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Wallada by ZinnDandelion

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Wallada was an Andalusian Umayyan princess who, after her father’s death (the Caleiph/king) who died without an heir when she was a teenager, inherited his entire fortune and used it to open a palace and literary hall in Córdoba where she taught art and poetry to women of all classes. Her literary councils were so famous, most of the great poets and intellectuals of the time visited them regularly.
Awesome things she also did:
She didn’t want to wear the hijab, so she didn’t which was a controversial move from a woman of her class (her father was the Caliph). Instead, she wore transparent tunics and embroidered her verses on the trim of her clothing.
“A custom of the time was for poets to compete in finishing incomplete poems. Wallada gained recognition for her skill, particularly as a woman in what was almost entirely a male competition.”
Fell in love with another poet, Ibn Zaydún, whose family’s connections were with rivals of her own clan, so they had to keep it a secret. They exchanged poetry verses until he was banished out of the city later due to unrelated political conflicts.
She died unmarried after a full life of controversy and bringing hell down on anyone who dared talk about her, especially famous religious figures of the time.
And separation going on and on and on …
The Princess Wallada Bint Al-Mustakfi (1011 - 1091), to her lover, a poet ibn Zaydun (1003 - 1071) in “Andalusian Poems", translated by Christopher Middleton and Leticia Garza-Falcón
If I committed a sin unintentionally, you have punished me unjustly with punishment more severe than that imposed on a deliberate sinner.
Wallada (1011 - 1091) in: “Abundance from the Desert. Classical Arabic Poetry” by Raymond Farrin
Must separation mean we have no way to meet ? Ay ! Lovers all moan about their troubles. For me it is a winter not a try sting time, Crouching over the hot coals of desire.
The Princess Wallada Bint Al-Mustakfi (1011 - 1091), to her lover, a poet ibn Zaydun (1003 - 1071) in “Andalusian Poems", translated by Christopher Middleton and Leticia Garza-Falcón

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The nickname they give you is Number Six and it will stick to you until you die because you are a pansy, a bugger a fornicator a cuckold, a swine and a thief. If a phallus could become a palm tree, you would turn into a woodpecker.
The Princess Wallada (1011 - 1091), to her lover, a poet ibn Zaydun (1003 - 1071), after discovering him with a man
Wait for darkness, and then visit me, for I believe that night keeps the secret best. What I feel for you is such that, were they to feel this way, the moon would not glow, the night would not spread, and the stars would not travel.
Wallada (1011 - 1091), an Umayyad princess in: “Abundance from the Desert. Classical Arabic Poetry” by Raymond Farrin When Wallada was about twenty-seven, she took an interest in the suave and eloquent ambassador-at-large attending her literary salon. She had the message above placed in his hands
You know that I am the Moon in the sky, but you burn, to my chagrin, for Jupiter.
Wallada