Anashik(Azerbaijani:aşıq,azb:آشؽق;Turkish:âşık;—all fromAzerbaijani:) orashugh(Armenian:աշուղ;Georgian:აშუღი)[1]: 1365 [2][3]is traditionally asinger-poet and bardwho accompanies his song—be it adastan(traditional epic story, also known ashikaye) or a shorter original composition—with a long-necked lute (usually abağlamaorsaz)[4]: 225 inAzerbaijani culture,includingTurkishandSouth Azerbaijani[4]and non-Turkic cultures ofSouth Caucasus(primarilyArmenianandGeorgian).[5]: 15–36 [6]: 47 [7][3]InAzerbaijan,themodern ashikis a professional musician who usually serves an apprenticeship, masters playing thebağlama,and builds up a varied but individual repertoire ofTurkicfolk songs.[8]

AshikAğalar Mikayılovplaying the saz
AshughJivani(center, playing thekamani) with instrumentalists
Sovietstamp from 1962 devoted toSayat-Nova's 250 anniversary.
An ashik performance inTabriz

The wordashiq(Arabic:عاشق,meaning "in love" or "lovelorn" ) is thenominativeform of a noun derived from the wordishq(Arabic:عشق,"love" ), which in turn may be related to theAvestanandPersianiš-( "to wish, desire, seek" ).[9]The term is synonymous withozan[tr]inTurkishandAzerbaijani,which it superseded during the fifteenth to sixteenth centuries.[10]: 368 [11]Other alternatives includesaz şair(meaning "saz poet" ) andhalk şair( "folk poet" ). InArmenian,the termgusan,which referred to creative and performing artists in public theaters ofParthiaand ancient as well asmedieval Armenia,is often used as a synonym.[5]: 20 [1]: 851–852 

History

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An ashik performance duringNowruzinBaku
Ismail I(1487–1524)

The ashik tradition in Turkic cultures ofAnatolia,AzerbaijanandIranhas its origin in theShamanisticbeliefs of ancientTurkic peoples.[12]The ancient ashiks were called by various names such asbakshy/bakhshi/Baxşı,dede(dədə), and uzan or ozan. Among their various roles, they played a major part in perpetuation of oral tradition, promotion of communal value system and traditional culture of their people. These wandering bards or troubadours are part of current rural and folk culture ofAzerbaijan,andIranian Azerbaijan,Turkey,theTurkmen Sahra(Iran) andTurkmenistan,where they are calledbakshy.Thus, ashik, in traditional sense, may be defined as travelling bards who sang and played saz, an eight or ten string plucking instrument in the form of a long-necked lute.

Judging based on theTurkicepicDede Korkut,[13]the roots of ashiks can be traced back to at least the 7th century, during the heroic age of theOghuz Turks.This nomadic tribe journeyed westwards through Central Asia from the 9th century onward and settled in presentTurkey,AzerbaijanRepublic and North-west areas ofIran.Naturally, their music was evolved in the course of the grand migration and ensuing feuds with the original inhabitants the acquired lands. An important component of this cultural evolution was that theTurksembraced Islam within a short time and of their own free will. Muslim Turkdervishes,desiring to spread the religion among their brothers who had not yet entered the Islamic fold, moved among the nomadicTurks.They choose the folk language and its associate musical form as an appropriate medium for effective transmission of their message. Thus, ashik literature developed alongsidemysticalliterature and was refined starting since the time ofTurkicSufiKhoja Akhmet Yassawiin early twelfth century.[14]

The single most important event in the history of ashik music was the ascent to the throne ofShah Isma'il(1487–1524), the founder of the Safavid dynasty. He was a prominent ruler-poet and has, apart from hisdiwancompiled amathnawicalled Deh-name, consisting of some eulogies of Ali, the fourth Caliph of early Islam. He used the pen-name Khata'i and, in ashik tradition, is considered as an amateur ashik.[15]Isma'il's praised playingSazas a virtue in one of his renownedqauatrains;[16]

Bu gün ələ almaz oldum mən sazım --- (Today, I embraced my Saz)
Ərşə dirək-dirək çıxar mənim avazım --- (My song is being echoed by heavens)
Dörd iş vardır hər qarındaşa lazım: --- (Four things are required for the life:)
Bir elm, bir kəlam, bir nəfəs, bir saz. --- (Conscience, speech, respiration, and Saz.)

