Medieval Empires and the Culture of Competition: Literary Duels at Islamic and Christian Courts

Medieval Empires and the Culture of Competition: Literary Duels at Islamic and Christian Courts
In the West these days, poetry rarely has a political flavor. But in the Middle Ages, in both Europe and the Middle East, literary compositions often packed a powerful punch that influenced rulers and their administrators. This study explores the social and political impact of court literature, most of it poetry, in Islamic and Christian imperial leadership circles from about 950–1350. Writings of key individuals—poets, secretaries, even leaders themselves—played an important role in encouraging competition (and ultimately cohesion) in these courts at times of political or military upheaval. The author focuses on literary contests in later Abbasid Iraq under the Buyid Persian viziers, in the Levant under the legendary Kurdish sultan, Saladin, and in 13th-century Spain under King Alfonso X of Castile. He also examines the literary creation in Spain and Italy of a fictional Saladin who interacts with European knights and rulers, describing this imaginary character as a “defused threat” who provides a model of righteousness to inspire ethical conduct among European nobles and royals. Clearly Europeans found much to admire in the actual Saladin, who trounced the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem but showed great generosity and fairness to his enemies.
 
Medieval Empires and the Culture of Competition: Literary Duels at Islamic and Christian Courts
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