Question:

Read the given source carefully and answer the questions that follow:
A strange nation?
The travelogue of Abdur Razzaq written in the 1440s is an interesting mixture of emotions and perceptions. On the one hand, he did not appreciate what he saw in the port of Calicut (present-day Kozhikode) in Kerala, which was populated by “a people the likes of whom I had never imagined,” describing them as “a strange nation.” Later in his visit to India, he arrived in Mangalore and crossed the Western Ghats. Here he saw a temple that filled him with admiration: Within three leagues (about nine miles) of Mangalore, I saw an idol-house the likes of which is not to be found in all the world. It was a square, approximately ten yards a side, five yards in height, all covered with cast bronze, with four porticos. In the entrance portico was a statue in the likeness of a human being, full stature, made of gold. It had two red rubies for eyes, so cunningly made that you would say it could see. What craft and artisanship!
(31.1) Why did Abdur Razzaq call India a ‘strange nation’?

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Consider how travelers interpret unfamiliar cultures to understand their descriptions.
Updated On: Jan 29, 2025
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Solution and Explanation

Abdur Razzaq found the cultural practices, architecture, and people of India unfamiliar, which made him describe it as a "strange nation." The diversity in lifestyle and traditions were different from his native experiences.
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