According toKöprülü'sstudies, the termashikwas used instead ofozanin Azerbaijan and in areas of Anatolia after the 15th century.[17][10]After the demise of Safavid dynasty in Iran, Turkish culture could not sustain its early development among the elites. Instead, there was a surge in the development of verse-folk stories, mainly intended for performance by ashiks in weddings. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union the governments of new republics in Caucasus region and Central Asia sought their identity in traditional cultures of their societies. This elevated the status of ashugs as the guardians of national culture. The newfound unprecedented popularity and frequent concerts and performances in urban settings have resulted in rapid innovative developments aiming to enhance the urban-appealing aspects of ashik performances.

Ashugh music in Armenia

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Armenianashugh school inYerevan

A concise account of the ashik (calledashughinArmenian) music and its development in Armenia is given inGarland Encyclopedia of World Music.[1]: 851–852 In Armenia, the ashugh are known since the 16th century onward, acting as the successors to the medievalgusan art.By far the most notable of the ashugh of all wasSayat Nova(1712–95), who honed the art of troubadour musicianship to crowning refinement.[18]

Ashik music in Iranian Azerbaijan

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A portrait of AshikRasool Ghorbani[fa]taken in 1955.

During thePahlaviera Ashiks frequently performed in coffee houses in all the major cities of east and west Azerbaijan in Iran.Tabrizwas the eastern center for the ashiks andUrmiathe western center. InTabrizashiks most often performed with two other musicians, abalabanplayer and aqavalplayer; inUrmiathe ashik was always a solo performer.[19]After theIslamic revolutionmusic was banned.{fact} Ten years later, ashik Rasool Ghorbani, who had been forced to make a living as a travelling salesman, aspired to return to the glorious days of fame and leisure. He started composing songs with religious and revolutionary themes. The government, realizing the propaganda potential of these songs, allowed their broadcast in national radio and sent Rasool to perform in some European cities.[citation needed]This facilitated the emergence of the ashik music as the symbol of Azeri cultural identity.[citation needed]

In September 2009,Azerbaijan's ashik artwas included intoUNESCO list of Intangible Cultural Heritage.[20]

The foundations of ashik art

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A stamp ofqavals

Ashik art combines poetic, musical and performance ability. Ashiks themselves describe the art as the unified duo ofsazandsöz(word).This duo is conspicuously featured in a popular composition bySəməd Vurğun:[21]

Binələri çadır çadır --- (The peaks rise up all around like tents)
Çox gəzmişəm özüm dağlar --- (I have wandered often in these mountains)
İlhamını səndən alıb --- (Mysazandsöztake inspiration)
Mənimsazım,sözüm dağlar. --- (From you, mountains.)

The following subsections provide more details about saz and söz.

Musical instruments

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Bağlama(saz)

Mastering in playing saz is the essential requirement for an ashik. This instrument, a variant of which is known asBağlama,is astringedmusical instrumentand belongs to the family of long-necked lutes.[22]Often performances of ashiks are accompanied by an ensemble ofbalaban[23]andqavalperformers. DuringEurovision Song Contest 2012all three instruments were symbolically played as a cultural symbol of the host country,Azerbaijan.

