Maldivians consider the introduction of Islam in …

Years: 1108 - 1251
Maldivians consider the introduction of Islam in 1153 as the cornerstone of their country's history.

Islam remains the state religion in the 1990s.

Except for a brief period of Portuguese occupation from 1558-73, Maldives also will remain independent.

Because the Muslim religion prohibits images portraying gods, local interest in ancient statues of the pre-Islamic period is not only slight but at times even hostile; villagers have been known to destroy such statues recently unearthed.

Western interest in the archaeological remains of early cultures on Maldives begins with the work of H.C.P. Bell, a British commissioner of the Ceylon Civil Service.

Bell is shipwrecked on the islands in 1879, and he returns several times to investigate ancient Buddhist ruins.

Thor Heyerdahl's research indicates that as early as 2000 BCE Maldives lay on the maritime trading routes of early Egyptian, Mesopotamian, and Indus Valley civilizations.

Heyerdahl believes that early sun-worshipping seafarers, called the Redin, first settled on the islands.

Even today, many mosques in Maldives face the sun and not Mecca, lending credence to this theory. Because building space and materials are scarce, successive cultures constructs their places of worship on the foundations of previous buildings.

Heyerdahl thus surmises that these sun-facing mosques were built on the ancient foundations of the Redin culture temples.

Locations
Subjects
Regions
Subregions

Related Events

Filter results