Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Kâtip Çelebi

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Katip Celebi


Role
  
Historian

Katip Celebi Ktip elebi Kimdir KPSS Gncel Bilgiler 2016

Died
  
October 1657, Istanbul, Turkey

Books
  
Takwim al-tawarikh, The History of the Maritime Wars of the Turks, A 365-year-old Story: The Book of Cihannuma

Similar People
  
Evliya Celebi, Seydi Ali Reis, Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu

Katip Çelebi - Adriyatik'ten Çin'e Tarih Yazanlar - TRT Avaz


Kâtip Çelebi (Ottoman Turkish: كاتب چلبى‎, Kātib Çelebi "Gentleman Scribe"), the pen name of Mustafa bin Abdullah (1609–1657), also later known as Haji Khalifa (Turkish: Hacı Halife) or Kalfa, was an Ottoman scholar. A historian and geographer, he is regarded as one of the most productive authors of non-religious, scientific literature in the 17th-century Ottoman Empire.

Contents

Kâtip Çelebi Ktip elebi Biyografya

Katip Çelebi - Kilometre Taşları - TRT Okul


Life

Kâtip Çelebi Katip elebi Kimdir Hayat ve Eserleri Hakknda Bilgi Web Bilge

Kâtip Çelebi was born as Mustafa, the son of an Abdullah, in Istanbul. He began his studies at the age of five or six, and became an apprentice in the Ottoman financial bureaucracy at the age of fourteen. As the accountant of the commissariat department of the Ottoman army in Anatolia, he accompanied the Ottoman army in the suppression of the rebellion of Abaza Mehmed Pasha in 1624, as well as during the Ottoman-Safavid War of 1629-1639, particularly in the campaigns at Baghdad in 1625, and at the siege of Erzurum. He returned to Constantinople in 1628. In the following year he was again in Baghdad and Hamadan, and in 1633-34 at Aleppo, whence he made the pilgrimage to Mecca (hence his title Hajji). The following year he was in Erivan and then returned to Constantinople. Here he obtained a post in the head office of the commissariat department, which afforded him time for study. An inheritance which he received in 1645 enabled him to live comfortably in the Ottoman capital of Istanbul and dedicate his time to scholarship. Katip Çelebi died untimely in 1657.

Works

Kâtip Çelebi wwwgateofturkeycomserviceAPIDataGetHeaderIma

Many of his works were composed between 1648 and his death in 1657. Among his best-known works is the Kashf al-ẓunūn ‘an asāmī al-kutub wa-al-funūn, (كشف الظنون عن أسامي الكتب والفنون) ("The Removal of Doubt from the Names of Books and the Arts"), a bibliographic encyclopaedia, written in Arabic, which lists more than 14,500 books in alphabetic order.

Kâtip Çelebi Katip Celebi Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

One of his shorter and more accessible works is Mīzānü'l-ḥaḳḳ fī iḫtiyāri'l-aḥaḳḳ (ميزان الحق في اختيار الأحق) ("The balance of truth in the choice of the truest"), a collection of short essays on topics in Islamic law, ethics, and theology, in which he takes a relatively liberal and tolerant view—often critical of narrow-minded Islamic religious authorities. This book serves as a source on Ottoman social developments in the 16th and 17th centuries, such as the introduction of coffee and tobacco. While he did not concur with the outlawing of coffee and tobacco, he found tobacco smoke personally distasteful, writing of the "noxious effects of the corruption of the aerial essence." An English translation by G. L. Lewis of the Mīzān al-ḥaqq has been published with annotations under the title The Balance of Truth.

Legacy

Kâtip Çelebi Katip elebi Kimdir Ksaca

There is a university named after him, İzmir Katip Celebi University in İzmir. Turkey and the UK have an ongoing science and innovation exchange program called the Newton-Katip Çelebi Fund.

References

Kâtip Çelebi Wikipedia