Poetry genres

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The most spread poetry genres are gerayly, qoshma and tajnis.[24][25]

Ethical code of behaviour and attitude for ashiks

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The defining characteristic of ashik profession is the ethical code of behaviour and attitude, which has been summarized byAşiq Ələsgərin the following verses;[26][27]

Aşıq olub diyar-diyar gəzənin ----(To be a bard and wander far from home)
Əzəl başdan pürkəmalı gərəkdi --- (You knowledge and thinking head must have.)
Oturub durmaqda ədəbin bilə --- (How you are to behave, you too must know,)
Mə'rifət elmində dolu gərəkti --- (Politeness, erudition you must have.)
Xalqa həqiqətdən mətləb qandıra --- (He should be able to teach people the truth,)
Şeytanı öldürə, nəfsin yandıra --- (To kill evil within himself, refrain from ill emotions,)
El içinde pak otura pak dura --- (He should socialize virtuously)
Dalısınca xoş sedalı gərəkdi --- (Then people will think highly of him)
Danışdığı sözün qiymətin bilə --- (He should know the weight of his words,)
Kəlməsindən ləl'i-gövhər tokülə --- (He should be brilliant in speech,)
Məcazi danışa, məcazi gülə --- (He should speak figuratively,)
Tamam sözü müəmmalı gərəkdi --- (And be a politician in discourse.)
Arif ola, eyham ilə söz qana --- (Be quick to understand a hint, howe'er,)
Naməhrəmdən şərm eyleyə, utana --- (Of strangers you should, as a rule, beware,)
Saat kimi meyli Haqq'a dolana --- (And like a clock advance to what is fair.)
Doğru qəlbi, doğru yolu gərəkdi --- (True heart and word of honour you must have.)
Ələsgər haqq sözün isbatın verə --- (Ələsgərwill prove his assertions,)
Əməlin mələklər yaza dəftərə --- (Angels will record his deeds,)
Her yanı istese baxanda göre --- (Your glance should be both resolute and pure,)
Teriqetde bu sevdalı gerekdi --- (You must devote himself to righteous path.)

Ashik stories (dastan)

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Stamp featuring epic poem "Koroglu", from the seriesEpic poems of USSR nations,1989

İlhan Başgöz[tr]was the first to introduce the wordhikayeinto the academic literature to describe ashik stories.[28]According to Başgöz, hikaye cannot properly be included in any of the folk narrative classification systems presently used by Western scholars. Though prose narrative is dominant in a hikaye, it also includes several folk songs. These songs, which represent the major part of Turkish folk music repertory, may number more than one hundred in a single hekaye, each having three, five or morestanzas.[29]

As the art of ashik is based on oral tradition, the number ofashik storiescan be as many as the ashiks themselves. Throughout the centuries of this tradition, many interesting stories and epics have thrived, and some have survived to our times. The main themes of the most ashik stories are worldly love or epics of wars and battles or both.

In the following we present a brief list of the most famous hikayes:[30]

  • Shah Ismail,the founder of theSafavid empire,is theprotagonistof a major hikaye. Despite the apparent basis in history, Shah Ismail's hikaye demonstrates a remarkable transformative ability. Feared as a ruthless despot during his lifetime, Shah Ismail becomes a poetic maestro in the hikaye, with his sword replaced by his saz, which is the weapon of choice for Shah Ismail's new persona of folk hero.[31]
  • The Warrior of The North. A Romantic Action Epic about bard named ashik in Constantinople in the 16th Century where he faces political and military problems and saves many people. In the end, he marries his soul mate, Nuur, but dies the same day in an attempt to save her from Hardun The Evil.
  • TheEpic of Köroğluis one of the most widespread of the Turkic hikayes. It is shared not only by nearly all Turkic peoples, but also by some non-Turkic neighboring communities, such as theArmenians,Georgians,Kurds,Tajiks,andAfghans.Although the hikaye's path of transmission is not yet fully understood, most researchers agree that it originated in the southCaucasusregion, most likelyAzerbaijan.[32]In theAzeriversion, the epic combines the occasional romance withRobin Hood-like chivalry.Köroğlu,is himself an ashik, who punctuates the third-person narratives of his adventures by breaking into verse: this isKöroğlu.This popular story has spread from Anatolia to the countries of Central Asia somehow changing its character and content.[8]AzerbaijanicomposerUzeyir Hajibeyovhas created an opera by this name, using the ashik stories and masterfully combined some ashik music with this major classical work.
  • Ashiq Qərib,Azeriepic, made famous byMikhail Lermontov,is another major story of a wandering ashik who began his journeys with worldly love and attains wisdom by traveling and learning then achieving sainthood. The story ofAshiq Qəribhas been the main feature ofa movie with the same nameby director and producerSergei Parajanov.[33]In early 1980sAşıq Kamandar[az]narrated and sang the story in a one-hour-long TV program, the cosset record of which was widely distributed in Iranian Azerbaijan and had a key impact on the revival of ashug music.
  • Aşıq Valeh is the story of a debate betweenAşıq Valeh[az][34](1729–1822) and Aşıq Zərniyar. Forty ashiks have already lost the debate to Aşıq Zərniyar and have been imprisoned. Valeh, however, wins the debate, frees the jailed ashiks and marries Zərniyar.

