Esther M. Zimmer Lederberg
El Abencerraje

The music is Morisco music, found on Iberian Garden, Vol. 1 by Altramar. The piece is Muwashshah: Mā li-l-muwallah, 1113-1198.

This music takes place at the beautiful gardens along the Guadalquiver, near Cordoba. This is during the "convivencia" under Alfonso X (El Sabio - The Wise), the time before Granda fell: when Christians, Moslems and Jews lived at peace with each other. Muwashshah are songs in poetic form, with instrumental interludes in the form of Ibn Bājja (Avempace): 1470-1520. This is Morisco art.
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Torquato Tasso
El Abencerraje
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"El Abencerraje" is a poem about honour, especially the special honour known as knightly chivalry between Catholic Iberian knights and Iberian Morisco knights. Very similar to "Gerusalemme liberata" by Torquato Tasso, or "Orlando Furioso" by Ludovico Aristo. All three poems concern the chivalry of Christian knights and Saracen knights.

Highly educated contemporary people continually emphasize this literature of Christian poetry, and these poems have been used in operas and music, as well. Not to doubt that such chivalry existed and was influential!

However, we must not forget that when the Moriscos were expelled from Spain, most of the Morisco men were murdered, most Morisco women were raped, the surviving men, women and children were enslaved and put in fetters for life, and all Morisco property stolen. This suggests (strongly) that this chivalry found in poems, music and opera, was not much more than propaganda: rhetoric to hide the ugly racism and religious intolerance found during the Holy Inquisition.

This category of propaganda was not a temporary or geographically isolated phenomena. At the roughly the same time (1609-1614) as the expulsion of the Spanish Moriscos, the German Peasant Rebellions (1524-1525) took place, but this time it was not Catholic tyranny, but Lutheran tyranny.

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