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Thinkers Timeline

Key thinkers across history — grouped by era, colour-coded by discipline. Click any card to explore ideas, quotations, and classroom contexts.

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Medieval — 500 to 1500
Rumi 1207-1273 · Khorasan / Anatolia (Persian Sufi)
Jalal al-Din Muhammad Rumi (1207-1273), known throughout the Islamic world as Mawlana (our master) and in the West by the short name Rumi, was a Persian Sufi poet, theologian, and teacher whose work remains among the most widely read religious poetry in world literature. He was born in Balkh (in present-day Afghanistan), then part of the Khwarezmian Empire, into a family of religious scholars. His father Baha al-Din Walad was a respected teacher and preacher. The family fled westward before the Mongol invasions, travelling through Baghdad, Mecca, Damascus, and finally settling in Konya in the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum (in present-day Turkey) — the origin of the name by which he became known. Rumi received thorough training in Islamic law, theology, and the Persian poetic and philosophical tradition. By his thirties he was a respected scholar and teacher with his own students and a conventional scholarly career. In 1244 he met a wandering dervish named Shams al-Din of Tabriz. The encounter transformed him. For nearly three years the two were inseparable, engaged in intense spiritual conversation. When Shams disappeared — either killed by Rumi's jealous disciples or simply leaving — Rumi responded not with a return to conventional scholarship but with an outpouring of poetry. The Diwan-i Shams-i Tabrizi, a collection of over forty thousand verses of lyrical poetry dedicated to his lost friend, and the Masnavi-i Ma'navi, a six-book epic of some twenty-five thousand couplets often called the Persian Qur'an, are the main works of his later life. He also wrote prose works and letters. The Sufi order later founded by his followers — the Mevlevi, famous for the whirling dance that became a form of prayer — spread across the Ottoman world. He died in Konya in 1273 and was buried there; his tomb at the Green Mausoleum remains one of the most visited religious sites in the Islamic world. UNESCO declared 2007, his eight-hundredth birth anniversary, an international year of Rumi.
"Listen to this reed, how it complains, telling tales of separation."