Category
page 1Poets from al-Andalus
Avempace
Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn Yaḥya ibn aṣ-Ṣā’igh at-Tūjībī ibn Bājja (), known simply as Ibn Bajja () or his Latinized name Avempace (; – 1138), was an Arab polymath, whose writings include works regarding astronomy, physics, and music, as well as philosophy, medicine, botany, and poetry.
Al-Mu'tamid ibn Abbad
Last ruler of the taifa of Seville in Al-Andalus and poet (1040-1095) (r. c.1069-1091)
Wallada bint al-Mustakfi
Al-Andalus poet
Samuel ibn Naghrillah
Spanish poet, vizier, and general
Ibn al-Khatib
Andalusi polymath, poet and historian (1313–1374)
Ibn Zaydún
poet of al-Andalus. (1003-1071)
Lubna of Cordoba
Al-Ándalus slave and intellectual
Dunash ben Labrat
10th-century Moroccan Jewish poet and grammarian
Ibn Said al-Maghribi
Arab geographer, historian and poet (1213–1286)
Yusuf III, Sultan of Granada
Sultan of Granada from 1408 to 1417
Ibn ʿAbd Rabbih
Moorish writer
Ibn Quzman
Al-Andalus poet (1078–1160)
Ibn Khafājah
Moorish writer
Ibn al-Abbar
Moorish historian
Aisha bint Ahmad al-Qurtubiyya
Andalusian writer and poet
Ibn Hamdis
Medieval Arab poet
Ibn Ammar
Moorish writer

Ibn Sahl al-Andalusī
Moorish poet

Abu Ishap Es-Saheli Altouwaidjin
Abu Ishaq al-Sahili (; 1290 – 15 October 1346), also known as al-Tuwayjin (), was an Andalusi poet and fiqh scholar who became a favored member of the court of Mansa Musa, Emperor of Mali. He is the most renowned of the scholars from the wider Muslim world who emigrated to Mali in the aftermath of Mansa Musa's pilgrimage.
Ibn Bassam
Arab Andalusian historian and poet (1058–1147)
Hafsa bint al-Hajj al-Rukuniyya
Al-Andalus poet and teacher
Qasmuna
Qasmūna bint Ismāʿil (; ), sometimes called Xemone, was an Iberian Jewish poet. She is the only female Arabic-language Jewish poet attested from al-Andalus, and, along with Sarah of Yemen and the anonymous wife of Dunash ben Labrat, one of few known female Jewish poets throughout the Middle Ages.
Ibn Amira
Andalucian Writer and Scholar
Abd al-Majid ibn Abdun
Poet from Al-Andalus
Ibn Darraj al-Qastalli
Andalusi poet of Berber origin (958–1030)
Nazhun al-Garnatiya bint al-Qulai’iya
Al-Andalus poet
Al-Rumaikiyya
'''E'etemad al-Rumaikiyya''' () was an Andalusian poet, consort of Emir Al-Mu'tamid of Seville. She is believed to have been born between 1045 and 1047.
Maria Alphaizuli
11th-century poet
Ibn al-Barraq
Andalusian Islamic scholar and poet
Buthaina bint al-Mu'tamid ibn Abbad
11th-century poet of Al-Andalus

Ibn Abi al-Khisal
Fakih, writer, historian, poet and minister of Andalusia, nicknamed the two ministries.
Ibn Zamrak
Andalusian poet
Ḥamda bint Ziyād
Al-Andalus poet
Muhja bint al-Tayyani
Andalusian poet
Yaḥyā Ibn-Ḥakam al-Ġazāl
Abū Zakariyyāʾ Yaḥyā ibn Ḥakam al-Bakrī al-Jayyānī ( 790–864), nicknamed al-Ghazāl ('the gazelle'), was an Andalusi Arab poet and diplomat. He undertook two important missions for the Emirate of Córdoba, the first to the Byzantine Empire in 840 and the second to the Vikings in 845.
Ibn Gharsiya
Muwallad poet and katib in the taifa court of Denia
Ibn al-Zaqqaq
poet
Umm al-Kirām
poet and princess from Al-Andalous
Al-Tutili
Abu ’l-ʿAbbās (or Abū Dj̲aʿfar) Aḥmad ibn ʿAbd Allāh ibn Hurayra al-ʿUtbī (or al-Kaysī) () (died 1126), nicknamed al-Aʿmā al-Tuṭīlī or the Blind Poet of Tudela, was an Andalusian Arab poet who composed in Arabic. Although born in Tudela, he was raised in Seville, where he gained talent in poetry. He later lived in Murcia. He died young.
Ibn Juzayy
Andalusian Muslim scholar and poet (c.1294–1340)
Al-Gassaniyya
Al-Gassaniyya () was an Andalusian adība (woman of letters) and poet from Bayyāna, present-day Pechina, Almería, Spain.
Isaac ibn Ezra
Spanish poet