Voyage en Espagne d'un Ambassadeur Marocain (1690-1691) by Wazir al-Ghassani

(8 User reviews)   518
Wazir al-Ghassani, Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, -1708? Wazir al-Ghassani, Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, -1708?
French
Hey, I just finished this incredible book you have to check out. It's the travel diary of a Moroccan ambassador sent to Spain in 1690, right after the Spanish had expelled all the Muslims. Can you imagine? His name is al-Ghassani, and he's basically walking into the heart of a country that had just violently rejected his entire culture and religion. The book is his day-by-day account of what he sees. It's not a dry history; it's a personal story of navigating suspicion, finding unexpected kindness, and seeing the ghosts of the Islamic world still visible in Spanish architecture and customs. The real mystery is how he manages this mission at all. He's there on a diplomatic errand to ransom Muslim captives, but he's also a man documenting the ruins of his people's former home. It’s tense, it’s thoughtful, and it gives you a perspective on European history you've definitely never seen before. It feels less like reading a 330-year-old text and more like getting a secret postcard from a very sharp, observant friend in a deeply strange situation.
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In 1690, the Moroccan Sultan Moulay Ismail sent his ambassador, Muhammad al-Ghassani, on a sensitive mission to the court of King Charles II of Spain. The goal was practical: to negotiate the ransom and release of Muslim captives held by the Spanish. But the setting was charged with history. Just a century before, Spain had completed the Reconquista and expelled its Muslim population. Al-Ghassani was walking into a land that had systematically erased the visible presence of his faith and culture.

The Story

This book is al-Ghassani's personal travelogue. He documents his journey from the Moroccan coast, across the Strait of Gibraltar, and through the Spanish countryside to Madrid and back. He doesn't just list events; he paints pictures. He describes the landscapes, the cities, and the state of the roads. He notes the crumbling remnants of mosques turned into churches and listens to local legends about the 'Moors' who once lived there. The heart of the narrative is his time at the Spanish court. We see his diplomatic meetings, the elaborate ceremonies, and the constant undercurrent of political tension. He observes Spanish customs with a curious but critical eye, comparing everything from their food and fashion to their military tactics with what he knows back home.

Why You Should Read It

What makes this book so gripping is its intimate, ground-level view. This isn't a grand political history; it's the story of one man trying to do his job in a foreign and sometimes hostile land. Al-Ghassani comes across as witty, perceptive, and resilient. You feel his loneliness and his pride. He's fascinated by Spanish technology and architecture, but also shocked by what he sees as their social customs. Reading his observations flips the script on the usual European travel narrative. Here, Europe is the exotic, strange land being scrutinized. It completely changes how you think about cultural contact and power in this era.

Final Verdict

Perfect for anyone who loves real-life adventure stories, armchair travelers, and readers hungry for non-Western perspectives on history. If you enjoyed the personal detail of Samuel Pepys's diary or the cross-cultural observations in Marco Polo's travels, you'll love this. It’s a short, powerful reminder that the past was never just one story, and that even in times of great conflict, people were still people—observant, curious, and trying to make sense of each other.



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Michelle White
1 month ago

Recommended.

Amanda Williams
1 year ago

Citation worthy content.

Donna Ramirez
1 year ago

Very interesting perspective.

Andrew Lee
1 year ago

Clear and concise.

Andrew White
9 months ago

As someone who reads a lot, the content flows smoothly from one chapter to the next. Thanks for sharing this review.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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