Legata app icon: a golden astrolabe on a dark field

A pocket encyclopedia for iPhone and iPad

Meet the 150+ historical figures who shaped twelve centuries of civilization

From the scholars of Baghdad's House of Wisdom to the poets of Al-Andalus, from Ottoman sultans to Mughal emperors — Legata is a beautifully designed reference atlas built for calm, focused reading. No ads. No feed. No chatbot.

Free to start — explore your first three figures with no account and no commitment.

Great lives deserve better than scattered tabs

The problem

Try reading about Ibn Sina, Saladin, or Mansa Musa online and you end up bouncing between ad-heavy pages, half-sourced summaries, and quiz apps that gamify names without context. The connections that make history meaningful — who taught whom, which cities shaped which minds — get lost.

The Legata approach

Legata gathers 150+ meticulously researched figures into one quiet, well-typeset atlas. Every biography carries academic source citations. Relationship-first navigation reveals teacher–student, family, patron, and contemporary links, so you can follow the Silk Road of ideas from Central Asia to Andalusia.

What you will find inside

Everything below comes straight from the atlas itself — scientists, philosophers, military leaders, poets, mystics, architects, and reformers across three continents.

150+

Researched figures

Each biography includes a concise summary, a deeper narrative read, key accomplishments, notable quotes, and academic source citations.

12

Historical eras

Browse by era — from the Golden Age of Science and Philosophy and Al-Andalus to the Ottoman Empire, the Mughal Empire, and Modern Reformers.

10

Curated collections

Themed starting points such as Architects of Discovery, Women Who Shaped History, The Travelers, Healers and Physicians, and The Mystics.

29

Historic cities

Explore figures through Baghdad, Cordoba, Damascus, Cairo, Istanbul, Samarkand, Timbuktu, and more — each city page shows every connected figure.

Relationship-first navigation

See who taught whom and who influenced whom through teacher–student, family, patron, and contemporary links across eras and regions.

Aa

Alias-aware search

Search "Averroes" to find Ibn Rushd, or "Saladin" to find Salahuddin al-Ayyubi. Handles kunya, Latin names, and common spellings.

Inside every biography

Legata is not a quiz app, not a social feed, and not an AI chatbot. It is a reference atlas designed for focused reading: serif headlines, clean sans-serif body text, and full dark and light mode support. No ads, no distractions, no interruptions.

Every figure — from Al-Khwarizmi and Omar Khayyam to Rumi and Mansa Musa — is presented with scholarly rigor and narrative depth, so a five-minute skim and an evening deep-read are both rewarding.

Twelve eras. Twenty-nine cities. One connected story.

History is easier to hold onto when it has a shape. Legata organizes its figures by the eras they defined and the cities that shaped them.

Browse by era

  • Golden Age of Science & Philosophy
  • Al-Andalus
  • Crusades & Ayyubid Period
  • Mamluk Sultanate
  • The Seljuk World
  • Ottoman Empire
  • Mughal Empire
  • Africa
  • Cross-Era Thinkers & Poets
  • Central Asia & the Timurids
  • Southeast Asia
  • Modern Reformers

Travel by city

  • Baghdad
  • Cordoba
  • Damascus
  • Cairo
  • Istanbul
  • Jerusalem
  • Samarkand
  • Granada
  • Fez
  • Bukhara
  • Isfahan
  • Delhi
  • Timbuktu
  • + 16 more

How Legata helps you

Curious readers

Start with a curated collection — The Travelers, The Mystics, Builders of Beauty — and let relationship links pull you deeper, one figure at a time.

Students & lifelong learners

Concise summaries give you the exam-ready version; deeper narrative reads and source citations give you material you can actually trust and follow up on.

Heritage explorers

Trace the scholars, poets, and rulers behind names you grew up hearing — with transliteration-friendly search that meets you at whatever spelling you know.

Travelers

Visiting Istanbul, Granada, or Fez? Open the city page and see every connected figure and the city's historical significance before you go.

Free to start

Explore your first three figures completely free — no account, no commitment. To unlock the full atlas of 150+ figures across all eras and collections, choose weekly, yearly, or one-time lifetime access. All subscription details are available within the app.

Frequently asked questions