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Excerpt from the chapter about Villena in Al-Mugrib fī ḥulā al-Magrib, in which the poet Abu al-Hasan Rashid ibn Sulayman is mentioned. Ali ibn Musa ibn Said al-Maghribi (Arabic: علي بن موسى المغربي بن سعيد) (1213-1286)[1] was a famous geographer, historian and the most important collector of poetry from al-Andalus in the 12th and 13th centuries. Ibn Said was born at Alcalá la Real near Granada, grew up in Marrakesh, studied in Sevilla and stayed in Tunis, Alexandria, Cairo, Jerusalem and Aleppo. He died in Tunis or Aleppo in 1275 or 1286. Ibn Said al-Maghribi was an indefatigable traveller, profoundly interested in geography. In 1250 he writes Kitab Bast al-Ard. His Kitab al-Jag-Ara fiya embodies the experience of his extensive travels in the Muslim world and the shores of the Indian Ocean. He also gives an account of parts of northern Europe including Iceland. Ibn Said also visited Armenia and was at the Court of Hulagu from 1256 to 1265. His Rayat al-mubarrizin waghayat al-mumayyizin (Banners of the Champions, also translated as Pennants of the Champions), published in 1243, is his best known anthology of poetry. He also wrote a history of the region Book of the Maghrib.[2] In the Pennants of the Champions, poetry is arranged according to home and occupation of the writer. Lyrics come from all over the Andalusian world: Alcalá, Córdoba, Granada, Lisbon, Murcia, Saragossa, Seville, Toledo, and Valencia. Authors include bureaucrats, gentlemen, kings, ministers, and scholars; the book is evidence of how important love poetry was to the educated of al-Andalus. It is also one of the few historical remains of love between men from the period. An excerpt from a poem of the Pennants:
Poetry such as this would have a huge influence on the chivalric ideas of medieval Europe, although European chivalry was very strictly limited to love between men and women. [edit] Notes
[edit] References
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