History of the Moors of Spain
Produced by Al Haines
HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS,
329 & 331 PEARL STREET,
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1840 by
Harper & Brothers,
In the Clerk's Office of the Southern District of New York
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We are accustomed to look upon the followers of the Arabian Prophet as little better than barbarians, remarkable chiefly for ignorance, cruelty, and a blind and persecuting spirit of fanaticism. As it regards the character of the Mohammedans at the present day, and, indeed, their moral and intellectual condition for the last two centuries, there is no great error in this opinion. But they are a degenerated race. There has been a period of great brilliancy in their history, when they were distinguished for their love of knowledge, and the successful cultivation of science and the arts; nor is it too much to say, that to them Christian Europe is indebted for the generous impulse which led to the revival of learning in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. Of the various nations of the great Moslem family, none were more {vi} renowned in arts, as well as arms, than the Moorish conquerors of Spain, whose history is contained in the following pages. The French original of this work has long enjoyed a deservedly high reputation; and the translation here offered is by an American lady, whose literary taste and acquirements well qualified her for the task.
A sketch of Mohammedan history, &c., from Rev. S. Greene's Life of Mohammed, has been appended at the close of the volume, to present to the reader a comprehensive view of that very remarkable people, of whom the Moors of Spain formed so distinguished a branch.
H. & B.
New York, October, 1840.
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Florian
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HISTORY
TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH ORIGINAL OF
TO WHICH IS ADDED,
NEW YORK
FIRST EPOCH
SECOND EPOCH.
THIRD EPOCH.
FOURTH EPOCH.
FIRST EPOCH.
SECOND EPOCH.
THIRD EPOCH.
FOURTH EPOCH.
GONZULO AND ZELINDA.
FIRST EPOCH.
SECOND EPOCH.
THIRD EPOCH.
FOURTH EPOCH.
THE LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND RELIGION OF THE ARABS;
THE END.