Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Turkish_folk_literature> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 92 of
92
with 100 triples per page.
- Turkish_folk_literature abstract "Turkish folk literature is an oral tradition deeply rooted, in its form, in Central Asian nomadic traditions. However, in its themes, Turkish folk literature reflects the problems peculiar to a settling (or settled) people who have abandoned the nomadic lifestyle. One example of this is the series of folktales surrounding the figure of Keloğlan, a young boy beset with the difficulties of finding a wife, helping his mother to keep the family house intact, and dealing with the problems caused by his neighbors. Another example is the rather mysterious figure of Nasreddin, a trickster figure who often plays jokes, of a sort, on his neighbors.Nasreddin also reflects another significant change that had occurred between the days when the Turkish people were nomadic and the days when they had largely become settled in Anatolia; namely, Nasreddin is a Muslim imam. The Turkish people had first become an Islamic people sometime around the 9th or 10th century CE, and the religion henceforth came to exercise an enormous influence on their society and literature; particularly the heavily mystically oriented Sufi and Shi'a varieties of Islam. The Sufi influence, for instance, can be seen clearly not only in the tales concerning Nasreddin but also in the works of Yunus Emre, a towering figure in Turkish literature and a poet who lived at the end of the 13th and beginning of the 14th century CE, probably in the Karamanid state in south-central Anatolia. The Shi'a influence, on the other hand, can be seen extensively in the tradition of the aşıks, or ozans, who are roughly akin to medieval European minstrels and who traditionally have had a strong connection with the Alevi faith, which can be seen as something of a homegrown Turkish variety of Shi'a Islam. However, in Turkish culture such a neat division into Sufi and Shi'a is scarcely possible: for instance, Yunus Emre is considered by some to have been an Alevi, while the entire Turkish aşık/ozan tradition is permeated with the thought of the Bektashi Sufi order, which is itself a blending of Shi'a and Sufi concepts. The word aşık (literally, \"lover\") is in fact the term used for first-level members of the Bektashi order.Because the Turkish folk literature tradition extends in a more or less unbroken line from about the 10th or 11th century CE to today, it is perhaps best to consider the tradition from the perspective of genre. There are three basic genres in the tradition: epic; folk poetry; and folklore.".
- Turkish_folk_literature thumbnail Ozan.jpg?width=300.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageID "30856578".
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageLength "10644".
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageOutDegree "62".
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageRevisionID "678165813".
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Alevism.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Anatolian_beyliks.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Bağlama.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Bektashi_Order.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Bektashi_jokes.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Bursa.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Category:Turkish_culture.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Category:Turkish_folk_poets.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Central_Asia.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Dadaloğlu.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Europe.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Epic_of_Koroghlu.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Erzurumlu_Emrah.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Folklore.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Gevheri.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Haji_Bektash_Veli.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Hymn.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Imam.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Islam.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Kaloghlan.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Karacaoğlan.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Karagiozis.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Karamanids.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Khanqah.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Mandolin.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Mehmed_I.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Memed,_My_Hawk.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Minstrel.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Muhammad.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Muslim.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Mysticism.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Nasreddin.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Neşet_Ertaş.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Nâzım_Hikmet.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Oghuz_Turks.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Oral_tradition.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Osman_I.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Ottoman_dynasty.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Pir_Sultan_Abdal.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Prophet.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Prose.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Seyrani.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Shadow_play.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Sheikh_Bedreddin.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Shia_Islam.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Stock_character.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Sufism.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Sultan.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Tariqa.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Transoxiana.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Trickster.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Western_Asia.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Yaşar_Kemal.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Yunus_Emre.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink Âşık_Veysel_Şatıroğlu.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink File:Kaygusuz_Abdal.jpg.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink File:Nasreddin.jpg.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLink File:Ozan.jpg.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLinkText "Anatolian folk poetry".
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dīwān of Yūnūs".
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLinkText "Turkish Alevi folk poetry".
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLinkText "Turkish folk literature".
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLinkText "Turkish folk poet".
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLinkText "Turkish folk poets".
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLinkText "Turkish oral literature".
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLinkText "folk".
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageWikiLinkText "folklore literature".
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Asian_topic.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:History_of_Turkish_literature.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Main.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Turkish_folk_literature wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Timeline_of_Folklore_of_the_Ottoman_Empire.
- Turkish_folk_literature subject Category:Turkish_culture.
- Turkish_folk_literature subject Category:Turkish_folk_poets.
- Turkish_folk_literature hypernym Tradition.
- Turkish_folk_literature type Food.
- Turkish_folk_literature type Redirect.
- Turkish_folk_literature comment "Turkish folk literature is an oral tradition deeply rooted, in its form, in Central Asian nomadic traditions. However, in its themes, Turkish folk literature reflects the problems peculiar to a settling (or settled) people who have abandoned the nomadic lifestyle.".
- Turkish_folk_literature label "Turkish folk literature".
- Turkish_folk_literature sameAs Q7855348.
- Turkish_folk_literature sameAs m.0bl3dy.
- Turkish_folk_literature sameAs Türk_halk_edebiyatı.
- Turkish_folk_literature sameAs Q7855348.
- Turkish_folk_literature wasDerivedFrom Turkish_folk_literature?oldid=678165813.
- Turkish_folk_literature depiction Ozan.jpg.
- Turkish_folk_literature isPrimaryTopicOf Turkish_folk_literature.