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Gullu Yologlu

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Name
  
Gullu Yologlu


Gullu Yologlu httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaazcc5Gl

Gullu Yologlu - PhD, Doctor of Historical Sciences has contributed ethnology, folklore studies, literature, history, religious studies and other scientific fields in Azerbaijan by providing rich information, analysis and outcomes with her scholarly and scholarly-publicistic articles and books, and her scientific and artistic radio and television programs for more than 20 years. Her main research areas are faiths, traditions, ethnic identities, shamanist past, material and non-material culture of small-numbered Turkic peoples living in coutries from the Siberia to the Balkans.

Contents

Gullu Yologlu httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons88

Early life

Gullu Yologlu Mammadli was born in a family of teachers, in Mesha-oba (Mesha Shambul) village (which is in Balakan district at present) in Zagatala district of Azerbaijan in May 5, 1963, although her origins come from Janalli village of Gazakh district. Her father Yologlu Kamil Gulmammadov who became a history-literature teacher after graduating from Ganja Pedagogical Institute and her mother Nahida Mahmud Bayramova, a physics-math teacher, worked in Zagatala.

Yologlu moved to Janalli, to her father’s homeland with her parents when she was 3.

Education

Finishing school named after Samad Vurgun with excellent marks in Gazakh in 1980, Yologlu enrolled in the Institute of the Russian Language and Literature named after Mirza Fatali Akhundov (at present Baku Slavic University) by passing exams successfully in the same year and graduated in 1985. She interned at Astrakhan Pedagogical State University (Russia) during 1983-1984.

Academia

Gullu Yologlu would constantly visit Moldova and conduct research on the Moldovan-Romanians and Gagauz Turks starting from her undergraduate years. She described Azerbaijani-Gagauz literary ties in the second chapter of her graduation paper on Azerbaijan-Moldova literary relations. The second chapter of Yologlu’s thesis which she defended in 1992 titled “Azerbaijan-Moldova literary relations” in which she had developed her research on the Gagauz people.

She is the author of 6 books and 123 printed scholarly publications.

She defended her doctoral dissertation titled “Ceremonies of Turkic Peoples (historical-ethnographic study on the basis of Tuva, Khakas and Gagauz Turks’ materials)” in 2006.

She is a member of Scientific Council of the Ahi Evran University (Kirshehir, Turkey).

Gullu Yologlu has been member of the Journalists’ Union of Azerbaijan since 1992 and Writer’s Union of Azerbaijan since 1996. In 1998, she was elected as an associate member of the Ataturk Cultural Center in Ankara, Turkey. Suleyman Demirel, the then President of Turkey, presented diploma to Yologlu in the conference hall of TIKA (Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency).

She is a lead researcher at the Institute of Archeology and Ethnography at the Azerbaijan National Academy of Sciences (ANAS) and member of the Dissertation Council.

Television and radio programs

Gullu Yologlu has presented and authored several radio and television programs. She has been author and presenter of "Soyumuz, soykökümüz" ("Our ancestry and roots") and “Dədə Qorqud-1300” ("Dada Gorgud-1300") rubrics at musical informational program "Sahar" ("Morning"), also "Min illərin işığı" ("The Light of Millennia") TV programs and "Böyük çöl" ("Great Steppe"), "Soyumuz, soykökümüz" ("Our ancestry and roots"), "Yurd yeri" ("Motherland") radio programs at the Azerbaijan Television and Radio Broadcasting Closed Joint-Stock Company. At present, she is the scriptwriter of "Keçmişdən gələcəyə" ("From the Past to the Future"), "Əsrlərdən gələn səslar" ("The Sounds of Ages") and "Türk elləri" ("Turkic Lands") and editor of “Qopuz” (“Gopuz”) programs.

Books

1. The Gagauz People (Qaqauzlar). – Baku, “Azarnashr”, 1996 48 p.

It provides detailed information about history, traditions, language, faith and literature of the Gagauz Turks living in Moldova. The book played an important role in helping Azerbaijani readers to know more about Orthodox Christian Gagauz Turks aftermath of dissolution of the USSR.

2. Gagauz Folklore (Qaqouz folkloru). - Baku, “Yazichi”, 1996, 200 p.

In her book “Gagauz Folklore”, Gullu Yologlu has included Gagauz Turks’ folklore materials which she had collected during her visits to Moldova and translated into Azerbaijani with a large introduction. Presented materials describe the Gagauz people’s deportation to southern areas of Moldova from the Balkans during Russian-Ottoman wars and anti-Turkish policies and efforts to separate the people from its roots.

3. Dada Gorgud’s Age (Dədə Qorqud yaşı). - Baku, “Yeni Nashrlar evi”, 1999, 136 p.

Scholar's collected articles describe creation and versions of “The Book of Dada Gorgud”, highlight various issues, such as "folklore" that was produced under the Soviet directions, shamans' activities in Siberia and other countries under the shield of Islam and Christianity, also Russification and Christianization policies of Tsarist Russia in Siberia, mother's role in mixed marriages, etc.

4. Family Rituals of the Turks (based on the ethnographic materials of the Tuva, Khakas and Gagauz Turks) (Türklerin aile merasimleri (tıva, xakas, qaqauz türklərinin etnoqrafik materialları əsasında)). – Ankara (Turkey), 1999, 180 p.

Family-life ceremonies of predominantly Muslim Azerbaijani Turks, Christian Gagauz and Khakas Turks and Lamaist (Tibetan Buddhist) Tuva Turks are studied in comparison, and common features in deeper layers are researched by delicately putting the religions aside that were adopted willingly or forcefully. The book reveals that roots of a lot of traditions and ceremonies of Turkic peoples that were thought to be derived from Islam, Christianity and Lamaism were actually the same and related to shamanism and they continue their existence under current religious beliefs.

5. The First Letter (translations from Romanian literature) ("İlk məktub" (Rumıniya ədəbiyyatından tərcümələr)). – Baku, “Adiloghlu”, 2002, 258 p.

The book presents translated stories and narratives mostly on political topics written by members of ethnic groups in Romania, including the Moldovan-Romanians which were torn apart by the decision of the central soviet government, and Tatars settled down in Dobruja fleeing persecutions from Tsarist Russia, with a large introduction. Some of the stories describe methods of torture used under the soviet regime against Romanians.

6. Seasonal Ceremonies (on the basis of materials of the Turkic peoples) ("Mövsüm mərasimləri" (türk xalqlarının materialları əsasında)). – Baku, “Khazar University”, 2009, 218 p.

The monograph studies influences of climate, geographical features, neighbors and historical roots on Turkic peoples' ceremonies and way of life. Most of the materials were collected during Gullu Yologlu's visits to Russia (Southern Siberia, Ural-Idel region, North Caucasus), Central Asia, Turkey, Iran, Iraq and other countries.

Awards

In 1998, shortly after her speech at the 10th Assembly of Azerbaijani Writers Yologlu was awarded with an individual scholarship by Heydar Aliyev, the then President of the Republic of Azerbaijan. She was declared “The Most Diligent Scholar of the Year” by “Simourg” International Award Foundation in 2001. She was awarded with “Award of Service of 2002” by KIBATEK (Cyprus, the Balkans, Institute of Eurasian Studies) in 2003.

Video

Türk Bilgələr Zirvəsi/Güllü Yoloğlu

Böyük Türk Qurultayı - Macarıstan

Uluslararası Somuncu Baba ve Kültür Çevresi Sempozyumu Birinci Oturum

Kosmopolitizm və milli dəyərlər

Personal life

She is married and has two daughters.

References

Gullu Yologlu Wikipedia