgan (present day northern Afghanistan), [2] possibly Šaʿyā bin Farīghūn. [1]

  4. Kitab al-Buldan (Ya'qubi book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitab_al-Buldan_(Ya'qubi_book)

    Kitab al-Buldan (Arabic: كتاب البلدان, Book of the Countries) is a book written by the author, and geographer Abu Abbas Al-Yaqoubi (died 897) and it is one of the oldest Arab geographical sources dating back to the days of Abbasid Caliphate.

  5. Ghazi Falah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghazi_Falah

    Falah is a founder of the Toronto-based peer review international journal The Arab World Geographer and serves as its Editor-in-Chief. The journal is published in English and features research on the geography of the Arab, Muslim, and Middle-Eastern worlds. [1]

  6. Arab world - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arab_world

    The political borders of the Arab world have wandered, leaving Arab minorities in non-Arab countries of the Sahel and the Horn of Africa as well as in the Middle Eastern countries of Cyprus, Turkey and Iran, and also leaving non-Arab minorities in Arab countries. However, the basic geography of sea, desert and mountain provides the enduring ...

  7. Surat Al-Ard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surat_Al-Ard

    Surat Al-Ard, also known as Al-Masalek wa Al-Mamalek, is a book on geography and travel written by the merchant traveler Abul Qasim Muhammad Ibn Hawqal following his travels, which commenced in 331 AH. [1]

  8. Geography and cartography in the medieval Islamic world

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_and_cartography...

    The exact relationship between the books of Khordadbeh and Jayhani is unknown, because the two books had the same title, have often been mixed up, and Jayhani's book has been lost, so that it can only be approximately reconstructed from the works of other authors (mostly from the eastern parts of the Islamic world [11]) who seem to have reused ...

  9. Ibn Hawqal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibn_Hawqal

    Ibn Hawqal based his great work of geography on a revision and augmentation of the text called Masālik ul-Mamālik by Istakhri (AD 951), which itself was a revised edition of the Ṣuwar al-aqālīm by Ahmed ibn Sahl al-Balkhi, (ca. AD 921).

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