{"product_id":"leo-africanus-al-hassam-bid-mahammad-al-wazzan-al-zaygati","title":"LEO AFRICANUS [AL-HASSAM BID MAHAMMAD AL-WAZZAN AL ZAYGATI]","description":"\u003cp\u003eThe important first edition in English, translated by John Pory, of this seminal classic of African topography and ethnography. Leo Africanus was an early C16 traveller who recorded in great detail the life of many remote North African kingdoms. He was born in Granada but in the 1490s his family moved to Fez in Morocco where Leo ultimately entered the service of the Sultan who sent him on commercial and diplomatic missions across northern and western Africa. In 1518 he was returning by sea from Istanbul and was captured, perhaps by Knights of Malta, who took him to Rome. There, under the patronage of Pope Leo IX he composed the present description of Africa, first published in Italian in 1550. It was a bestseller, put Leo at the centre of Roman intellectual life and remained one of Europe s principal sources of knowledge of the Arab-African world for the next 400 years. It was translated into English in 1600 by John Pory. Pory s letter  To the Reader  tells the fascinating story of Leo s life   a tale of complex interaction between Europe and Africa, Islam and Christianity ... This book was important in that it was written by a Moorish man and well regarded by scholars. However Pory is aware that some readers at this time might distrust the writings of a  More  and a  Mahumetan  (or Muslim), and he reassures them of Leo s sophistication: his  Parentage, Witte, Education, Learning, Emploiments, Travels, and his conversion to Christianitie .  (BL). \u003cbr\u003e\n It is very probable that Shakespeare was influenced by this work in his portrayal of Othello.  Pory s account of Leo s marvellous escape from  so manie thousands of imminent dangers  might remind us of Othello s tale of  hair-breadth escapes i  th  immanent deadly breach . Like Leo, Othello tells of being  sold to slavery  and we later learn that Othello was also a former Muslim, now baptised as a Christian. In his description of African people, Leo takes pains to give a balanced perspective, though it seems nonetheless stereotyped and prejudiced. Celebrating their  vertues , he says Africans are  Most honest people   destitute of fraud and guile . But  no nation in the world is so subject to jealousie  (p. 40). In the unpleasant description of their  vices , he says they are  very proud and high-minded, and woonderfully addicted unto wrath . They are also  so credulous that they beleeve matters impossible which are told to them  (p. 41) and promiscuous in wooing  divers maides  before settling on a wife (pp.41 42). It is hard not see these qualities reflected in Shakespeare s Othello, at least as Iago describes him. Exploiting the stereotypes that define the Moor in Venice, Iago talks of the  free and open nature  that makes Othello think  men honest  when they only  seem so . He tells Roderigo he suspects  the lusty Moor  of sleeping with Emilia, and plans to  put him into jealousy so strong  that his anger will cloud his judgement. Pory s English translation (1600) was printed in the same year as the Moroccan ambassador s visit to London to negotiate a military alliance between English and African forces, with the hope of conquering Spain. In his letter to Sir Robert Cecil, Elizabeth I s secretary, Pory exploits this opportunity to market the book as particularly current, saying  At this time especially I thought [it] would proove the more acceptable .   (BL). \u003cbr\u003e\n A handsome copy of this rare and influential first English edition.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"LEO AFRICANUS [AL-HASSAM BID MAHAMMAD AL-WAZZAN AL ZAYGATI]","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":57816166629711,"sku":"K178","price":25000.0,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/1016\/2425\/0703\/files\/IMG_20190815_124843.jpg?v=1781794869","url":"https:\/\/sokol-books-ltd.myshopify.com\/products\/leo-africanus-al-hassam-bid-mahammad-al-wazzan-al-zaygati","provider":"Sokol Books Ltd","version":"1.0","type":"link"}