Nazhun al-Garnatiya bint al-Qulaiʽiya

Nazhūn bint al-Qulāʽiya al-Gharnātiya (Arabic: نزهون بنت القلاعي الغرناطية, 12th-century) was a Granadan Qiyan and poet, noted for her outrageous verse.

Ibn al-Abbar has her as a (near-)contemporary of the twelfth-century Ḥamda bint Ziyād al-Muaddib.

[3]: 4, 13 fnn 5, 8, 10 Although little of her work survives, Nazhun is, among medieval Andalusian women poets, probably second only to her contemporary Hafsa Bint al-Hajj al-Rukuniyya in the quantity of her work preserved: classical sources attribute to her twenty-one lines of verse from seven poems.

In addition, the later Ùddat al-jalīs by Àlī ibn Bishrī attributes to her a muwashshaḥa of twenty-five lines,[3]: 13 fn 7  giving her the distinction of being the only female poet in the collection.

"[5] The study of her work has been hampered by scholars either not comprehending, or choosing not to expound on, its obscenity and double entendres.