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Abbasgulu agha Bakikhanov[lower-alpha 1] (Azerbaijani: Abbasqulu ağa Bakıxanov) (21 June 1794, Amirjan – 31 May 1847, Wadi Fatima, near Jeddah), Abbas Qoli Bakikhanov,[3][lower-alpha 2] or Abbas-Qoli ibn Mirza Mohammad (Taghi) Khan Badkubi[4] was an Azerbaijani writer, historian, journalist, linguist, poet and philosopher.

Abbasgulu Bakikhanov
Abbasqulu Bakıxanov
Born(1794-06-21)June 21, 1794
Amirjan, Baku Khanate, Qajar Iran[1]
DiedMay 31, 1847(1847-05-31) (aged 52)
Wadi Fatima, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Other namesQodsi / Qudsi / Gudsi
Occupationwriter, historian, journalist, linguist, poet and philosopher
Known forFather of Azerbaijani historiography
Parent
  • Mirza Muhammad Khan II (father)

He was son of the third khan of Baku Mirza Muhammad Khan II. He later served as an officer in the Imperial Russian Army and participated in the Russo-Persian War of 1826–1828. He later retired and settled in Quba, but traveled extensively within Russia, meeting important literary figures as Alexander Pushkin.

Also known by his pen name Qodsi / Qudsi / Gudsi (Azeri: Qüdsi), Bakikhanov is referred to by many Azerbaijani scholars as being one of the "earliest (Azerbaijani) intellectuals and historians".[5] He is credited with being the first person that wrote a proper "scholarly monograph on the history of greater Shirvan"; the area that would later make up most of the Republic of Azerbaijan.[5] His Qanun-e Qudsi, was the first Persian grammar manual published in history.


Early life


Bakikhanov house in Quba, currently a museum named after him
Bakikhanov house in Quba, currently a museum named after him

According to other sources, Bakikhanov was born on 10 June 1794. His childhood contemporized with a defining epoch in the history of the Caucasus—the era of battles between Russia and Persia over political domination in the region. Bakikhanov was the son of the 3rd khan of Baku, Mirza Muhammad Khan II and a Georgian lady Sofia.[6] He began his academic studies at the age of 7 and soon excelled in Persian. In 1813, seven years after the loss of the khanate's sovereignty, the family moved to Quba, where Bakikhanov studied social and life sciences, humanities, and languages. Within the next ten years, he learned Arabic, Turkish, and Russian, followed later by French and Polish.[7] In 1818, he established the first Azeri literary society Golestan-i Iram. His poetry at this early phase displayed Bakikhanov's deep moral and philosophical involvement in Islam. In 1820, he enlisted in the Russian army as an interpreter and got a commission for taking part in suppressing the rebellious Kazikumukh Khanate (present-day southern Daghestan).


Political and diplomatic career


Bakikhanov actively participated in the political life of the Caucasus. He was a member of the Russian diplomatic mission that was in charge of negotiating border issues between Russia and Persia in the 1820s. In 1823, he assisted in gathering ethnographic information for the Description of the Province of Karabakh. In 1828, he was among the Russian military command under General Paskevich that took part in peace negotiations with Persia, which resulted in signing the Treaty of Turkmenchay. He managed to convince Khan Ehsan of Nakhchivan, as well as a number of Kurdish leaders of Persia to ally with Russia. The year after Bakikhanov was awarded the 4th Degree Medal of St. Vladimir for participating in the siege of Kars in the Russo-Turkish War of 1828-1829. For a while he served at the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Saint Petersburg, and had travelled to Kaunas, Riga, and Warsaw before he retired in 1835 and returned to the village of Amsar near Quba.[8]


Career in education


Bakikhanov's religious views were generally liberal due to major European influences. He criticized fanaticism among the religious masses and the Obscurantism of the clergy. He promoted the Islamic culture in the region and in Russia as a whole. His ultimate goal was to establish a Muslim college in Baku and an Oriental languages school in Tbilisi. In 1832, he came up with a project for establishing a major educational institution for Muslims, where subjects would be taught in Russian, Persian, and Azeri. He went further, and wrote a number of textbooks through which students were expected to study. The project was sent to the governor of the Caucasus for approval but unfortunately was disregarded and never looked into. Bakikhanov also translated several fables by Ivan Krylov into Azeri — however, only one has been preserved till nowadays. His greatest accomplishment in the field of education was writing Qanun-e Qudsi, the first Persian grammar manual published in history.[9]


Major works


Other works include Umumi Joghrafya (General Geography), Kitab-i Nasihat (The Book of Admonitions), etc., scientific essays, collected poems, articles, translations of various works into Azeri and Russian, etc.


Death


In 1845, Bakikhanov went on a hajj. On his way to the holy Islamic sights, he was warmly received by the Shah of Persia and was awarded the Shir-e Khorshid, the highest-ranking Persian medal. There he also visited Isfahan, Yazd, Shiraz, and Kermanshah. In Constantinople, Bakikhanov had an audience with the Sultan, who showed interest in some of his academic writings, particularly in Asrar al-Malakut, of which he was presented a copy. From there, Bakikhanov went to visit Mecca and Medina. On his way from Medina back to Damascus he caught cholera and died in the small town of Wadi Fatima in Hejaz (present-day Saudi Arabia) in 1847.


Family


In 1826, Bakikhanov married Sakina (b. 1807) his paternal cousin and grandnephew of Fatali Khan, daughter of Kalb Huseyn agha, by whom he had two daughters:[11]


Awards



Memory



Notes


  1. "Bakikhanov" derives from "Baku-Khanov". A Russified name.[2]
  2. Or "Abbas Qoli Aqa Bakikhanov".

