Sirah Maps ◎
The Persian military engineer Salman al-Farsi suggested digging a trench ( khandaq ) across the exposed northern approach to Medina. A geological map of Medina explains why this was revolutionary: the city was naturally defended on all sides by lava fields ( harra ) except for a 500-meter gap in the north. The trench artificially extended the natural topography. The Qurayshi cavalry, masters of open-field warfare, were rendered useless. Sirah Maps show that the Battle of the Trench was not a miracle of divine intervention alone; it was a miracle of applied geospatial intelligence. Part IV: The Sacred Cartography of Pilgrimage The final layer of the Sirah Map is the ritual one. The Hajj and Umrah are re-enactments of prophetic geography. When the Prophet performed the Farewell Pilgrimage (632 CE), he was retracing the steps of Ibrahim (Abraham) and Hajar.
Introduction: The Problem with Linear Narrative For centuries, the study of the Sirah —the prophetic biography of Muhammad ibn Abdullah—has been dominated by a textual, chronological approach. Scholars like Ibn Ishaq, al-Tabari, and Ibn Hisham meticulously arranged events year by year: the Year of the Elephant, the first revelation, the Hijra, the Battles of Badr and Uhud, the Conquest of Mecca. This linear model is invaluable for historical sequencing, but it often obscures a more profound dimension of the prophetic mission: geography . sirah maps
Simultaneously, the tribal map was a fluid patchwork of diyar (homelands), water rights, and blood-feud territories. The Sirah is replete with spatial triggers: the sacrilegious murder during the Fijar wars, the alliances of Hilf al-Fudul , and the critical concept of jiwar (neighbourly protection). A Sirah Map that visualizes tribal boundaries explains why the Prophet, after the devastating year of grief (loss of Khadija and Abu Talib), sought refuge not just in any town, but in Ta’if—only to be rejected by its tribal elite. The map shows that Ta’if belonged to the rival Thaqif confederacy, a different political ecology. Spatial thinking transforms biographical events from personal tragedies into geopolitical realities. The Hijra (622 CE) is conventionally taught as a migration from Mecca to Yathrib. But a Sirah Map reveals it as an act of cartographic subversion . The Qurayshi cavalry, masters of open-field warfare, were