Verbal dueling (deyişmə)

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In order to stay in the profession and defend their reputation ashiks used to challenge each other by indulging in verbal duelings, which were held in public places. In its simplest form one ashik would recite a riddle by singing and the other had to respond by means of improvisation to the verses resembling riddles in form. Here is an example:[35]

The first ashik The second ashik
Tell me what falls to the ground from the sky? Rain falls down to the ground from the sky
Who calms down sooner of all? A child calms down sooner of all.
What is passed from hand to hand? Money is passed from hand to hand
The second ashik Shik
What remains dry in water? Light does not become wet in water
Guess what does not become dirty in the ground? Only stones at the pier remain clean.
Tell me the name of the bird living alone in the nest The name of the bird living in its nest in loneliness is heart.

Famous ashiks

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21st century

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  • Changiz Mehdipour[fa],born inSheykh Hoseynlu,has significantly contributed to the revival and development of ashik music. His book on the subject[36]attempts to adapt the ashik music to the artistic taste of the contemporary audience.
  • Samira Aliyeva[az],born inBaku(1981), is a popular professional ashik who teaches at theAzerbaijanState University of Culture and Art. She is committed to the survival of the ashik tradition.[37]
  • Zulfiyya Ibadova,born in 1976, is a passionate and vibrant performer with a strong individual style. She has written a great deal of original music and lyrics, and likes combining the Saz with other instruments.[37]
  • Fazail Miskinli[az],born in 1972, is a master Saz player. He teaches at theAzerbaijanState University of Culture and Art.[38]

20th century

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Hep sen mi ağladın hep sen mi yandın, --- (Did you cry all the time, did you burn all the time?)
Ben de gülemedim yalan dünyada --- (I couldn't smile too in untrue world)
Sen beni gönlümce mutlu mu sandın --- (Did you think I was happy with my heart)
Ömrümü boş yere çalan dünyada. --- (In the world which stole my life in vain ")

İşte gidiyorum çeşm-i siyahım --- (That's it, I go my black eyed)
Önümüze dağlar sıralansa da --- (Despite mountains ranked before us)
Sermayem derdimdir servetim ahım --- (My capital is my sorrow, my wealth is my trouble)
Karardıkça bahtım karalansa da --- (Withal my blacken fortune darkened ")

  • Ashik Veysel(25 October 1894 – 21 March 1973). The openingquatrainof his composition,Kara Toprak( "Black earth" ), is as the following:[50]

Dost dost diye nicesine sarıldım --- (I expected for many people to be real friends)
Benim sâdık yârim kara topraktır --- (My faithful beloved is black soil)
Beyhude dolandım boşa yoruldum --- (I wandered around with no end, I got tired for nothing)
Benim sâdık yârim kara topraktır --- (My faithful beloved is black soil ")

