Ziya Paşa

Turkish author

Learn about this topic in these articles:

contribution to Turkish literature

  • This map shows the territorial expansion of the Ottoman Empire from 1300 to its greatest extent in 1683-99, highlighting different periods under rulers such as Mehmed II, Selim I, and Süleyman the Magnificent, and marking key cities, seas, and geographical boundaries in Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East.
    In Turkish literature: New Ottoman literature (1839–1918)

    …Şinasi succeeded in winning both Ziya Paşa and Namık Kemal over to the cause of modernization. Ziya Paşa led a successful career as a provincial governor, but in 1867 he fled to France, England, and Switzerland; while in exile he collaborated with Şinasi. In Geneva in 1870, Ziya Paşa wrote…

    Read More
  • Al-Ḥākim Mosque
    In Islamic arts: Turkish literatures

    Ziya Paşa (died 1880), the translator of Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s Émile (which became a popular textbook for 19th-century Muslim intellectuals), was among the first to write in a less traditional idiom and to complain in his poetry—just as Ḥālī was to do in India a few…

    Read More

role in Young Ottomans

  • In Young Ottomans

    …noted poets Namık Kemal and Ziya Paşa; they were further supported financially and materially by the Egyptian prince Mustafa Fazıl and had attracted the attention of the Ottoman princes Murad and Abdülhamid.

    Read More