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{{Short description|19th-century poet from Shirvan (1840s–1880s)}}
'''Mirza Nasrulla Bahar Shirvani''' ({{lang-az|Mirzə Nəsrulla Bahar Şirvani}}) (1835, [[Shamakhi]], [[Azerbaijan]] - 1883, [[Tabriz]]) was renowned Azerbaijani [[poet]].
'''Bahar Shirvani''' was a 19th-century poet from [[Shirvan]], who was active under [[Naser al-Din Shah Qajar]] ({{reign|1848|1896}}), the [[Qajar dynasty|Qajar]] [[shah]] (king) of [[Qajar Iran|Iran]].{{sfn|Tahqiqi|2019}}


Bahar Shirvani's birth date has been put as 1831, 1835 and 1837. In [[Tabriz]], he served as the secretary of the French Consulate. There he was also assigned with the education of [[Iraj Mirza]]. Bahar Shirvani died in 1883 or 1886. Some scholars considered him to have died at Mirza Mohammad Kazem Saburi's house in [[Mashhad]], while others considered him to have died in [[Tehran]] or Tabriz.{{sfn|Tahqiqi|2019}}
He was born in a wealthy family in Shamakhi where he studied Persian and Arabic languages. After the death of his father, he became a tradesman for a while. Later, he went to Iran and lived in [[Shiraz]], [[Rey, Iran|Rey]] and [[Tus, Iran|Tus]] cities. Finally went to Tabriz and stayed there until his death in 1883. Her work is mainly [[Azerbaijani language|Azerbaijani]] and [[Persian language|Persian]] languages.


Bahar Shirvani wrote poetry in Persian and [[Azerbaijani Turkish]]. He adopted the style of his predecessors and leaned towards the [[Khorasani style (poetry)|Khorasani style]].{{sfn|Tahqiqi|2019}}
He was buried in the cemetery of Sorkhab district in Tabriz.


== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist}}
* Zaman Əsgərli, ''XIX əsr Azərbaycan şeri antologiyası'', Bakı, "Şərq-Qərb", 2005, p. 254, The ISBN printed in document (9952-418-69-5) is invalid.

== Sources ==
* {{cite encyclopedia | article = {{lang|fa|بهار شیروانی}} |trans-title= Bahar-e Shirvani | last = Tahqiqi | first = Leila | url = https://www.cgie.org.ir/fa/article/229127 | encyclopedia = The Great Islamic Encyclopaedia |language=fa| year = 2019 }}

{{Azerbaijani Turkic literature}}
{{Azerbaijani Turkic literature}}
{{Persian literature}}
{{Authority control}}


{{Persondata
| NAME = Shirvani, Bahar
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Poet
| DATE OF BIRTH = 1835
| PLACE OF BIRTH = Shamakhi, Azerbaijan
| DATE OF DEATH = 1883
| PLACE OF DEATH = Tabriz, Iran
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Shirvani, Bahar}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Shirvani, Bahar}}
[[Category:Azerbaijani-language poets]]
[[Category:Azerbaijani-language poets]]
[[Category:Azerbaijani poets]]
[[Category:1830s births]]
[[Category:1835 births]]
[[Category:1880s deaths]]
[[Category:1883 deaths]]
[[Category:Male poets from the Russian Empire]]
[[Category:People from Shamakhi]]
[[Category:People from Tabriz]]
[[Category:Persian-language poets]]
[[Category:Persian-language poets]]
[[Category:Azerbaijani emigrants to Iran]]
[[Category:Emigrants from the Russian Empire to Iran]]
[[Category:Imperial Russian emigrants to Iran]]
[[Category:19th-century Iranian poets]]
[[Category:Iranian Azerbaijani writers]]
[[Category:19th-century Azerbaijani poets]]
[[Category:Iranian Azerbaijani poets]]
[[Category:19th-century poets]]
[[Category:Burials in Iran]]
[[Category:Burials in Iran]]
[[Category:19th-century male writers]]


{{Azerbaijan-poet-stub}}

Revision as of 21:05, 20 November 2023

Bahar Shirvani was a 19th-century poet from Shirvan, who was active under Naser al-Din Shah Qajar (r. 1848–1896), the Qajar shah (king) of Iran.[1]

Bahar Shirvani's birth date has been put as 1831, 1835 and 1837. In Tabriz, he served as the secretary of the French Consulate. There he was also assigned with the education of Iraj Mirza. Bahar Shirvani died in 1883 or 1886. Some scholars considered him to have died at Mirza Mohammad Kazem Saburi's house in Mashhad, while others considered him to have died in Tehran or Tabriz.[1]

Bahar Shirvani wrote poetry in Persian and Azerbaijani Turkish. He adopted the style of his predecessors and leaned towards the Khorasani style.[1]

References

Sources

  • Tahqiqi, Leila (2019). "بهار شیروانی". The Great Islamic Encyclopaedia (in Persian).