Dīvān (Persian)

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Country
Turkey
City
Istanbul
Institution
Fatih Millet Ktp.
Repository
Alī Emiri Koleksiyonu
Collection
Farsça
Shelfmark
no. 1006

Contents

Work 2: Dīvān (Persian) (Nesimi, approximately 1369-approximately 1418)
LOC subject headings
Masnavis
Sufism (Early works to 1800)
Persian poetry 747-1500
Ghazals, Persian
Author
Nesimi, approximately 1369-approximately 1418
نسيمي
Show other names
Nesīmī (d. 820/1418 [?])
Seyyid İmādüddīn Nesīmī (d. 820/1417?)
ﺳﻴﺪ ﻋﻤﺎﺩﺍﻟﺪﻳﻦ نسيمي
Nesimi, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (authorised)
Imadăddin Năsimi, approximately 1369-1418 (variant)
Imadeddin Nesimi, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Nasīmī, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Nasīmī, ʻImād al-Dīn, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Năsimi, Imadăddin, approximately 1369-1418 (variant)
Nasimi, Imadeddin, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Nesimi, ca. 1369-ca. 1418 (variant)
Nesimi, d. 1404 or 5 (variant)
Nesimi, İmadeddin, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Nesimi, Seýit Umadutdin, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Nesimi, Umadutdin, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Seĭid Imadeddin Nesimi, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Seĭit Ymadeddin Nesimi, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Seyid İmadeddin Nesimi, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Seyyid Nesîmî, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Ymadeddin Nesimi, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Насими, Имадеддин, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
عماد الدين نسيمى (variant)
نسينى (variant)
نسيمي (variant)
نسيمي،, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
نسيمي،, حو. 1369-حو. 1418 (variant)
Sayyid ʻImād al-Dīn Nasīmī Tabrīzī, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
سيد عماد الدين نسيمى تبريزى (variant)
Nasīmī Tabrīzī, Sayyid ʻImād al-Dīn, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Tabrīzī, Sayyid ʻImād al-Dīn Nasīmī, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Seyyid İmadäddin Näsimi, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Näsimi, Seyyid İmadäddin, approximately 1369-approximately 1418 (variant)
Biographical notes
Nesīmī is an early Ottoman poet and mystic, famous for his Ḥurūfī worldview. He is believed to have come from Nesīm, near Baghdād. He was most likely of Turkoman origin, although his title of “Seyyid” also points to Arab blood. About 804 AH [1401 CE] he became a follower of Faḍl Allāh Ḥurūfī (d. 796/1394), whom he personally met, and eventually became his successor. After Faḍl Allāh’s death, he left Azerbaijan for Anatolia. He came to Bursa during the reign of Murād I (761-91/1360-89) and was not well received here. Ḥacı Bayram (d. 833/1430) refused to see him in Ankara. He eventually went to Aleppo, where he was flayed for his heretical views in 820 AH [1417 CE] (other dates are also given in the historical sources). Evliyā Çelebi (d. 1095/1684) mentions a lodge and a tomb for Nesīmī in this city. Nesīmī had Dīvāns in both Persian and Turkish, which he knew equally well, as well as possibly a Dīvān in Arabic which is no longer extant. His Turkish shows the characteristics of the Ādharī dialect. Nesīmī’s poetry focuses on Ḥurūfī teachings, the doctrine of the oneness of being, and the praise of the Twelve Imams. The latter aspect, in addition to his martyrdom, has led to the Alevi adoption of Nesīmī, who consider him as one of their seven great poets. Nesīmī also had an important historical role in the development of classical literature in Turkish, with his extensive use of complex images (maḍmūn).
