Leyla Mammadbeyova

Leyla Alasgar qizi Mammadbeyova, née Zeynalova[1] (Azerbaijani: Leyla Ələsgər qızı Məmmədbəyova; 17 September 1909 – 1989), was the first Azerbaijani female aviator.[2] She also was the first female pilot of Transcaucasia, of Southern Europe and of Middle East.[3]

Leyla Mammadbeyova
Leyla Ələsgər qızı Məmmədbəyova
Born17 September 1909
Died1989 (aged 79–80)
Baku, Azerbaijan SSR, Soviet Union
OccupationAviator

Career

Mammadbeyova's father Alasgar Zeynalov was the cousin of one of Azerbaijan's pioneer film actors, Huseyn Arablinski.[1] Her family was arts-oriented, and as a teenager she could play the piano and the tar. At age 14, she married former landowner Bahram Mammadbeyov of Kurdakhany, who would go on to become chief of the Professional Unions Bank in Baku.[1]

Mammadbeyova was trained as a professional aviator at the Baku Airclub and performed her first flight in 1931. She continued her education at an aviators school in Moscow in 1932. On 17 March 1933, Mammadbeyova became the second woman parachutist in the Soviet Union (after Nina Kamneva) having jumped from a Polikarpov Po-2 aeroplane at Moscow's Tushino Airfield. In 1934 she won the parachute jump competition held among representatives of the South Caucasus nations. By 1941 she was Squadron Leader of the Soviet Army.[2]

Mammadbeyova continued her career as a pilot and instructor at the Baku Airclub. She was refused to fight in World War II as at the time she was raising four children (she had six overall). Despite the Baku Airclub closing down due to war conditions, Mammadbeyova managed to launch glider and parachutist courses of her own, where she trained hundreds of combat pilots and around 4,000 paratroopers. Two of her students later became Heroes of the Soviet Union. Mammadbeyova performed her last flight in 1949 and worked as Vice-Chair of the DOSAAF's Baku branch until 1961.[2]

Mammadbeyova's elder son Firudin fought in World War II, and her younger son Khanlar took part in the Nagorno-Karabakh War, both as combat pilots.

Leyla Mammadbeyova became a living icon while still in her twenties. Her courage and skills were celebrated through media and the arts. Her character inspired the literary works of Mikayil Mushfig (Afshan, 1933 and Shoyla, 1934) and Samad Vurgun (Leyla, 1935), as well as the movie Ismat (dir. Mikayil Mikayilov, 1934). In the latter, Mammadbeyova appeared as a stuntwoman, having performed in plane operating scenes.[1] In 1995 a documentary on Mammadbeyova's life and career entitled Leyla and directed by Nazim Rza Israfiloglu was released by Azerbaijantelefilm.[4]

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gollark: Funnily enough, the 32 byte limit is *barely* long enough that I can define and use... the identity function.
gollark: `9**9**9**9**9**9*9` is greater than 2^64, probably, so I cannot be stopped with C/Rust.
gollark: Unless we are just ignoring such limits.
gollark: This is still constrained by C integer sizes.

References

  1. Conquering the Skies. Baku Magazine, #2 (22), March–April 2011; p. 72.
  2. (in Russian) The Proprietress of the Sky Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine by I.Gadirova. Nash Vek. 7 May 2004. Retrieved 6 June 2007
  3. The Living Age... by Eliakim Littell and Robert S. Littell. Making of America Project. Littell, Son & Company, 1934; p. 226-27
  4. (in Azerbaijani) AzTV / Our Films: Leyla Archived 9 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine
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