Samiha Ayverdi

Samiha Ayverdi (25 November 1905 22 March 1993) was a Turkish writer and Sufi mystic. She was the sister of architect and historian Ekrem Hakkı Ayverdi.

Samiha Ayverdi
Born(1905-11-25)25 November 1905
Died22 March 1993(1993-03-22) (aged 87)
Istanbul, Turkey
Resting placeMerkezefendi Cemetery, Istanbul
NationalityTurkish
OccupationNovelist
RelativesEkrem Hakkı Ayverdi (brother)

Samiha Ayverdi was born in İstanbul to Fatma Meliha Hanim and İsmail Hakkı Bey, an Ottoman military official. She studied at Süleymaniye Kız Numune Mektebi and among other things, learned French and read about philosophy and Islamic mysticism. She became a follower and later official successor of Sufi thinker Kenan Rıfai, who became a major influence in her work.[1]

In 1938, she published her first novel titled Aşk Budur and followed it with over 30 novels and short story collections.[2]

Ayverdi died on 22 March 1993 and is buried at the Merkezefendi Cemetery in Zeytinburnu, İstanbul.

Bibliography

  • Aşk Bu İmiş
  • Yaşayan Ölü
  • Son Menzil
  • Yolcu Nereye Gidiyorsun
  • İbrahim Efendi Konağı
  • Mabette Bir Gece
  • İnsan Ve Şeytan
  • Batmayan Gün
gollark: As dictator, I resent this accusation and will be sending you to [REDACTED] shortly.
gollark: Greetings, foolish mortal.
gollark: https://www.math.toronto.edu/mathnet/questionCorner/itothei.html
gollark: It means that i^i is a real number (or , strictly speaking, all the values of it are real).
gollark: This is presumably not the same as actually being drunk.

References

  1. Hibri, Azizah (1982). Women and Islam. Pergamon Press. p. 145. ISBN 978-0-08-027928-2.
  2. Mitler, Louis (1988). Contemporary Turkish writers: a critical bio-bibliography of leading writers in the Turkish Republican Period up to 1980. Indiana University. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-933070-14-1.
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