Search results for " Ibn Sab'in"
showing 4 items of 4 documents
Ibn Sab'in
2011
‘Abd al-Haqq ibn Sab‘ı¯n was born in the Ricote Valley, near Cieza, in the Kingdom of Murcia sometimes between the year 613 and 614 of the Hegira (1216 or 1217 CE). He studied Arabic, Andalusi literature, logic and philosophy, medicine, alchemy, white magic, and the ‘‘Science of Names and Letters.’’ At that time Ibn Khala¯s: was the qadi of Ceuta. He chose Ibn Sab‘ın to answer the philosophical questions sent by the emperor Frederick II of Hohenstaufen. It has been contended that Ibn Sab‘ı¯n was forced to leave his new hometown after answering the emperor’s arguments. What seems more likely, however, is that his Sufi ideas were not very popular with the political chief of the town. The time…
Le langage philosophique de l’Empereur Frédéric II dans le Questions Siciliennes de Ibn Sab'in et l’Aiguillon des disciples de Ja’aqov Anatoli
2009
Depuis quelques années, un groupe de recherche qui relie l’Officina di Studi Medievali et la faculté de Lettres et Philosophie de Palerme poursuit une recherche qui a pour but de remonter directement à la source du ferment intellectuel de la cour de Frédéric II, en traduisant les oeuvres dont on avait une idée approximative du contenu, et en commentant des textes jusque-là connus surtout par leur titre et leur contenu approximatif. Les deux premiers résultats visibles de ce travail sont les textes récemment publiés: al-Masa’il al-siqilliyya (Les questions siciliennes) de Ibn Sab‘in, philosophe et soufi musulman , et le Malmad ha-talmidim (L’aiguillon des disciples) de Ja’aqov Anatoli , phil…
Les questions siciliennes de Ibn Sab'in: nouvelles perspectives de recherche
2007
Al-Gaziratu al-Siqilliyya: tradizione e cultura della Sicilia arabo-islamica
2020
This piece examines the historical transition in the so-caled Jazirat al-Siqilliyya region from the Christian Bizantine tradition to the Islamic one, passing throught literary, geographical and philosophical masterpieces. The linguistic and cultural diversity will emerge from the texts of the Arab geographers, who visited that area in the XIth century, as well as from the production of philological and grammatical manuals developed to correct the Sicilian population speaking Arabic, the language of the new rulers. The work will also analyze the Norman era, witnessing both the dismissal of the Islamic conquerors who will seek refuge in Ifriqya, and the new spirit of cohabitation established …