c. 1600) was an Aragonese Morisco, noted for writing Discurso de la luz de Muhamad ('discourse of the light of Muḥammad'), the principal Spanish-language Muslim account of the lives of the Islamic prophets.
Rabadán's Discurso de la luz de Muhamad begins with a canto praising God as the creator of all; the second canto tells of Adam, Iblīs, Noah and Abraham.
The work closes by listing the ninety-nine names of Allāh, explaining each in Spanish.
[1] The text was a major influence on the understanding of Islam of the eighteenth-century English historian Joseph Morgan.
[2] Rabadán has been identified as the author of a sixteenth-century Spanish poem recounting a hajj, "Coplas del peregrino de Puey Monçón".