İsmail Hakkı Bursevî | |
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İsmail Hakkı Bursevî's Tomb in Bursa
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Born | a Sunday 1653 Aytos, Ottoman Empire, now Bulgaria |
Died | 1725 (aged 71–72) Bursa, Anatolia, Turkey |
Resting place | Bursa Turkey |
Other names | İsmail Hakkı Üsküdar |
Ethnicity | Turkish people |
Occupation | Author, Translator, Sheikh, Musical composition, Poet |
Religion | Islam |
Jurisprudence | Sunni |
Movement | Sufism |
Main interest(s) | Theology, Ethics, Mysticism |
Notable idea(s) | Translating Arabic books into Turkish |
Notable work(s) | Commentaries of the Koran, Ibn Arabi, Rumi, Attar, Najmuddin Kubra |
Sufi order | Jelveti |
Influenced by
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Influenced
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İsmail Hakkı Bursevî (Bursalı İsmail Hakkı) |
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Born | 1653 Aytos, Ottoman Empire |
Died | 1725 (aged 71–72) Bursa, Ottoman Empire |
Genres | Ottoman classical music Turkish makam music |
Occupation(s) | Lyrics author, composer |
İsmail Hakkı Bursevî, Ismāʿīl Ḥaḳḳī al-Brūsawī, (Turkish: Bursalı İsmail Hakkı, Arabic: اسماعيل حقى، بروسهلى، Iranian: Esmã’īl Ḥaqqī Borsavī) was a 17th-century Ottoman Turkish Muslim scholar, a Jelveti Sufi author on mystical experience and the esoteric interpretation of the Quran; also a poet and musical composer. İsmail Hakkı Bursevî influenced many parts the Ottoman Empire but primarily Turkey. To this day he is revered as one of the ‘Büyükler’, the great saints of Anatolia. He is regarded as an eminent literary figure in the Turkish language, having authored more than a hundred works.Translations of some of his works are now available for the English-speaking world.
İsmail Hakkı was the son of Muṣṭafā, who was in turn son of Bayram Čawush, who was in turn son of Shah Ḵhudā-bende. İsmail Hakkı was born in 1652 or 1653 in Aytos, Thrace although his parents came from Aksaray, Istanbul. His mother died when he was aged seven and on the suggestion of Shaykh Osman Fazli he was sent to c.1663 Edirne (Adrinaople), to receive traditional education under the scholar ʿAbd-al-Baki, a relative of the Shaykh