19th century

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  • Ashik Summani,Ashig Aly,Molla Juma,Ashig Musa,
  • Ashiq Basti(1836–1936), is one of the most outstanding female representatives of the art of Ashig in nineteenth century Azerbaijan. She was born in the Loh village of the Kalbajar region. She had a deep knowledge of Azerbaijani folk literature and was able to recite poems of her own at these folk ceremonies. She also learned to play the saz. Basti was known to be an active member of 'Gurban Bulaghi', a famous literary gathering of her era. She fell deeply in love with a shepherd sometime between the age of seventeen and eighteen. Her first love, however, was killed by a nobleman in her presence. Having helplessly witnessed this scene, Basti was thrown into a state of mental turmoil by this tragic incident. In her poems, Basti refers to her sweetheart as Khanchoban. In her lifetime, an epic story called 'Basti and Khanchoban' was created to deal with her ill-fated love. She avenges the nobleman who had killed her beloved by cursing him in her poems. Basti lost her eyesight from her endless weeping and she grew old well before her time. She was called 'Blind Basti' and a saying was created about her: 'Even the stone was crying when Basti cried'. However, she lived a long life and died in 1936, at the age of one hundred.[51]
AnAzerbaijanipostal stamp featuringAshig Alasgar
  • Ashig Alasgar,perhaps the most renowned Azerbaijani ashik of all ages, was born in 1821 inGegharkunik Province(Գեղարքունիքի մարզ) of the present dayArmeniato an impoverished family. At the age of 14 he was employed as aservant boyand worked for five years, during which fell in love with his employer's daughter, Səhnəbanı. The girl was married off to her cousin and Alasgar was sent home. This failed love urged young Alasgar to buy asazand seek apprenticeship with Ashik Ali for five years. He emerged as an accomplished ashik and poet and in 1850, unwillingly, defeated his master in a verbal dueling. The rest of Alasgar's productive life was spent training ashiks and composing songs until his death in 1926.[52]Here, we present the opening verses of one of Alasgar's finest compositions, titled Deer (Jeyran).[53]The song has been recently performed byAzerbaijan'sbeloved traditional singerFargana Qasimova.Alim Qasimovoffers the following commentary on this popular song: "In Azerbaijan, jeyran refers to a kind of deer that lives in the mountains and the plains. They’re lovely animals, and because their eyes are so beautiful, poets often use this word. There are many girls named Jeyran in Azerbaijan. We hope that when listeners hear this song, they’ll get in touch with their own inner purity and sincerity."[54]

Durum dolanım başına, --- (Let me encircle you with love,)
Qaşı, gözü qara, Ceyran! --- (Your black eyes and eyebrows, Jeyran.)
Həsrətindən xəstə düşdüm, --- (I have fallen into the flames of longing,)
Eylə dərdə çara, Ceyran! --- (Help me to recover from this pain, Jeyran ".)
.......

An Armenian postal stamp featuring ashughJivani
  • Jivani(Armenian:Ջիվանի,1846–1909), bornSerob Stepani Levonian(Սերոբ Ստեփանի Լևոնյան), was anArmenianashugh (orgusan) andpoet.[55]Jivani's compositions mostly deal with social issues. An example:[56]

THE mournful and unhappy days, like winter, come and go.
We should not be discouraged, they will end, they come and go.
Our bitter griefs and sorrows do not tarry with us long;
Like customers arrayed in line, they come, and then they go....

18th century

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17th century

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incecikten bir kar yağar, --- (With its tender flakes, snow flutters about,)
Tozar Elif, Elif deyi... --- (Keeps falling, calling out "Elif… Elif…”)
Deli gönül abdal olmuş, --- (This frenzied heart of mine wanders about)
Gezer Elif, Elif deyi... --- (Like minstrels, calling out "Elif… Elif…”)

Statue ofAşıq ÜmerinYevpatoria
  • Aşıq Ümer(1621—1707) medievalCrimean Tatarpoet fromKezlev.He wrote mainly lyric poems and greatly influenced the later ashiks.
  • Ashik Abbas Tufarganlywas born in the late 16th century inAzarshahr.According to a popular ashik hikaye, known asAbbas və Gülgəz,he was a love rival ofKing Abbas.The facts about Ashik Abbas's life are mixed with the myths of the said hikaye. Ashik Abbas's compositions have survived and are still song by contemporary ashiks. A famous song starts as the following:[59][60]

Ay həzarət, bir zamana gəlibdir, --- (Oh brothers and sisters, what have we come to:)
Ala qarğa şux tərlanı bəyənməz --- (The jay hates the eagle as never before.)

