Ismayil Shykhly
Ismayil Shykhly | |
---|---|
Born |
İkinci Şıxlı, Qazakh Rayon, Azerbaijan | March 22, 1919
Died |
July 26, 1995 76) Baku, Azerbaijan | (aged
Occupation | Writer |
Ismayil Shykhly (Azerbaijani: İsmayıl Şıxlı; March 22, 1919 – July 26, 1995), also known by his birth name Ismayil Shikhlinsky Gahraman oglu (Azerbaijani: İsmayıl Şıxlınski Qəhrəman oğlu), was Azerbaijani writer.
Early years
Shykhly was born on March 22, 1919 in Ikinji Shykhly village of Qazakh Rayon of Azerbaijan. He studied in Kosalar village. In 1934, he got enrolled in Qakhazh Pedagogical School. He was impressed by Samad Vurgun's poem "Yadıma düşdü" (I recollected) during his speech at Alexandr Pushkin's 100th anniversary celebrated in Qazakh. The same year, Shykhly entered Baku State Pedagogical Institute. During his years in college, influenced by Vurgun's writing and Ashig folk art, he wrote many poems. His first poem "Quşlar" (Birds) was published in Ədəbiyyat qəzeti newspaper in 1938. He was a teacher by profession and wrote a number of books on ancient and national traditions. His most famous work, "Turbulent Kura" (Dəli Kür) was filmed in 1969 by Azerbaijanfilm. On September 15, 1942 he volunteered for military service and fought in World War II through 1945.[1]
Career
Upon his return, he continued writing and his first novel "Həkimin nağılı" (Doctor's tale) was published in 1947. In 1965-1968, he was the Chairman of Union of Azerbaijani Writers, in 1976-1978, he was the Chief Editor of Azərbaycan magazine, and from 1981 on, he was the First Secretary of the Union of Azerbaijani Writers. Shykhly had served as the deputy in Supreme Soviet of Azerbaijan SSR and has been awarded with Sheref, Red Banner of Labor and Shohrat orders for his contributions to Soviet and Azerbaijani literature. Ismayil Shykhly died on July 26, 1995 in Baku. He was buried at Alley of Honor.
Works
- "My Dead World" (Ölən Dünyam)
- "Turbulent Kura" (Dəli Kür)
- "Bury the Dead in the Cemetery" (Ölüləri Qəbristanda basdirin)
- "Exile of Dignity" (Namus Qaçağı)
- "The Coward Bullet" (Namərd Gülləsı)
See also
References
- ↑ "Database of biographies. İsmayıl Şıxlı". Retrieved 2010-12-29.