Muhammad Aminxoʻja Mirzaxoʻja oʻgʻli Muqimiy

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Fargʻonacha , a lyric work by Muqimiy

Muhammad Aminxo'ja Mirzaxo'ja o'g'li Muqimiy ( Cyrillic Муҳаммад Аминхўжа Мирзахўжа ўғли Муқимий; Russian Мукими Мухаммад Амин-ходжа Mukimi Mukhammad Amine Khoja * 1850 , † 1903 ) was a leading Uzbek late tschagataischer early dschadidistischer poet Qo'qon in the Fergana Valley .

Muqimiy received his training on a madrasa in Qo'qon, then in Bukhara . Muqimiy belonged to the Furqat group of poets and wrote mainly lyrical and satirical works.

The Uzbek Soviet literati considered him a co-developer of Uzbek critical realism . In his works, the Soviets recognized a growing “democratic tendency” of Uzbek poets under the influence of Russian culture, and named Muqimiy as well as Furqat, Avaz Oʻtar oʻgʻli , Hamza Niyoziy and Zavqiy an outstanding one Representative of his current. The Uzbek Drama Theater in Tashkent was named after him.

literature

  • Edward Allworth: Uzbek Literary Politics (= Publications in Near and Middle East Studies. Series A, Vol. 5, ZDB -ID 845768-2 ). Mouton & Co., The Hague et al. 1964 (English).
  • Edward Allworth (Ed.): Central Asia, 130 Years of Russian Dominance. A historical overview. 3rd edition. Duke University Press, Durham et al. 1994, ISBN 0-8223-1521-1 . (English).
  • Viktor M. Beliaev: Central Asian Music. Essays in the History of the Music of the Peoples of the USSR Edited and annotated by Mark Slobin. Translation from Russian by Mark and Greta Slobin. Wesleyan University Press, Middletown CT 1975, ISBN 0-8195-4083-8 , pp. 302-307 (English).

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Allworth: Uzbek Literary Politics. 1964, p. 109.
  2. Allworth (Ed.): Central Asia. 1994, p. 419.
  3. Historic Center of Kokand on whc.unesco.org
  4. a b Allworth (Ed.): Central Asia. 1994, p. 408.
  5. ^ Allworth: Uzbek Literary Politics. 1964, p. 27.
  6. Beliaev: Central Asian Music. 1975, p. 302.
  7. ^ Allworth: Uzbek Literary Politics. 1964, p. 72.
  8. ^ Allworth: Uzbek Literary Politics. 1964, p. 88.
  9. SS Kasymov: Uzbekskaja Sowjetskaja Sozialistitscheskaja Respublika. XIII. Literatura . In: Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1956), pp. 31–34 (Russian); Translated into English by Edward Allworth, The Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic… Literature . In: Uzbek Literary Politics. 1964, pp. 254-260.
  10. Munisa Gafurova: International day of ancient art ( Memento from March 20, 2011 in the Internet Archive ), on www.ut.uz , March 30, 2007