Saladin was virtually forgotten by Muslim history until recently. His name was kept alive by European historians and novelists, who saw him as a heroic and honorable enemy in the Crusade stories. His appearance in popular adventure stories by the likes of Sir Walter Scott, made Muslims re-evaluate the long-forgotten Saladin in the nineteenth century, although they largely maintained the westernized, romantic, and largely fictitious character of western literature, including keeping him as an Arab hero, even though he was a Kurd. In the twentieth century, he has become a huge historical figure in Islam, mainly because of what his conquest of Jerusalem now represents for anti-Zionists.
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05-03-2025 alle ore 07:54