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About the Author
Ibn Arabi was born in Murcia on Monday the 17th of Ramadan of the year 560 AH, that is the 26th of July of the year 1165 AD. In 568/1172 he moved to Seville where he lived for twenty years during which he traveled to Morocco and Tunisia several times, and stayed there for intermittent periods, and then after that he traveled to the East for the Hajj in the year 598/1201 never to return to Andalusia.
In the East he lived in Egypt briefly and then went to Palestine heading to Mecca where he devoted himself to worship and teaching at the Grand Mosque the place where received the secrets and wisdom he deposited in his well-known book of the Meccan Revelations. Then he went to Iraq and entered Baghdad and Mosul and met their men, and then travelled north to Anatolia and Turkey where he dwelt for many years and had a high status with king Kaykaus. After that, the Sheikh took numerous trips between Iraq, Egypt, Syria and Palestine until he settled in Damascus in the year 620/1223 and he stayed there until he passed away in the night of the 22nd of the month of Rabîă the second of the year 638 AH, that is the 9th of November of the year 1240 AD.
Ibn Arabi was both radically original and remarkably prolific author, more than four hundred genuine books can be listed under his name and more than a thousand titles have been attributed to him. His books vary in length between short treatises and long books such as the Futûħât which is contained in thirty seven volumes. He was known in his lifetime for his devoutness to worship, asceticism, and generosity; wherever he goes he had many faithful friends and students attending his councils, and he was a close friend to the Ayyubi kings in Aleppo and Damascus and also to the Turkish king Kaykaus. After his death he became known first as ash-Shaykh al-Kabîr (the Great Master) then ash-Shaykh al-Àkbar (the Greatest Master).
About the Author
Ibn Arabi was born in Murcia on Monday the 17th of Ramadan of the year 560 AH, that is the 26th of July of the year 1165 AD. In 568/1172 he moved to Seville where he lived for twenty years during which he traveled to Morocco and Tunisia several times, and stayed there for intermittent periods, and then after that he traveled to the East for the Hajj in the year 598/1201 never to return to Andalusia.
In the East he lived in Egypt briefly and then went to Palestine heading to Mecca where he devoted himself to worship and teaching at the Grand Mosque the place where received the secrets and wisdom he deposited in his well-known book of the Meccan Revelations. Then he went to Iraq and entered Baghdad and Mosul and met their men, and then travelled north to Anatolia and Turkey where he dwelt for many years and had a high status with king Kaykaus. After that, the Sheikh took numerous trips between Iraq, Egypt, Syria and Palestine until he settled in Damascus in the year 620/1223 and he stayed there until he passed away in the night of the 22nd of the month of Rabîă the second of the year 638 AH, that is the 9th of November of the year 1240 AD.
Ibn Arabi was both radically original and remarkably prolific author, more than four hundred genuine books can be listed under his name and more than a thousand titles have been attributed to him. His books vary in length between short treatises and long books such as the Futûħât which is contained in thirty seven volumes. He was known in his lifetime for his devoutness to worship, asceticism, and generosity; wherever he goes he had many faithful friends and students attending his councils, and he was a close friend to the Ayyubi kings in Aleppo and Damascus and also to the Turkish king Kaykaus. After his death he became known first as ash-Shaykh al-Kabîr (the Great Master) then ash-Shaykh al-Àkbar (the Greatest Master).
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Scarica in formato PDF, TXT o leggi online su Scribd
About the Author
Ibn Arabi was born in Murcia on Monday the 17th of Ramadan of the year 560 AH, that is the 26th of July of the year 1165 AD. In 568/1172 he moved to Seville where he lived for twenty years during which he traveled to Morocco and Tunisia several times, and stayed there for intermittent periods, and then after that he traveled to the East for the Hajj in the year 598/1201 never to return to Andalusia.
In the East he lived in Egypt briefly and then went to Palestine heading to Mecca where he devoted himself to worship and teaching at the Grand Mosque the place where received the secrets and wisdom he deposited in his well-known book of the Meccan Revelations. Then he went to Iraq and entered Baghdad and Mosul and met their men, and then travelled north to Anatolia and Turkey where he dwelt for many years and had a high status with king Kaykaus. After that, the Sheikh took numerous trips between Iraq, Egypt, Syria and Palestine until he settled in Damascus in the year 620/1223 and he stayed there until he passed away in the night of the 22nd of the month of Rabîă the second of the year 638 AH, that is the 9th of November of the year 1240 AD.
Ibn Arabi was both radically original and remarkably prolific author, more than four hundred genuine books can be listed under his name and more than a thousand titles have been attributed to him. His books vary in length between short treatises and long books such as the Futûħât which is contained in thirty seven volumes. He was known in his lifetime for his devoutness to worship, asceticism, and generosity; wherever he goes he had many faithful friends and students attending his councils, and he was a close friend to the Ayyubi kings in Aleppo and Damascus and also to the Turkish king Kaykaus. After his death he became known first as ash-Shaykh al-Kabîr (the Great Master) then ash-Shaykh al-Àkbar (the Greatest Master).
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Formati disponibili
Scarica in formato PDF, TXT o leggi online su Scribd