Ottoman Poets and Poetics in the Sixteenth Century: Introducing Asik elebi's and Latifi's Biographical Dictionaries
By (Author) Kristof D'hulster
Edinburgh University Press
Edinburgh University Press
9th February 2026
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Hardback
448
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book offers the first-ever partial English translation and commentary of what are arguably the two most important Ottoman biographical dictionaries of poets: the tezkires of Ak elebi and Latifi. While tezkires are mostly culled for their factual data, this book focuses on the non-entry materials, especially the prefaces. These offer intimate glimpses into the authors' lives, charting their professional ambitions, frustrations and feuds, set against the backdrop of the sixteenth-century Ottoman literary world a world in which patrimonial relations made and broke careers, poetry was appraised, attacked, monetised and stolen, and the ambitions of aspiring poets were fuelled and foiled.
The two tezkires reflect this milieu, and their authors were personally acquainted, exchanging thoughts over their work and, finally, falling out over an accusation of plagiarism. The translations are supplemented with a reflection on the nature and translatability of Ottoman high prose, a discussion of the tezkire genre and a detailed presentation of the two authors and their dictionaries. Through a novel study of these interconnected works, this book provides a panorama of Ottoman literary history, as well as insights into the authors' personal struggles.
Kristof D'hulster is a research fellow of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation and is based at the University of Bonn. He engages with the socio-political and cultural history of the pre- and early modern Islamic world, mapping processes of exchange, interaction and connectivity between the Arabic, Turkic, and Persian regions. Following his PhD on Turkic linguistics (KU Leuven, 2010), he was a research fellow of the Research Foundation - Flanders (FWO) and of ERC projects in Ghent, Birmingham and Jena. Next to his first monograph, Browsing through the Sultan's Bookshelves. Towards a Reconstruction of the Library of the Mamluk Sultan Qniawh al-Ghawr (Bonn University Library, 2021), recent publications include "Will I be Happy, Will I be Rich Three Lot-Books (Qur'a) from the Library of Qniawh al-Muammad" (al-'Ur al-Wus, 2024) and "Qayt Sharf's Turkic Class Notes and Tamurby's First Arabic Scribbles: Language and Education at the Mamluk Barracks in Light of MS Ayasofya 1448" (Mamlk Studies Review, 2025).