ABSTRACT

This article explores fragmented historical references on African itinerants in South Asia between the twelfth and fifteenth centuries who worked in the coastal regions as Islamic scholars, jurists, benefactors, and leaders. Utilizing epigraphic, architectural, and textual sources on a few such personalities from Malabar and Bengal, I take a preliminary step towards debunking the exclusive association of Africans in South Asia with slavery and military labor. These historical figures are not anomalies, rather they are representatives of a larger intellectual, legal, and religious network that fared between Asia and Africa. Although they are evident in historical sources, they have been systematically forgotten in contemporary memories and scholarship, while this forgetfulness befits the prevalent stereotyping tendencies of Africa and Africans in South Asia.