Ramon Llull

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Born Palma de Majorca, Kingdom of Majorca (now Spain)
Died Mediterranean Sea or Mallorca
Web Aaaaarg, Wikipedia, Using "Academia.edu" as base chain is not permitted during the annotation process., Open Library

Ramon Llull, T.O.S.F. (1232–1316; Anglicised Raymond Lully, Raymond Lull; in Latin Raimundus or Raymundus Lullus or Lullius) was a Majorcan writer and philosopher, logician and a Franciscan tertiary.

From the 1270s onwards Lullus worked on his Art (Ars): a philosophico-theological system which takes the basic concepts of the three monotheistic religions of its time and discusses them by means of rational discourse in order to convince Muslims (and Jews) of the truth of the Christian articles of faith. Revising his Art and extending it across all fields of human knowledge, Lullus attempted to create a universal science that later influence thinkers such as Nicholas of Cusa and Leibniz. He produced some 280 works in both Catalan and Latin.

Chronology

From Ramon Llull: From the Ars Magna to Artificial Intelligence, eds. Alexander Fidora and Carles Sierra, 2011, pp 139-140.

  • 1229: James I reconquers Mallorca from Muslim domination.
  • 1232: Birth of Ramon Llull in Palma de Mallorca.
  • 1257: Llull marries Blanca Picany, and enters the services of Prince James, son of James the Conqueror.
  • 1263: Llull’s “conversion to penitence” at the age of thirty: Llull decides to write the best book in the world against the errors of the unbelivers, to found monasteries in which the different languages necessary for mission might be taught and to dedicate his life to the service of Christ.
  • 1265: After a pilgrimage to the Marian shrine at Rocamadour, in southern France, and to Santiago de Compostela, Llull meets with Ramon de Penyafort in Barcelona, who advises him to return to Majorca and there, rather than in Paris, to devote himself to study and contemplation. With a Muslim slave Llull begins nine years of linguistic and intellectual training.
  • 1271-74: At the end of his nine years of study, Llull writes his first works, the Lògica d'Algatzell — a paraphrase of al-Ghazali's Maqasid al-falasifa, and the monumental Book of Contemplation.
  • 1274: Death of the slave who had taught Llull Arabic. Illumination on Mount Randa, first version of the Art, Llull's philosophico-theological system.
  • 1276: A Papal Bull confirms the foundation of the Monastery of Miramar, on Majorca, financed by James II, in which thirteen Franciscans study oriental languages and the Art.
  • 1283: In Montpellier, Llull writes the novel Blaquerna and elaborates upon his system in the Ars demonstrativa.
  • 1287: First visit to the Papal Court.
  • 1287-89: First visit to Paris.
  • 1292: In Rome, Llull (already 60 years old) writes his first work on the crusades.
  • 1293: So-called "psychological crisis" in Genoa followed by Llull's first journey to North Africa.
  • 1297-99: Second stay in Paris.
  • 1299: James II of Aragon gives persmission to Llull to preach in all the synagogues and mosques within his domains.
  • 1301-02: Journey to Cyprus, Lesser Armenia and possibly Jerusalem.
  • 1303: Llull writes his Logica nova in Genoa.
  • 1305: Llull begins the definitive formulation of his system, the Ars generalis ultima.
  • 1307: Second trip to North Africa (Bejaia), where Llull is imprisoned for six months and, finally, expelled. Shipwrecked near Pisa.
  • 1308: In Pisa Llull writes the Ars brevis, finishes the Ars generalis ultima, and re-writes the work begun in Bejaia and lost in the shipwreck, the Disputatio Raimundi christiani et Homeri saraceni.
  • 1309-11: Fourth and final stay in Paris, where Llull writes some thirty works, most of them directed against the Latin Averroists. In 1310, forty Masters and Bachelors of the University of Paris sign a document approving the Ars brevis. From Paris he travels to Vienne, recommeding to the Council of Vienne the foundation of language schools.
  • 1313-14: Visit to Sicily.
  • 1314-15: Third mission to North Africa (Tunis), where Llull dedicates works to the Sultan. His final works date from December 1315.
  • 1316: Around or before March he dies on board the ship taking him back from Tunis to Majorca or in Majorca itself. Llull must have been 84 years old. His remains are burried in the Franciscan Monastery in Palma.

