Ramon Llull (born 1232/33, Ciutat de Majorca [now Palma]?, Majorca [now in Spain]—died 1315/16, Tunis or near Majorca) was a Catalan mystic and poet whose writings helped to develop the Romance Catalan language and widely influenced Neoplatonic mysticism throughout medieval and 17th-century Europe. He is best known in the history of ideas as the inventor of an “art of finding truth” (ars inveniendi veritatis) that was primarily intended to support the Roman Catholic faith in missionary work but was also designed to unify all branches of knowledge.
Reared at the royal court of Majorca, Llull developed characteristics of a troubadour in his chivalrous upbringing. He wrote a manual of chivalry, which appeared in a 15th-century English version edited by William Caxton, the first English printer. From the large Moorish population in Majorca he acquired a knowledge of Arabic, which he used in some of his writings. His milieu also aroused in him an interest in Islamic Sufi mysticism and the Eastern contemplative spirit.
Having married, Llull at about the age of 30 experienced mystical visions of Christ on the Cross, after which he abandoned courtly life and devoted himself to missionary work. Influenced by the pacifist spirituality of Francis of Assisi, he traveled throughout North Africa and Asia Minor attempting to convert Muslims to Christianity.
About 1272, after another mystical experience on Majorca’s Mount Randa in which Llull related seeing the whole universe reflecting the divine attributes, he conceived of reducing all knowledge to first principles and determining their convergent point of unity. Borrowing certain tenets from the 11th-century Scholastic theologian Anselm of Canterbury, he wrote his principal work; this is collectively known as the Ars magna (1305–08; “The Great Art”) and includes the treatises Arbor scientiae (“The Tree of Knowledge”) and Liber de ascensu et descensu intellectus (“The Book of the Ascent and Descent of the Intellect”). Llull attempted to place Christian apologetics on the level of rational discussion, mainly to meet the needs of disputation with the Muslims. Llull used logic and complex mechanical techniques (the Ars magna) involving symbolic notation and combinatory diagrams to relate all forms of knowledge, including theology, philosophy, and the natural sciences as analogues of one another and as manifestations of the godhead in the universe. Llull thus used original logical methods in an attempt to prove the dogmas of Christian theology. The Ars magna’s apologetic applications receded into the background after Llull’s death, and it was as a universal system and compendium of knowledge that the Ars remained influential until long after the Renaissance.
Llull devoted his life to the spread of his Ars and attempted to interest rulers and popes in his projects. King James II of Aragon was persuaded to establish a school at Majorca for the study of Oriental languages so that the Ars could be disseminated throughout the Islamic world.
According to legend, Llull was stoned in North Africa at Bejaïa (Bougie) or Tunis and died a martyr at sea before reaching Majorca, where he was buried. Charges of confusing faith with reason led to the condemnation of Llull’s teaching by Pope Gregory XI in 1376. In the 19th century, however, the Roman Catholic church showed more sympathetic interest and approved of his veneration. Current interest centres on his mystical writings, particularly the Llibre d’amic e amat (The Book of the Lover and the Beloved). In Catalan culture his allegorical novels Blanquerna (c. 1284) and Félix (c. 1288) enjoy wide popularity. Llull’s works in Catalan were critically edited by M. Obrador, S. Galmes, et al., 21 vol. (1905–52).