Category
page 1Literature of al-Andalus

Picatrix
thumb|Title of a 1612 Ghayat al-Hakim manuscript (Istanbul, Hagia Sophia 2443).
Picatrix () is a 400-page Arabic book of magic and astrology, which most scholars assume was originally written in the middle of the 11th century, though an argument for composition in the first half of the 10th century has been made. The work was translated into Spanish and then into Latin during the 13th century, at which time it got the Latin title Picatrix. The title Picatrix is also sometimes used to refer to the book's author.
Toledo School of Translators
group of translators of philosophical and scientific works from Classical Arabic
zajal
Zajal () is a traditional form of oral strophic poetry declaimed in a colloquial dialect. The earliest recorded zajal poet was Ibn Quzman of al-Andalus who lived from 1078 to 1160. Most scholars see the Andalusi Arabic zajal, the stress-syllable versification of which differs significantly from the quantitative meter of classical Arabic poetry, as a form of expression adapted from Romance languages' popular poetry traditions into Arabic—first at the folkloric level and then by lettered poets such as Ibn Quzman.
Hadith Bayad wa Riyad
13th-century Arabic love story
Lamma Bada Yatathanna
poem
Al-ʿIqd al-Farīd
book by Ibn Abd Rabbih
Biblioteca de al-Andalus
spanish-language encyclopedia about Islamic Iberia
Ritha' al-Andalus
poem written by Salih ben Sharif al-Rundi