Works

Major works

  • I.2 Book of Contemplation [1273–4 (?)].
  • II.A.1 Ars compendiosa inveniendi veritatem (ACIV) [ca. 1274, Majorca].
  • II.A.9 Book of the Gentile and the Three Wise Men [1274–6 (?)]. A Christian apology.
  • II.A.19 Blaquerna [1276–83, Montpellier]. A romantic novel.
    • II.A.19e Book of the Lover and the Beloved. A celebration of mystical love in the courtly tradition.
    • II.A.19f Art of contemplation.
  • II.B.1 Ars demonstrativa (AD) [c1283, Montpellier].
  • II.B.15 Felix or the Book of Wonders [1287–9, Paris].
    • II.B.15a Book of the Beasts.
  • III.23 Tree of Science [1295–6, Rome].
  • III.56 Logica nova (LN) [1303, Genova].
  • III.77 Ars brevis (AB) [1308, Pisa]. The companion work (imago) to the AGU, a summary of his philosophical system.
  • III.80 Ars generalis ultima (AGU) [1305–8, Lyon-Pisa]. Known as Ars magna.

Manuscripts

Modern translations

  • Selected Works of Ramón Llull, 2 vols., ed. & trans. Anthony Bonner, Princeton University Press, 1985, xxxix+1329 pp; abridged ed. as Doctor Illuminatus: A Ramon Llull Reader, ed. & trans. Anthony and Eve Bonner, Princeton University Press, 1994, 408 pp. (English) The 1994 edition includes Book of the Gentile and the Three Wise Men, the Ars brevis, The Book of the Lover and the Beloved, Book of the Beasts; as well as Bonner's "Historical Background and Life" at 1-44, "Llull's Thought" at 45-56, "Llull's Influence: The History of Lullism" at 57-71. [1] [2] Reviews: Walter W. Artus (Renaissance Quarterly, 1986), J.M. Sobré (Hispanic Review, 1986), John Dagenais (Speculum, 1987), S.G. Fernández-Corugedo (Mystics Quarterly, 1988), F. Domínguez (Journal of the History of Philosophy, 1988, DE).
  • Ars brevis, trans., intro. & ed. Alexander Fidora, Hamburg: Felix Meiner, 1999. (Latin)/(German)
  • Translations by Steven Abbott and Yanis Dambergs (English)

Literature

Journal

Books, book chapters and articles

  • Jocelyn N. Hillgarth, Ramon Lull and Lullism in Fourteenth-Century France, Oxford, 1971.
  • Frances Yates, "The Art of Ramon Lull: An Approach to it Through Lull's Theory of the Elements", Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 17 (1954), pp 115-173; repr. in Yates, Collected Essays, 1: Lull & Bruno, Routledge, 1982.
  • Martin Gardner, "The Ars Magna of Ramon Lull", in Gardner, Logic Machines and Diagrams, McGraw-Hill, 1958, pp 1-27; 2nd ed., intro. Donald Michie, University of Chicago Press, 1982, xiv+165 pp.
  • Frances Yates, "Ramon Lull and John Scotus Erigena", Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 23 (1960), pp 1-44; repr. in Yates, Collected Essays, 1: Lull & Bruno, Routledge, 1982.
  • Frances Yates, "Lull and Lullism", in Yates, Collected Essays, 2: Renaissance and Reform: The Italian Contribution, London, 1983.
  • Amador Vega, Ramon Llull y el secreto de la vida, Madrid: Siruela, 2002. (Spanish)
  • Charles H. Lohr, "Nicolaus Cusanus and Ramon Lull: A Comparison of Three Texts on Human Knowledge", Traditio 59 (2004), pp 229-315.
  • Florian Cramer, "Ramon Llull and Lullism", in Cramer, Words Made Flesh: Code, Culture, Imagination, Rotterdam: Piet Zwart Institute, 2005, pp 36-41.
  • Anthony Bonner, The Art and Logic of Ramon Llull: A User's Guide, Brill, 2007.
  • Alexander Fidora, Josep E. Rubio, Raimundus Lullus: An Introduction to His Life, Works and Thought, Turnhout: Brepols, 2008, xiv+564 pp. [3] Review: Robert D. Hughes (Faventia), M.M. Tischler (Historische Theologie, DE).
  • Alexander Fidora, Carles Sierra (eds.), Ramon Llull: From the Ars Magna to Artificial Intelligence, Barcelona: Artificial Intelligence Research Institute, 2011, 146 pp.
  • Florian Cramer, "Ramón Llulls ars", ch. 3.2, and "Lullische principia", ch. 4.4 in Cramer, Exe.cut(up)able statements: Poetische Kalküle und Phantasmen des selbstausführenden Texts, Munich: Fink, 2011, pp 49-54 and 102-119. (German)

Bibliography

Centres, Resources

Links