Tales from the Mediterranean. Stories Behind the Images. Award winning Travel Writer Troy Nahumko's writing platform.
About Me

- Troy
- Troy Nahumko is an award-winning author based in Caceres, Spain. His recent work focuses on travels around the Mediterranean, from Tangier to Istanbul. As a writer and photographer he has contributed to newspapers and media such as Lonely Planet, The Globe and Mail, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Toronto Star, Couterpunch,The Irish World, The Straits Times, The Calgary Herald, Khaleej Times, DW-World, Rabble and El Pais. He also writes a bi-weekly op-ed column 'Camino a Ítaca' for the Spanish newspaper HOY. His book, Stories Left in Stone, Trails and Traces in Cáceres, Spain is published by the University of Alberta Press. As an ESL materials writer he has worked with publishers such as Macmillan and CUP.
Writing Profile
- Links to Published Pieces
- The Globe and Mail
- Perceptive Travel
- Roads and Kingdoms
- Brave New Traveler
- The Toronto Star
- The Straits Times (Singapore)
- Khaleej Times, Dubai
- Traveler's Notebook
- Matador Network
- Calgary Herald
- Salon
- DW-World/Qantara
- Go Nomad
- El Pais (English)
- Go World Travel
- The Irish World
- Trazzler
- International Business Times
- HOY (Spanish)
- Teaching Village
- Verge Travel Magazine
- BootsnAll
- Rabble.ca
- SUR in English
- Counterpunch
Friday, June 19, 2015
Did Ibn Battuta Sleep there in Granada, Spain?
Somewhere in this "bride of Andalusian cities," one of the greatest travel-story meeting of minds took place. A rendezvous that seven years and a different continent later would give fruit to one of the best travel books ever written, Rihla (also know as A Gift to Those Who Contemplate the Wonders of Cities and the Marvels of Travelling), perhaps the most accurate portrait of medieval life across the then-known world we have. On his round-the-world trip back from China, Ibn Battutah met his ghostwriter and local boy, Ibn Juzayy, in an unknown garden. Granada's not as old as most think, the Alhambra itself was then just a red castle and a dream in a young king's mind when Battutah gave it its nuptial title in 1350. The oldest Muslim building in the city isn't the superlative palace atop the hill, but the Corral del Carbon, which in its time served as a hotel for travelers and traders. Just maybe where the world's greatest traveler laid his head?
#architecture #getaway #medieval #muslim #muslimarchitecture #islam #book #andalusia #alhambra #islamicarchitecture #14thcentury #andalucia #travelwriting #ibnbattutah #travelwriter #nazriddynasty #redfort #ibnjuzayy
Originally published on Trazzler
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