Vefātü’n-nebī
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Summary View
- Country
 - Turkey
 - Collection
 - Vasfi Mahir Kocatürk Special Collection
 
Contents
- Vefātü’n-nebī (ʿĀrif (d. After 842/1438))
 - 
            
- Author
 - ʿĀrif (d. After 842/1438)
 - عارف
 - Show other names
 - ʿĀrif (authorised)
 - عارف (variant)
 - Biographical notes
 - Nothing is known about ʿĀrif’s life except that his was the author of six mathnawis and some poems and is one of the earliest authors of a ḫamse (a collection of five mathnawis)) in Turkish literature after Aḥmedī (d. 815/1412-13) and Ḳayġusuz Abdāl (d. 848/1444 ?). He is also the earliest author of a Mevlid (A poem on the birth of the Prophet) after Aḥmedī (d. 815/1412-13) and Süleymān Çelebi (d. 825/1422) .
 - Title
 - Vefātü’n-nebī
 - وفات النبى
 - Notes
 - The mathnawi accomplished in 5th Rebīʿü’l-āḫir 842 [1438 CE], consisting of 1402 couplets is about the sickness and the death of the prophet Muhammad and how these incidents affected his companions. At the end of the Vefātü’n-nebī, ʿĀrif gives the total number of the couplets contained in his five mathnawis, consisting of 4000 in total.
 - Main language of text
 - Turkish
 - Bibliography
 - Studies
 - Gülsoy, Nebahat. "Arif: Miraç-name, vefat, isimsiz bir mesnevi (giriş-transkripsiyonlu metin-sözlük)." unpublished MA thesis, Istanbul: Marmara University, 1993.
 - Kocatürk, Vasfi Mahir. In Türk Edebiyatı Tarihi. Ankara: Edebiyat Yayınevi, 1964, 261-264. (<p>introduces the content and includes parts from the work</p>)
 - Tunç, Semra. "Ârif, Hayatı, Edebî Kişiliği ve Eserlerinin Tenkidli Metni I. C. İnceleme-II. C. Metin." unpublished PHD thesis, Konya: Selçuk University, 1996.
 - Tunç, Semra. "Ârif ve II. Murâd Döneminde Yazılmış Bir Hamse." Selçuklu Üniversitesi Türkiyat Araştırmaları Dergisi. , no. 12 2002: 155-168.
 - Çelebioğlu, Amil. Türk Mesnevî Edebiyatı: 15 yy. kadar (Sultan II. Murad Devri) (824-855/1421-1451). Istanbul Kitabevi, 1999.
 - Show filiations
 - Süleymaniye Yazma Eserler Kütüphanesi 355
 
 
Physical Description
History
- Date of copy
 - possibly 16th. century