Kaygusuz Abdal

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Kaygusuz Abdal (1341-1444) was a Turkish folk poet of the 14th century.

Background

Kaygusuz Abdal

In the 14th century Alaiye was the capital of the small Alaiye beylik (principality). Kaygusuz Abdal was born in or near to Alaiye (modern Alanya, Antalya Province of Turkey). His name was Alaattin Gaybi and Kaygusuz Abdal was his pseudonym. According to tradition he was bey's son (i.e., prince). But instead of politics he chose to be a dervish. His tutor was Abdal Musa.

Life

Details of his life and travels are ambiguous. Most of the stories attributed to him are not reliable. His works however convey that he travelled to many places. He travelled to Mecca for Hajj. He was also visited Damascus, Najaf and Karbala. There are unreliable accounts of his visits to cities in the Balkans like Yambol, Plovdiv (now both in Bulgaria), Bitola (now in the Republic of Macedonia) and Edirne (now in Turkey). In Egypt he gained the title Abdullah Magaravi ("God's servant living in a cave") after spending several years in seclusion.[1]

Works

His poetic works include;

  • Divan,
  • Gülistan,
  • Mesnevi-i Baba Kaygusuz (3 Vol.),
  • Gevher-nâme,
  • Minber-nâme.

His other works are

  • Budala-nâme,
  • Kitab-ı Mfglate,
  • Vücûd nâme.
  • Saray-nâme
  • Dilgüşâ.

[2]

References

  1. Aşık veysel Folk poets page (Turkish)
  2. İstanbul University Faculty of Literature (Turkish)