Al-Wasiti and his cousin, Ibn al-Murajja, are both known as diarists belonging to the same prominent family from Jerusalem, Abd al-Rahman. Their writings are among the early examples of a classical Islamic literary genre praising the virtues of the holy cities, the ''Fada'il al-Mudun
("virtues of cities"), and specifically to the Fada'il Bayt al-Maqdis
, literally, the "Merits of the Holy House", Bayt al-Maqdis
being an early Muslim name for Jerusalem. Al-Wasiti uses as his main source the earliest known book of this genre dedicated to Jerusalem, the now lost Fada'il Bayt al-Maqdis'' written by al-Walid ibn Hammad al-Ramli al-Zayyat (d. 912), himself also from Jerusalem. The fact that al-Wasiti lived before 1099, the year
Jerusalem fell to the
Crusaders, makes him particularly interesting, as his religious praise of the city is not yet motivated by the purpose of fuelling Muslim fervour for its liberation. As a native scholar, Al-Wasiti records the religious merits of Jerusalem, which have two main aspects in Early Muslim tradition:
eschatological and
prophetic. In this context he writes about the construction of the
Dome of the Rock by Caliph
Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan, helping us understand how
Mount Moriah became
assimilated into the Muslim tradition, with a focus on three elements:
Creation and the
Last Judgement,
David and
Solomon, and Prophet
Mohammed's
Night Journey. The first two are of course influences of
Jewish and
Christian biblical and para-biblical narratives and traditions, constituting
Isra'iliyat. ==References==