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Fazli (poet)

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Azerbaijani poet, c. 1543–1605
Fazli
BornFazli Chalabi Fuzulizade
c. 1543
Karbala
Died1605
OccupationPoet
LanguageAzerbaijani, Persian, Arabic
ParentsFuzuli

Fazli Chalabi Fuzulizade (Azerbaijani: Fəzli Çələbi Füzulizadə, فضلی چلبی فضولی زاده; c. 1543–1605), commonly known as Fazli (Fəzli, فضلی), was a 16th-century poet. He wrote in Azerbaijani, Persian, and Arabic and was the son of the major Azerbaijani poet Fuzuli. Fazli was best known for his talent in creating chronograms and riddles within his poems.

Name

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Fazli's full name was Fazli Chalabi Fuzulizade.[1] [2] [3] His pen name, Fazli, means "belonging to munificence or abundance" and is likely a tribute to his father, the poet Fuzuli, whose pen name means "superfluous".[4]

Biography

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Born in Karbala,[5] Fazli's exact date of birth is uncertain, but it must have been before 1556 when his father passed away. The 16th–century Ottoman poet and bibliographer Ahdi's Tezkire (a bibliographical dictionary of poetry) in 1563/64 described him as a mature poet, suggesting that he was born around 1543. Fazli received much of his poetic education from his father. Ahdi described Fazli as an intelligent and contented person. He also noted that Fazli was more interested in secular knowledge than religious studies.[1] [4] It is generally accepted that Fazli died in 1605.[4]

Poetry

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Fazli is recognised as a minor poet due to the limited amount and quality of his work. He wrote verses in Azerbaijani, Persian, and Arabic in the aruz form (poetry using quantifying prosody).[1] [4] His poetry is characterized by a notable degree of creativity. In one of his qitas (a form of monorhyme poetry), he expresses support for Sunni beliefs and opposition to Qizilbash views. Fazli is most renowned for his skill in creating chronograms and riddles within his poems. His qoshma (non-religious verse form) poems are also believed to have inspired later Turkic poets from Azerbaijan.[1] [4]

References

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Sources

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Azerbaijani is the official language of Azerbaijan and one of the official languages in Dagestan, a republic of Russia. It is also widely spoken in Iran (in particular in the historic Azerbaijan region) as well as in parts of Turkey and Georgia.
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    Contemporary Persian and Classical Persian are the same language, but writers since 1900 are classified as contemporary. At one time, Persian was a common cultural language of much of the non-Arabic Islamic world. Today it is the official language of Iran, Tajikistan and one of the two official languages of Afghanistan.

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