Title
Dīvān (Persian)
ديوان
Notes
Nesīmī’s Persian Dīvān consists of 290 ghazals, 7 qaṣīdas, 5 mas̱navīs, 1 tarjīʿ-i band, 1 mustazād, 1 muḥammas tarkīb-i band, 1 musammaṭ, 85 rubāʿīs and 20 qiṭʿas.
Main language of text
Persian
Foliation
22-26 ff.
Bibliography
Editions
Burrill, Kathleen R.F.. The Quatrains of Nesimî – Fourteenth-Century Turkic Hurufi. Paris: Mouton, 1972. (with Annotated Translations of the Turkic and Persian Quatrains from Hekimoğlu Ali Paşa MS)
Değirmençay, Veyis. İmâdüddin Nesîmî ve Farsça Divanı’nın Türkçe Çevirisi. Erzurum: 2005, , [n.d.].
Studies
Alparslan, Ali. "Câvidân-nâme’nin Nesîmî’ye Tesiri." unpublished associate professorship dissertation, İstanbul University, 1967.
Babinger, Franz. "Nesīmī." Encyclopaedia of Islam. VIIILeiden: E.J. Brill, 1995: 8-8.
Bilgin, A. Azmi. "Nesīmī." TDVİA. 33, [n.d.]: 3-5.
Gibb, E.J.W.. History of Ottoman Poetry. London: Luzac & Company, 1900-09.
Gölpınarlı, Abdülbâki. "Nesîmî." İslam Ansiklopedisi. IX, [n.d.]: 206-207.
Gölpınarlı, Abdülbâki. Hurufîlîk Metinleri Kataloğu. Ankara: 1973.
Gölpınarlı, Abdülbâki. Nesîmî, Usûlî, Rûhî. İstanbul: Kapı, 2014.
Kuluzade, Mehmet. "Nesimi." In Azerbaycan Edebiyatı Tarihi. Bakü: Azerbaycan SSR İlimler Akademisi Neşriyatı, 1960, 265-265.
Köprülü, Fuat. "Nesimî’ye Dair." Hayat. I, no. 20 1927.
Memmedzade, Hemid. "Nesimi’nin Farsça Divanı." TDEAD. Translated by Karabey, Turgut. IX 1998: 135-147.
Olgun, İbrahim. "Seyyit Nesîmî Üzerine Notlar." TDAY Belleten. 1970: 47-68.
Olgun, İbrahim. "Nesîmî Üzerine Notlar." TDAY Belleten. 1971: 195-207.
Ünver, Mustafa. Hurûfîlik ve Kuran: Nesîmî Örneği. Ankara: 2003.
Üzüm, İlyas. "Nesīmī–Görüşleri." TDVİA. 33, [n.d.]: 5-6.
Show filiations
Fatih Millet Ktp. no. 1006
Topkapı Sarayı Müzesi Kütüphanesi 320
Süleymaniye Yazma Eserler Kütüphanesi 395
Kitābkhana-i Markazī-yi Dānishgāh-i Tihrān 5386
St Petersburg Branch of the Academy of Sciences of Russia A53
Fatih Millet Kütüphanesi 438
İzzet Koyunoğlu Kütüphanesi 3781
Manisa Yazma Eser Kütüphanesi 2671
Süleymaniye Yazma Eserler Kütüphanesi 3977
Nuruosmaniye Yazma Eser KÜtüphanesi 4964
Work 4: Tarjīʻ-i band (ʻIrāqī, Fakhr al-Dīn Ibrāhīm,-1289? )
LOC subject headings
Persian poetry
Author
ʻIrāqī, Fakhr al-Dīn Ibrāhīm,-1289?
Show other names
عراقى ، فخر الدين ابراهيم
Fahreddîn-i Irâkî,-1289?
Fahrüddin Eraki, -1289?
ʻIrāqī, Fakhr al-Dīn Ibrāhīm, -1289? (authorised)
Araghi, FakhreDin Ebrahim, -1289? (variant)
Araqi, Fakhr al-din, -1289? (variant)
ʻArāqī, Fakhr al-Dīn Ibrāhīm, -1289? (variant)
Eraqi, Fakhroddin Ebrahim, -1289? (variant)
ʻErâqi, Faxr al-Din, -1289? (variant)
Fahreddîn-i Irâkî, -1289? (variant)
Fakhr al-Dīn Ibrāhīm ʻIrāqī, -1289? (variant)
Fakhruddin ʻIraqi, -1289? (variant)
Hamadâni, Faxr al-Din ʻErâqi, -1289? (variant)
Hamadānī ʻIrāqī, Fakhr al-Dīn Ibrāhīm, -1289? (variant)
Irâkî, Fahreddîn, -1289? (variant)
Iraki, Fakhriddin Ibragim, -1289? (variant)
ʻIrāqī, Fakhr al-Dīn Ibrāhīm, d. 1289? (variant)
ʻIraqi, Fakhruddin, -1289? (variant)
عراقى ، فخر الدين ابراهيم همدانى (variant)
عراقى، فخر الدين ابراهيم (variant)
عراقى، فخرالدين (variant)
فخر الدين ابراهيم عراقى (variant)
فخر الدين عراقى (variant)
Biographical notes