References


  1. Gould, Rebecca Ruth (2019). "The Persianate Cosmology of Historical Inquiry in the Caucasus: ʿAbbās Qulī Āghā Bākīkhānūf's Cosmological Cosmopolitanism". Comparative Literature. 71 (3): 272–273. doi:10.1215/00104124-7546287. The present article develops this emergent area of inquiry through an examination of the writings, life, and legacy of the polymath Persianate intellectual ʿAbbās Qulī Āghā Bākīkhānūf (1794–1847). Bākīkhānūf came of age in an era of empire, in his case specifically of Russian incursions onto Qajar territory. While Bākīkhānūf was born into what was the Qajar empire, his place of birth was incorporated into the Russian empire with the Treaty of Gulistan (1813), ratified during his teenage years.
  2. Storey, Charles Ambrose (1970). Persian Literature: v.1: A Bio-bibliographical Survey. Luzac Publishing Ltd. p. 428. ISBN 978-0718901417. by 'Abbas-QulI " Qudsi " Badkubi or Baku-Khanov.
    • Floor, Willem M.; Javadi, Hassan. "The heavenly rose-garden: a history of Shirvan & Daghestan, by Abbas Qoli Aqa Bakikhanov", (Mage Publishers, 2009), p. vii; "Abbas Qoli Aqa Bakikhanov, also known under the pen-name Qodsi, was an Azerbaijani writer, historian, journalist, linguist, poet and philosopher. He was born on Thursday, the 4th Dhu'l-Hejjeh 1208 hijri, or the 10th of June in the year 1794 in the village of Amir Hajan near Baku. Bakikhanov was a scion of the ruling dynasty of the Khanate of Baku, being the nephew of the last khan of Baku. His father Mirza Mohammad Khan II was the ninth Khan of Baku and was (...)"
    • Bournoutian, George A. "A Brief History of the Aghuankʻ Region, by Esayi Hasan Jalaleantsʻ", (Mazda Publishers, 2009), p. 10; "Even more irritating was the fact that Muslim historians, who had lived in the territory of what later became the Azerbaijan Republic, men like Abbas Qoli Aqa Bakikhanov Mirza Jamal Javanshir and Mirza Adigozal Beg, the first of whom was honored by the Academy of Sciences in Baku as the father of the history of Azerbaijan, had clearly indicated a strong Armenian presence in Karabagh prior to 1828 and had placed the region within the territory of historic Armenia."
  3. Storey, Charles Ambrose (1970). Persian Literature: v.1: A Bio-bibliographical Survey. Luzac Publishing Ltd. p. 428. ISBN 978-0718901417. by 'Abbas-Quli "Qudsi" Badkubi or Baku-Khanov.
  4. Bournoutian 2004, p. 17.
  5. "A CHALLENGING LITERARY FIGURE". 8 July 2011. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
  6. Studies on Qudsi Archived September 28, 2007, at the Wayback Machine by G.Bakikhanova (in Russian). Retrieved 29 August 2006
  7. Azeri Literature Archived September 28, 2007, at the Wayback Machine (in Russian). Fundamental Electronic Library The Russian Literature and Folklore. Retrieved 29 August 2006
  8. Floor & Javadi 2009, p. xiii.
  9. Willem Floor, Hasan Javadi(2009), "The Heavenly Rose-Garden: A History of Shirvan & Daghestan by Abbas Qoli Aqa Bakikhanov, Mage Publishers, 2009.
  10. Acts collected by the Caucasian Archaeological Commission: [In 12 vols.] / Archive of Chief Executive viceroy of the Caucasus; Under the Society. Ed. A. D. Berger. - Tbilisi: Typ. Ch. Ex. Viceroy Cau., 1866-1904. T. 6: Part 2: [1816-1827] / Ed. A. D. Berger. - 1875. - 941 p. — pp. 907-908
  11. Гусейнов, Гейдар (1958). Из истории общественной и философской мысли в Азербайджане XIX века (in Russian). Азербайджанское гос. изд-во. p. 122.
  12. "Tarix". tarix.gov.az. Archived from the original on 2017-05-15. Retrieved 2018-08-30.
  13. "В Баку воздвигнут памятник Бакиханову – ФОТО". 4 October 2011. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
  14. "Завершились съемки художественного фильма "Посол зари", посвященного Мирза Фатали Ахундову". LifeNews - Новости Азербайджана и Мира (in Russian). Retrieved 2018-08-30.

Sources



На других языках


- [en] Abbasgulu Bakikhanov

[es] Abbasgulu Bakıjanov

Abbasgulu aga Bakıjanov (en azerí, Abbasqulu ağa Bakıxanov Qüdsi) fue un poeta, escritor, científico, filósofo y traductor de Azerbaiyán.

[fr] Abbasgoulou agha Bakikhanov

Abbasgoulou agha Bakikhanov(en azéri : Abbasqulu ağa Bakıxanov ; né le 4 juin 1794) est un poète azerbaïdjanais, écrivain, scientifique, penseur et traducteur.

[ru] Бакиханов, Аббас-Кули-ага

Аббас-Кули́-ага́ Бакиха́нов (азерб. عباسقلی باکیخانوف, Abbasqulu ağa Bakıxanov), также известный под литературным псевдонимом Кудси́ (азерб. Qüdsi, «чистый», «благородный») (1794—1847) — азербайджанский[1] учёный-просветитель, поэт и писатель, писавший на азербайджанском, персидском и арабском языках[2]. Ф. Касим-заде считает его «одним из основоположников реалистического направления в азербайджанской художественной литературе XIX века»[3].



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