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ID142758
Title ProperOn Charles Vernay and his ‘DIVAN’
LanguageENG
AuthorWasti, Syed Tanvir
Summary / Abstract (Note)Starting with the nineteenth century, European interest in the literature of the Middle East began to increase. Ottoman Turkish poetry, from territories that expanded into Europe, was an object of special study – as evidenced from the works of Sir William Jones, James Clarence Mangan and Elias John Wilkinson Gibb, on the one hand, and poets like Lord Byron and Thomas Moore, on the other hand. A young Frenchman, Charles Vernay, who had a gift for languages, taught himself Persian and Turkish and published a Divan – a collection of classical Oriental poetry – in Paris while still in his teens. The article traces the life and analyzes the Turkish poetry of Charles Vernay.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle Eastern Studies Vol. 51, No.5; Sep 2015: p.789-803
Journal SourceMiddle Eastern Studies 2015-10 51, 5
Key WordsEuropean Interest ;  Charles Vernay ;  DIVAN ;  Ottoman Turkish Poetry ;  Turkish Poetry