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Ashig Alasgar

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Azeri mystic troubadour poet (1821–1936)
Ashig Alasgar
Born1821 (1821)
Aghkilsa, Erivan Khanate
DiedMarch 7, 1926 (aged 104–105)
Aghkilsa, Nor Bayazet uezd, Armenian SSR, Soviet Union
Website
dede-alesker.com

Ashig Alasgar (Azerbaijani: Aşıq Ələsgər; 1821 – 7 March 1926) was an Azerbaijani mystic troubadour (Ashik) and highly regarded poet of Azerbaijani folk songs. He was born in the village of Aghkilsa in the Goycha District of the Erivan Khanate.

Early life

Ashig Alasgar was born in 1821 in the village of Aghkilse in the Goycha region. His father Almammad worked as a carpenter. At the same time, he was also known for his intelligence in literature. Almammad was fairly good at poetry genres such as Gerayly, Qoshma and Bayati. It was presumed that Almammad had a huge impact on Ashiq Alasgar.

Ashiq Alasgar grew up in a big and poor family with three brothers and two sisters. He was the eldest son of the family. Due to the financial difficulties in his family, Alasgar was obliged to work on the farm of a rich landowner, Karbalayi Gurban when he was 14. While working here, Alasgar fell in love with a 12 years old daughter of Karbalayi Gurban. But due to his social background, he was refused to have such a relationship with agha's daughter and after some time Alasgar was fired.

Ashig Alasgar spent his childhood in the village of Aghkilse and was uneducated. But despite this, he was able to learn the secrets of ashiq art from the elderly ashigs in his village. From his childhood, Alasgar was a careful listener and he very passionately participated in most events in his village due to his strong memory and story-telling ability, he could manage to memorize almost all ashiq stories (dastans) of that time. He was playing saz using his left hand.

Activities

Ashiq Alasgar is considered one of the great representatives of Azerbaijani folk poetry. His poetries in Gerayly, Qoshma, Mukhammas, Cighali Tecnis, Giphilbend genres have influenced ashigs' next-generation. Ashig Alasgar was almost a master in branches of ashig art and contributed a lot to Azerbaijani literature. Alasgar wrote his first poetries in his adolescence period. Shortly after, his father encouraged him to learn ashig art from one of the famous ashigs in Goycha district, Ashig Ali. After a long term preparation, Alasgar had a chance to participate in a wedding ceremony in his village with Ashig Ali. In that event, everyone appreciated the intelligence of Alasgar as he was able to defeat his instructor Ashiq Ali in a debate (kind of competition between two ashigs) and that event made Alasgar very famous in Goycha region and neighbouring districts. He actively participated in several wedding ceremonies and important events in Yerevan, Nakhchivan, Gazakh, Garabagh, Javanshir, Ganja, Kalbajar other regions.

Later life

Grave of Ashig Alasgar in Aghkilse

Due to concussion from his first love, Alasgar did not marry anyone until he was 40 and then he married a girl named Anakhanima from the village Yanshaq in Kalbajar district. In this period, Ashig Alasgar was busy with different activities in order to take care of his family. In spring and summertime, he was engaged in agriculture, small construction works and carpentry. But despite all of the above activities, he spent most of his time to the ashig art and wrote several poems. Alasgar was known not only in Azerbaijan but also as a master of ashig art in Turkey, Iran and Dagestan.

Alasgar completed his later life in misery and suffering. In 1915, he lost his brother's son and also his son-in-law at a very young age. After a year, his son Basir murdered the reeve of the village and escaped but instead, several people were arrested from Alasgar's family. During the period of 1918-1919 conflict between Azerbaijanis and Armenians, Alasgar was forced to leave his motherland and migrated to live in Kalbajar and then to Tartar districts. In 1921, he returned to Aghkilse and continued to reside there for the rest of his life.

Ashig Alasgar died on Aghkilse on March 7, 1926.

References

  1. "Article by Anna Oldfeld Senarslan, University of Wisconsin, Conference on Music in the world of Islam, 2007" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-10-01. Retrieved 2008-05-10.
  2. "Who is who (in Azerbaijani)". Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2009-11-28.
  3. ^ "AZƏRBAYCAN AġIQLAR BĠRLĠYĠ. OZAN DÜNYASI".
  4. "AZERBAİJANİ MUSİC. ASHUQ MUSİC".
  5. "Poetry and music of Ashiqs (Traditional music of Azerbaijan)".
  6. "Ağkilsədə uyuyan Aşıq Ələsgər - Anım günü".
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See also
Azerbaijani is the official language of Azerbaijan and one of the official languages in Dagestan, a republic of Russia. It is also widely spoken in Iran (in particular in the historic Azerbaijan region) as well as in parts of Turkey and Georgia.
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