The Sailing Scribe: Mansur al-Khariji and the Oceanic Worlds of the Gulf
Studies 12 June, 2025

The Sailing Scribe: Mansur al-Khariji and the Oceanic Worlds of the Gulf

Fahad Ahmad Bishara

​Associate Professor of History and of Gulf and Arabian Peninsula Studies at the University of Virginia, United States.

acrobat Icon How did Gulf nakhodas [dhow captains] produce the routes they traversed around the Indian Ocean? This article draws on the writings of one Kuwaiti nakhoda, Mansur bin Ibrahim al-Khariji (1879-1954) to explore the intellectual labour that made movement and circulation in the Gulf and Indian Ocean possible. His manuscript, which he composed after a long sailing career, includes notes on navigation, transactions, and the political geographies he crossed, together with stanzas of poetry. His notes shed light on the workings of a world in motion; of institutions and ideas that animated circulation around the Gulf and Indian Ocean. Through engagement with al-Khariji’s writings, this article offers reflections on a nautical world that has been pushed to the margins of a terrestrially moored historiography.


* This Article  was published in the 18th issue of AlMuntaqa, a peer-reviewed academic journal for the social sciences and humanities. You can read the full paper here.