The Western Mediterranean Kingdoms_ The Struggle for Dominion, 1200-1500

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THE WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN KINGDOM 1200-I'iOO

but he argued that their religions were inadequate because
they were incomplete; but even to recognise in them partial
truth was an unusual concession in late medieval Europe.
Llull's novels-such as Blanquerna, written in Montpellier in
1283-85, or Felix, written while on one of his visits to Paris



  • are structured around a popularised version of the 'art' .:^111
    And the aim of such books was not simply to increase Chris-
    tian devotion among his Christian readers, but to prompt
    them to support his campaign for the conversion of Muslims
    and Jews. Simply by lending their support, Christians could
    earn merit for themselves. It was a matter of bitter disappoint-
    ment that his attempts to secure the aid of sundry popes
    and monarchs, including the rulers of France, Naples and
    Cyprus, never seemed to secure long term results. His own
    language school, founded for Franciscan missionaries with
    papal approval around 1276, was based at Miramar in the
    north-west of Majorca, and benefited from the patronage of
    Llull's old friend King James II of Majorca. But it fell victim
    to the chaos of the War of the Vespers. Later, the Council of
    Vienne took further his attempts to stimulate the teaching of
    oriental languages in the existing universities: there was a
    brief upsurge in the study of Hebrew at Oxford, for instance.
    But long-term results were few.
    His own expeditions into north Mrica, in the hope of ex-
    plaining his 'art' and converting large numbers of Muslims
    were not successful, either. His books written in Arabic do
    not survive; perhaps that very fact is significant of their lack
    of impact, though a book-within-a-book written in Catalan,
    the Book of the Lover and the Beloved, reveals strong influence
    from the Sufi mystical tradition within Islam.^11 Llull's aim
    while he was in Tunis (in 1293) was to engage in direct dis-
    cussion with the Muslim imams, tempting them into verbal
    combat with the suggestion that he would become a Muslim
    if they could convince him of the truth of Islam. But the only
    result was that he was expelled and forbidden to return. In
    Bougie, in 1307, aged seventy-five, he stood up in the main
    square, shouting out a denunciation of Muhammad in the
    30. Ramon Llull, Blanquema (London, 1923); Felix may he found in
    Bonner, Select Works, vol. 2, pp. 64 7-1105.
    31. Text in Blanquerna, pp. 411-68; a new translation by E. Bonner is in
    A. Bonner, Doctor Illuminatus, pp. 173-237; also trans!. M.D. Johnston,
    The Book of the !~over and the BP!oved (Warminster /Bristol, 1995).

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