Başına bir hal gelirse canım, ---If something happens to you,
Dağlara gel dağlara, ---Come to the mountains,
Seni saklar vermez ele canım, ---She will embrace you as her own,
Seni saklar vermez ele. ---Never hands you in to the strangers.
........

16th century

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Khatai, he produced a large volume of lyric poetry inAzerbaijani language.Khatai's poetry is graceful and polished and his language closely approaches to folk idiom:[61]

Winter's shaken off, and spring arrives!---Rosebuds waken, garden plot revives,
Birds all trill in aching harmony,---Love's a thrilling flame, disturbing me.
Earth is dressed in furry, downy green,---Whispers press the silence once serene,.......

  • Aşıq Qərib
  • Nahapet Kuchak(Armenian:Նահապետ Քուչակ) (died 1592) was anArmenianmedievalpoet,considered one of the firstashughs.[62]He is best known for hishairens(հայրեն), "couplets with a single coherent theme."[63]Kuchak was probably born in the village of Kharakonis, near the city ofVan.[64]He later married a woman named Tangiatun. The poet lived his entire life near theLake Vanarea until his death in 1592. Kuchak was buried in the cemetery of Kharakonis St. Theodoros Church and his grave became pilgrimage site.[65]
  • Pir Sultan Abdal(ca. 1480–1550) was a TurkishAlevipoet and ashik. During the time, Pir Sultan Abdal with the villagers, went against injustice, and was hanged by the Sivas governor Hızır pasha, who was once his comrade.[66]The openingquatrainof his composition, THE ROUGH MAN, is as the following:[67]

Dostun en güzeli bahçesine bir hoyrat girmiş, --- (The rough man entered the lover's garden)
Korudur hey benli dilber korudur --- (It is woods now, my beautiful one, it is woods,)
Gülünü dererken dalını kırmış --- (Gathering roses, he has broken their stems)
Kurudur hey benli dilber kurudur --- (They are dry now, my beautiful one, they are dry)

  • Ashiq Qurbaniwas born in 1477 inDirili.He was a contemporary ofShah Ismailand may have served as the court musician. His compositions were handed down as gems of oral art from generation to generation and constitute a necessary repertoire of every ashik. A famous qushma, titled Violet, starts as the following:[38][68]

Başina mən dönüm ala göz Pəri, --- (O my dearest, my love, my beautiful green-eyed Pari)
Adətdir dərələr yaz bənəvşəni. --- (Custom bids us pluck violets when spring days begin)
Ağ nazik əlinən dər dəstə bağla, --- (With your tender white hand gather a nosegay,)
Tər buxaq altinə düz bənəvşəni... --- (Pin it under your dainty chin.....)

15th century

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  • Kaygusuz Abdal,was born in the late 14th century into a noble and aristocratic family of theAnatolianprovince of Teke and died in 1445. He traveled throughout the Middle East and eventually came toCairowhere he founded aBektashiconvent. Kaygusuz's poetry is among the strangest expressions of Sufism. He does not hesitate to describe in great detail his dreams of good food, nor does he shrink from singing about his love adventures with a charming young man. A tekerleme by Kaygusuz sounds like a perfect translation of a nursery rhyme:[69]

kaplu kaplu bağalar kanatlanmiş uçmağa.. ----The turturturtles have taken wings to fly...

