Ali ibn Attiya ibn al-Zaqqaq (
Arabic: علي إبن عطيّة إبن الزقّاق البلنسي اللخمي) (c. 1100
Valencia - 1133 or 1134) was one of the great poets of
Al-Andalus during the reign of the
Almoravids.[1] He was a Muslim from
Banu Lakhm. His mother was the sister of fellow Andalusian poet,
Ibn Khafaja, and there is scholarly dispute regarding his father.[2] He was a disciple under philosopher Ibn Ṣîd de Badajoz.[3]
El sueño de Al-Zaqqâq by
Luis Delgado is a collection of the works of Ibn Al-Zaqqaq set to music.
Reception
Literary historian
Emilio García Gómez referred to al-Zaqqaq's descriptive poetry as "the dramatization of metaphor".[4]
References
^James T. Monroe, Hispano-Arabic poetry: a student anthology , p. 39
^Granja, F. Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs, 2012, “Ibn al-Zaḳḳāḳ”
^Jesús Rubiera Mata, María.
"Ibn al-Zaqqaq". Real Academia de la Historia. Retrieved May 9, 2020.
^García Gómez, Emilio. Ibn al-Zaqqaq: Poesías. Madrid, 1956
Further reading
Poesías / Ibn Al-Zaqqāq ; edición y traducción en verso [del árabe] de
Emilio García Gómez, Publicación Madrid : Instituto Hispano-Arabe de Cultura, 1986
External links
Ibn al-Zaqqaq al-Balansi, Trad. Ramon Dachs i Josep Ramon Gregori, Robaiyat d'Ibn al-Zaqqaq de València (examples of his work plus trl. in Spanish)
[1] (retrieved September 15, 2010)