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Ibn Bajja

Ibn Bajja

1085 CE1139 CE · Zaragoza (Saragossa)

Ibn Bajja — Latinized as Avempace, fully Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Yahya ibn al-Sa'igh ("son of the goldsmith") — was the earliest major philosopher of the Aristotelian (Peripatetic) tradition in the Muslim West. He was born in Saragossa (Zaragoza), then capital of the Banu Hud taifa kingdom; sources place his birth "some years before" 1085, and the exact year is disputed. Beyond philosophy he was a noted physician, astronomer, mathematician, poet and musician.

When the Almoravids took Saragossa around 1110, Ibn Bajja entered their service. He is attested as vizier (chief minister) to the Almoravid governor Ibn Tifilwit, for whom he composed panegyric verse. After Saragossa fell to the Christian king Alfonso the Battler in 1118, his life became, in the words of one tradition, a long and unsettled pilgrimage across al-Andalus and North Africa. The sources report that he first sought shelter at Xativa (Jativa), and name Almeria, Granada and (less certainly) Seville among his later stops, where the scholar Ibn al-Imam was his disciple. He was reportedly imprisoned more than once.

Philosophically he absorbed and extended al-Farabi, writing on logic, the soul and human perfection; his best-known work, the Tadbir al-mutawahhid (Governance of the Solitary), argues how a thinking individual can flourish within an imperfect society. He died in Ramadan 533 AH / 1139 CE in Fez. Several sources report he was poisoned — a story naming an eggplant and a rival physician's servant — but this remains a reported tradition, not an established fact.

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Stop 1 of 41118Born; Early Career; Vizier

Zaragoza (Saragossa)Aragon (Spain)

What they did here

Born in Saragossa (Zaragoza), then capital of the Banu Hud taifa; the exact birth year is disputed (sources say he was born 'some years before' 1085). Under the Almoravids who took the city c.1110, he served as vizier to the governor Ibn Tifilwit and wrote panegyrics for him. Saragossa fell to Alfonso the Battler in 1118.

About Zaragoza (Saragossa)

Zaragoza (Arabic Saraqusta), on the Ebro in the Aragon region of northeastern Spain, was the capital of the Upper March of al-Andalus and of an independent taifa kingdom in the 11th century, a centre of philosophy and science. The philosopher Ibn Bajja (Avempace, d. 1138) was born and educated there before its conquest by Christian Aragon in 1118.

Across the traditions, in Zaragoza (Saragossa) at the same time

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In the same place & time

Sages whose lives overlapped with Ibn Bajja’s in the same cities, drawn from their recorded journeys.

The world in their lifetime

Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Ibn Bajja’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.

Works(1)