13th century

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A Turkish banknote (2009) withYunus Emre's image
  • Yunus Emre(1240–1321) was one of the first Turkish poets who wrote poems in his mother tongue rather thanPersianorArabic,which were the writing medium of the era.Emrewas not literally an ashik, but his undeniable influence on the evolution of ashik literature is being felt to the present times.[71]The openingquatrainof his composition, Bülbül Kasidesi Sözleri, is as the following:[72]

İsmi sübhan virdin mi var? --- (is The Father's name your mantra?)
Bahçelerde yurdun mu var? --- (are those gardens your home?)
Bencileyin derdin mi var? --- (is your plight just as mine?)
Garip garip ötme bülbül --- (don't sing in sorrow nightingale)

See also

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Notes and references

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  1. ^abcThe Concise Garland Encyclopedia of World Music, Volume 2.Routledge.2013.ISBN978-1136095948.
  2. ^Russell, James R. (2018). "43. From Parthia to Robin Hood: The Epic of the Blind Man's Son". In DiTommaso, Lorenzo; Henze, Matthias; Adler, William (eds.).The Embroidered Bible: Studies in Biblical Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha in Honour of Michael E. Stone.Leiden:Brill.pp. 878–898.ISBN9789004355880.Retrieved6 August2020.
  3. ^abZiegler, Susanne (1997)."East Meets West - Urban Musical Styles in Georgia".In Stockmann, Doris; Koudal, Henrik Jens (eds.).Historical Studies on Folk and Traditional Music: ICTM Study Group on Historical Sources of Folk Music, Conference Report, Copenhagen, 24–28 April 1995.Copenhagen:Museum Tusculanum Press. pp. 159–161.ISBN8772894415.
  4. ^abShidfar, Farhad (5 February 2019). "Azerbaijani Ashiq Saz in West and East Azerbaijan Provinces of Iran". In Özdemir, Ulas; Hamelink, Wendelmoet; Greve, Martin (eds.).Diversity and Contact Among Singer-Poet Traditions in Eastern Anatolia.Ergon Verlag.ISBN978-3956504815.
  5. ^abYang, Xi (5 February 2019). "History and Organization of the Anatolian Ašuł/Âşık/Aşıq Bardic Traditions". In Özdemir, Ulas; Hamelink, Wendelmoet; Greve, Martin (eds.).Diversity and Contact Among Singer-Poet Traditions in Eastern Anatolia.Ergon Verlag.ISBN978-3956504815.
  6. ^Kardaş, Canser (5 February 2019). "The Legacy of Sounds in Turkey: Âşıks and Dengbêjs". In Özdemir, Ulas; Hamelink, Wendelmoet; Greve, Martin (eds.).Diversity and Contact Among Singer-Poet Traditions in Eastern Anatolia.Ergon Verlag.ISBN978-3956504815.
  7. ^Babayan, Kathryn; Pifer, Michael (7 May 2018).An Armenian Mediterranean: Words and Worlds in Motion.Springer.pp. 200–201.ISBN978-3319728650.
  8. ^abColin P. Mitchell (Editor), New Perspectives on Safavid Iran: Empire and Society, 2011, Routledge, 90–92
  9. ^M. Heydari-MalayeriOn the origin of the word ešq
  10. ^abKöprülü, Mehmet Fuat (2006).Early Mystics in Turkish Literature.Psychology Press.ISBN0415366860.
  11. ^Studies on the Soviet Union - 1971, Volume 11 - Page 71
  12. ^"DASTAN GENRE IN CENTRAL ASIA – ESSAYS ON CENTRAL ASIA by H.B. PAKSOY – CARRIE Books".Vlib.iue.it.Retrieved17 November2014.
  13. ^G. Lewis (translator), The Book of Dede Korkut, Penguin Classics(1988)
  14. ^AlMAD, Y. S. (2006).LITERARY INFLUENCE. Early Mystics in Turkish Literature(PDF).pp. lii–lvi.
  15. ^Ekmeleddin İhsanoğlu (Editor), Culture and Learning in Islam, 2003, p. 282
  16. ^"Atlas of traditional music of Azerbaijan".Atlas.musigi-dunya.az.Retrieved17 November2014.
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  18. ^Rouben Paul Adalian, Historical Dictionary of Armenia, 2010, p.452.
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