He was born in the town of Kumijān (Iran), not far from the city of Hamadan, apparently in 610 [1213-1214 CE]. In his youth he studied the Qur’ān, Hadith and Islamic theology (kalam). However, he is better known for his literary skills as a Sufi poet that travelled extensively from Pakistan to Anatolia during his lifetime. He began teaching in his native Hamadan (Iran) when he met a group of Qalandar dervishes and abandoned his activities to travel with them all the way to Multān (Pakistan) in the year 1230 [1230 CE]. It was in that city where he allegedly became a disciple of the Sufi master Bahāʼ al-Dīn Zakariyyā, 1170?-1262? ,  بهاء الدين زكريا, who at the time was the leader of the Suhrawardīyah Sufi Order. In fact, ʻIrāqī seems to have married the shaykh’s daughter and had a son with her named Kabīr al-Dīn, d. after 1289, کبیر الدین. Under the auspice of Bahāʼ al-Dīn Zakariyyā, 1170?-1262? , ʻIrāqī stayed in Multān (Pakistan) for 17 years dedicated to writing poetry. After the dead of the Bahāʼ al-Dīn Zakariyyā, 1170?-1262? in 1268 [1268 CE], he seems to have lost the support of the members of the order and left Multān (Pakistan) by sea at the age of 24. First he went to Arabia where he performed hajj and then all the way to Anatolia, where he joined Ṣadr al-Dīn al-Qūnawī, Muḥammad ibn Isḥāq, -1273 or 1274 in Konya (Turkey) and then became close to Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī, Maulana, 1207-1273 and his followers. He was under the protection and patronage of Muʻīn al-Dı̄n Sulaymān, Parwānā, -1277 and Shams al-Dīn Juwaynī, d. 1285 until these two were accused of treason against the Mongols and the later was executed in 1277 [1277 CE]. The fall of his patron seems to have been behind the escape of Iraqi to Sinop and from there to Egypt, where he found refuge under the Mamluk Sultan Baybars al-Manṣūrī, approximately 1245-1325. He gained a high status at the court of the Mamluks and then moved from Egyptto Damascus where he re-joined his son (who has stayed in Multan after Iraqi’s departure). He fell ill shortly after his arrival in Syria and died on 8 Dhu al-Qa'dah 688 [1289 CE] at the age of 78.
Title
Tarjīʻ-i band
Notes
Main language of text
Persian
Foliation
ff. 30-33
Bibliography
Editions
ʻIrāqī, Fakhr al-Dīn. Risālah-ʹi lamaʻāt va Risālah-ʹi iṣṭilāḥāt. Edited by Nūrbakhsh, Javād. Tehran: Khānaqāh-i Niʻmat Allāhī, 1353 [1974].
ʻIrāqī, Fakhr al-Dīn. Lamaʻāt. Edited by Khvājavī, Muḥammad. Tehran: Intishārāt-i Mawlá, 1363 [1984].
Translations
ʻIrāqī, Fakhr al-Dīn and Baljit Singh. Lammāt = The flashes: a Persian treatise on Sufism, written in the 13th century. New Delhi: Sikh Foundation, 2003.
ʻIrāqī, Fakhr al-Dīn. Divine flashes. Edited by Chittick, William C., Peter Lamborn Wilson and Seyyed Hossein Nasr. New York: Paulist Press, 1982.
ʻIrāqī, Fakhr al-Dīn and Ercan Alkan. Lemaat: aşka ve âşıklara dair. Translated by Konuk, Ahmed Avni. Cağaloğlu, İstanbul: İki Harf, 2011.
Studies
Chittick, William C.. "‘Erāqī, Faḵr-al-Dīn Ebrāhīm b. Bozorgmehr Javāleqī Hamadānī." Encylcopaedia Iranica. 8, [n.d.]: 538-540.
Wolper, Ethel Sara. Cities and Saints. Sufism and the Transformation of Urban Space in Medieval Anatolia. University Park, Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2004.
Show filiations
Fatih Millet Ktp. no. 1006
Topkapı Sarayı Müzesi Kütüphanesi 320
Süleymaniye Yazma Eserler Kütüphanesi 395
Kitābkhana-i Markazī-yi Dānishgāh-i Tihrān 5386
St Petersburg Branch of the Academy of Sciences of Russia A53
Fatih Millet Kütüphanesi 438
İzzet Koyunoğlu Kütüphanesi 3781
Manisa Yazma Eser Kütüphanesi 2671
Süleymaniye Yazma Eserler Kütüphanesi 3977
Nuruosmaniye Yazma Eser KÜtüphanesi 4964

Physical Description

Dimensions of folio
width 13cm, height 22cm
Dimensions of written area
width 8.4cm, height 15.1cm
Columns
1
Ruled lines
15
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