Book of Dede Korkut
The Book of Dede Korkut, also spelled as Dada Gorgud, Dede Qorqut or Qorqit ata, is the most famous epic stories of the Oghuz Turks. The stories have values important to the social lifestyle of the nomadic Turks and their pre-Islamic beliefs. The book's mythic story is part of the culture of Turkic states. Some of those are Turkey, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan and to a smaller amount Kyrgyzstan.[1]
The stories were first told orally before they were written as a book. There are many versions of the stories. Many dates have been used for the first written copies. Geoffery Lewis dates it fairly early in the 15th century.[2][3] Cemal Kafadar said that it was no earlier than the 15th century.[2] Stanford Jay Shaw (1977) in his history of the Ottoman empire dates it in the 14th century.[4]
Book Of Dede Korkut Media
- DQKBirinciboy.jpg
The beginning of the first chapter, "Boghach Khan Son of Dirse Khan", of the Dede Korkut, 16th-century Dresden manuscript
- Gorkut Ata Statue at Independence Monument (27506806397).jpg
Gorkut Ata (Dede Korkut) Statue in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan.
- Oghusenbuchmuseum.jpeg
A copy of Book of Dede Korkut in Dresden, Germany.
- TM-2006-1000manat-Gorkut Ata2-b.png
Depiction of Gorkut Ata (Dede Korkut) in 2006 Turkmen coins.
- 1999, December, 29. The 1300th Anniversary of Kitabi Dede Gorgud.jpg
1999 Stamps of Azerbaijan commemorating the 1300th Anniversary of Kitab-i Dede Gorgud
References
- ↑ "The book of my grandfather Korkut" (trans., intro and comments by V.Barthold, new ed., intro and comments by V.M.Zhirmunskiy and A.N.Kononov) // Moscow and Leningrad, USSR Academy of Sciences, 1962, p. 6
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Cemal Kafadar(1995), “in Between Two Worlds: Construction of the Ottoman states”, University of California Press, 1995.
- ↑ Michael E. Meeker, “The Dede Korkut Ethic”, International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 24, No. 3 (Aug., 1992), 395-417.
- ↑ Stanford Jay Shaw, History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey, Cambridge University, 1977, pg 141.