The Lords of Colours: A Prosopogmphic Approach to the Sufi World of 13th Century Anatolia

dc.contributor.authorTurgut, Vedat
dc.date.accessioned2025-05-20T19:00:54Z
dc.date.issued2021
dc.departmentBilecik Şeyh Edebali Üniversitesi
dc.description.abstractIt is true that the political, social and religious structures in 13th-century Seljuk Anatolia had a chaotic feature. The traces of the claim that the populous Turcoman tribes pushed into Anatolia by the Mongols, who were the reason for this chaos, and especially the ancestors of the Ottomans that were the leaders of those tribes which had been considered pagans and shamanists and were later converted to Islam, can be found in the heterodox thesis. This assertion has been tested according to the records kept by the Ottomans, to the sources based on doctrines (aqaid) and to knowledge derived from religious order tradition in this study. It is known that official records kept by the Ottomans that grew within the waqf system are based on the written documents and trustworthy men. This study focuses on the leading figures of the Sufi world through the 12th century and the beginning of the 13th century, and on their marriages. These leading figures were Ahi Evren Mahmud, Muhiyiddin ibn Arabi, Mahmud Hayrani, Seyh Ede-Bali, Haci Bektas Veli, Cemaluddin Musa Zili, Yunus Emre, Abdulkadir-i Geylani, Ahmed er-Rifai, Ebu'l-Vefa Bagdadi, Ahmed Yesevi, Kutbuddin Haydar, Evhaduddin Kirmani, and Shibuddin Suhreverdi. The starting point of this study is based on Seyyid Elvan as recorded in some Negri and Ashikpashazade versions, in which a menkibe/legend is said to have occurred between Orhan Ghazi and Geyikli Baba. In this context, an attempt is made to show the links between the ancestors of the Ottomans with the aforesaid sufi leaders and the devotedness of those ancestors to Bayezid-i Bistami and Veysel Karani. Those ancestors' interest in Veysel Karani, who inherited the mantle of the Prophet Mohammed, and in Karani's follower, Bistami, was because these individuals had protected the cause of the prophet, without seeing him. While the Khorasan School represents an uveysi love, the Turks, who adopted the mutasawwifs (Islamic Sufi masters) of that School as their leaders, were educated according to Maturidi doctrines (aqaids) and Hanefi school of law.
dc.identifier.endpage80
dc.identifier.issn0255-0636
dc.identifier.issue57
dc.identifier.scopusqualityQ3
dc.identifier.startpage35
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11552/8868
dc.identifier.wosWOS:000667932100002
dc.identifier.wosqualityQ2
dc.indekslendigikaynakWoS
dc.indekslendigikaynakWoS - Arts and Humanities Citation Index
dc.institutionauthorTurgut, Vedat
dc.language.isotr
dc.publisherIstanbul 29 Mayis Univ & Isam
dc.relation.ispartofOsmanli Arastirmalari-The Journal of Ottoman Studies
dc.relation.publicationcategoryMakale - Uluslararası Hakemli Dergi - Kurum Öğretim Elemanı
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
dc.snmzKA_WOS_20250518
dc.subjectGeylani
dc.subjectRifai
dc.subjectVefai
dc.subjectKalenderi
dc.subjectBayezidi
dc.subjectDede Karkin
dc.subjectAhi Evren
dc.subjectMahmud Hayrani
dc.subjectMevlana
dc.subjectErtugrul Gazi
dc.titleThe Lords of Colours: A Prosopogmphic Approach to the Sufi World of 13th Century Anatolia
dc.typeArticle

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