Did You Know? Timbuktu once had a library that housed over 1 million manuscripts?

Far from being a myth, Timbuktu — located in present-day Mali — was once the intellectual and spiritual heart of Africa, especially during the height of the Mali and Songhai Empires (13th–16th centuries).
The libraries of Timbuktu contained over 1 million handwritten manuscripts, covering subjects like:
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Mathematics & Geometry
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Astronomy
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Law & Ethics
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Medicine
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Geography & Trade
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Religion, Poetry, and Philosophy
Many of these works were written in Arabic, Ajami (African languages written with Arabic script), and even local African languages. Scholars from across North Africa, the Middle East, and even Europe traveled to Timbuktu to study, teach, and exchange ideas.
These weren’t just religious texts — they were evidence of a literate, scholarly African society engaging with science, logic, and complex intellectual traditions centuries before many Western nations established universities.
Despite colonial erasure and extremist threats in modern times, efforts are underway to preserve and digitize these priceless manuscripts.
Quote for Thought
“Timbuktu wasn’t a myth — it was a monument to African genius, written in ink and bound by time.”
— Forgotten Libraries of the Desert
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