28 responses

  1. Imperator
    July 17, 2012

    Tx for mentioning me πŸ™‚ I was actually looking in some bookstores in Bucharest for a book about Milescu, I could not find even in Romanian πŸ™
    To your list, I would add Zhang He http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zheng_He as a would-be blogger worth following πŸ™‚

    Reply

    • Anil Polat
      July 19, 2012

      Thank you for the suggestion πŸ™‚ As for Zhang, he almost made this list actually but is one I need to read up more on. Now even more excuse to do so πŸ™‚

      Reply

  2. Antoinette | love.antoinette
    July 17, 2012

    Unique Post!
    Marco Polo, Ibn Battuta, and Ferdinand Magellan especially! It’s fascinating how the Spanish language and Catholic religion spread like fire as he circumnavigated the globe!

    Reply

    • Anil Polat
      July 19, 2012

      You can almost follow his path by the languages and religions in present-day countries. I wonder how now, hundreds of years later, they would view their own travels.

      Reply

  3. Micki
    July 17, 2012

    I would love to read what the world’s oldest backpacker (Keith Wright from Australia) has to say. 95 years old and still going – the man’s an inspiration.

    Reply

  4. Heather – Ginger Nomads
    July 17, 2012

    Erik the Red would definitely be awesome. As would the Vikings who settled the east coast of Canada long before the other Europeans arrived around 1500.

    Reply

    • Anil Polat
      July 19, 2012

      Your comment makes me wonder how many other travelers in the Americans prior to European settlement whose stories we don’t know about. Lack of written language or anyone to carry the tales and motivations… or what the first “American” to see a Viking would have thought?

      Reply

  5. Ryan at Travel and Graphs
    July 17, 2012

    I would love to read the thoughts of adventurers from oral cultures, and get a glimpse inside their worldview.

    Reply

    • Anil Polat
      July 19, 2012

      I should really read ahead in the comments before I respond to a thread! Yes, exactly!

      Reply

  6. Christine
    July 17, 2012

    Thanks Anil, some good tips for reading there πŸ™‚
    I am currently reading a biography about Gertrude Bell, what an amazing woman! Amongst her many achievements including record breaking mountaineering, speaking fluent Arabic, translation of Sufi poetry she travelled the Middle East and Turkey extensively recording and photographing archeological sites and was behind the creation of modern day Iraq. A personal friend of T.E. Lawrence, she set off on expeditions alone with just her hired help, remarkable when you think that this was in the 19th century before the first world war. She wrote extensive notes, letters and journals and would have been the ultimate travel blogger had she had the technology we have now.

    Reply

    • Anil Polat
      July 19, 2012

      I just did a quick Google search on her and think even a 10th of her travels would make an incredible travel blog. I’m curious to read more about her, especially considering recent history along her path.

      Reply

  7. Ryan
    July 17, 2012

    Great post. Let’s add Alfred Russel Wallace to the list. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Russel_Wallace

    Reply

    • Anil Polat
      July 19, 2012

      Good selection!

      Reply

  8. Someday I’ll Be There – Mina
    July 18, 2012

    I would still love to find and read the book of Ibn Battuta “Rihla” (The journey)

    Sometimes I really wish I was born earlier in this century, I would have definitely been one of those hippies traveling around the world. Specially that it was much easier for Egyptians back at that time! πŸ˜€ Better currency, better passport! Damn I would have used this! It is a shame there are no known Egyptian travelers from that era!

    I think I’d also read the book The man who walked around the world…sounds interesting!

    Reply

    • Anil Polat
      July 19, 2012

      I wonder if there’s not a copy somehow in the Alexandria Library? Must be there!

      Reply

  9. Barbara
    July 18, 2012

    What an original post! I love it.

    Herodotus traveled as extensively as Ibn Battuta, only in Ancient Greek times. His work definitely reads a little like a blog too.

    Cheers!

    Reply

    • Anil Polat
      July 19, 2012

      In both cases it would be fun to see how close fantasy and fact were πŸ™‚

      Reply

  10. Jennifer Ondrejka
    July 18, 2012

    Don’t forget Gudridr Thorbjarndottir–she out-traveled Eric the Red, going from Norway to Greenland to Iceland to N. America (when it was still Vinland) and Europe. She bore two children and survived three husbands while traveling under the most difficult conditions.

    Reply

    • Anil Polat
      July 19, 2012

      Wow, quite a string of traveler degrees of separation among the Norse!

      Reply

  11. Violeta Matei
    July 19, 2012

    I like your idea very much! This gives me another idea: perhaps it would be worth writing the imaginary Magellan blog πŸ™‚

    Reply

    • Anil Polat
      July 20, 2012

      Now that would be challenging writing!

      Reply

  12. Linda
    July 20, 2012

    I love this post! I like to play this game too. I would love to have sailed with Captain James Cook (almost felt as if I had after reading Tony Horwitz’s “Blue Latitudes” – one of the few books which kept me up all night reading), and I would also give anything to have been a fly on the wall of Mark Twain’s journeys.

    Reply

    • Anil Polat
      July 23, 2012

      Wow, simply looking at this (Cook’s route) makes me want to read that blog:

      …and Twain’s Twitter to go with the travel blog, a great combination.

      Reply

      • Linda
        July 23, 2012

        In “Blue Latitudes” Tony Horwitz follows his route, and his research is impeccable so you get two journeys for the price of one! Cook’s and Horwitz’s. Apologies for sounding like an ad for the book, but it honestly is one of my favorites of all time!

        Reply

      • Anil Polat
        July 24, 2012

        No need to apologize at all, I love hearing good book recommendations! It’s perfect and I’ll add it to my long list of books to read now πŸ™‚

        Reply

  13. Sophie
    August 2, 2012

    Great idea for a blog post πŸ™‚ Very unique! Hmmm, I wish they had blogs too. Hopefully one day you’ll be regarded as legendary as these guys and someone will have a blog post commending you in such high esteem too.

    Reply

    • Anil Polat
      August 2, 2012

      haha, though I do wonder in 100 years if this blog will be around in some form or another… interesting thought!

      Reply

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