Mirza Fatali Akhundov

Mirzə Fətəli Axundov (also Axundzadə; Russian Мирза Фатали Ахундов / Mirza Fatali Akhundov; born July 12, 1812 in Nuxa, † February 27, 1878 in Tbilisi, Georgia) was an Azerbaijani reconnaissance, writer, philosopher and literary critic.

He designed the first Latin alphabet of Turkic languages ​​, and placed it in 1863 before the Ottoman Scientific Society in Turkey. But his proposal was there no agreement, so that he left disappointed.

His philosophical treatise "Three letters of Indian princes Kämaluddövlä to the Persian prince Dschalaluddövlä and their answer by the latter " (1863-1865), also known as " letters of Kämaluddövlä " known to influence the development of philosophy in the Islamic Orient.

His novel " Deceived Star " ( 1857) he founded the new Azerbaijani prose.

Especially famous was Axundov with his theatrical comedies " Molla Ibrahim Khalil, the Alchimiker and owner of the philosophy stone " (1850), " Monseur Jordan, the botanist, and Dervish Mästälischah, the famous magician" (1850), " The Bear, the conqueror of the robbers " ( 1851), " Vizier of the khanate Länkäran " ( 1851), " adventures of a miser " (1852 ), also known as " Hadji Gara ", and " Human Rights in the city of Tabriz " (1855 ), with whom he dramaturgy justified not only in Azerbaijan, but also in the literature of the Islamic Middle East.

His first published work was in 1837 created " Oriental Elegy on Pushkin's death."

  • Azerbaijani
  • Author
  • Literature ( Azerbaijani )
  • Born in 1812
  • Died in 1878
  • Man
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