Ajem-Turkic

Early form of the Azerbaijani language
ترکی عجمی
Türkī-yi ʿacemīRegionIran, Eastern Anatolia, Southern Caucasus, DagestanEra15th—18th centuries
Developed into Azerbaijani
Language family
Turkic
  • Common Turkic
    • Oghuz
      • Western Oghuz
        • Ajem-Turkic
Early form
Old Anatolian Turkish
Writing system
Perso-Arabic alphabetLanguage codesISO 639-3

Ajem-Turkic or Ajami Turkic[1] (ترکی عجمی‎; Türkī-yi ʿacemī,[2] lit. 'Persian Turkic'[3] or 'Persian Turkish'),[4] also known as Middle Azeri[3] or Middle Azerbaijanian,[4] is the Turkic vernacular spoken in Iran between the 15th and 18th centuries. The modern Azerbaijani language is descended from this language.[3]

Name

The term is derived from earlier designations, such as lingua turcica agemica, or Turc Agemi, which was used in a grammar book composed by the French writer Capuchin Raphaël du Mans (died 1696) in 1684. Local texts simply called the language türkī.[3] During "the Isfahan phase of the Safavids", it was called ḳızılbaşī in contrast to rūmī (Ottoman) and çaġatā’ī (Chagatai), due to its close relation to dialects spoken by the Qizilbash.[2]

History

Ajem-Turkic is descended from Old Anatolian Turkish, and is part of the southwestern branch of Oghuz languages. The language first appears during the 15th-century in Azerbaijan, eastern Anatolia, and Iran. It went through more development under the Turkic dynasties of the Aq Qoyunlu (1378–1503) and the Qara Qoyunlu (1374–1468), and particularly in Safavid Iran (1501–1736), whose ruling dynasty stemmed from Azerbaijan. Under them, Ajem-Turkic, alongside Persian, was used at the court and in the military, and was a lingua franca from northern to southern Iran.[3] According to Swedish Turkologist Lars Johanson, Ajemi Turkic was an "Azerbaijanian koiné" that functioned as lingua franca in the Caucasus region and in southeastern Dagestan, and was widely spoken at the court and in the army.[5]

According to É. Á. Csató et al.:[4]

A specific Turkic language was attested in Safavid Persia during the 16th and 17th centuries, a language that Europeans often called Persian Turkish ("Turc Agemi", "lingua turcica agemica"), which was a favourite language at the court and in the army because of the Turkic origins of the Safavid dynasty. The original name was just turki, and so a convenient name might be Turki-yi Acemi. This variety of Persian Turkish must have been also spoken in the Caucasian and Transcaucasian regions, which during the 16th century belonged to both the Ottomans and the Safavids, and were not fully integrated into the Safavid empire until 1606. Though that language might generally be identified as Middle Azerbaijanian, it is not yet possible to define exactly the limits of this language, both in linguistic and territorial respects. It was certainly not homogenous—maybe it was an Azerbaijanian-Ottoman mixed language, as Beltadze (1967:161) states for a translation of the gospels in Georgian script from the 18th century.

Literature

Tezkire-i Şeyh Safi

Since its appearance, Ajem-Turkic was heavily impacted by Persian, especially in its syntax. The Persian design of merging clauses which Ajem-Turkic had inherited from Old Anatolian Turkish was strengthened due to its continuous contact with Persian.[3]

Sources for the study of Ajemi-Turkic include the prose texts of Nishati (fl. 1530–after 1557), the Tarih-i Hatai (Tārīkh-i Khatāʾī, 1494/95); Şühedaname (Şühedānāme, 1539); and Tezkire-i Şeyh Safi (Tedhkire-i Şeykh Ṣafī, 1542/43).[3]

References

  1. ^ H. Boeschoten (2009). "Alexander Stories in Ajami Turkic". Turcologica. 75. Wiesbaden.
  2. ^ a b In Honor of the Turkologist!: Essays Celebrating the 70th Birthday of Ekrem Čaušević. Zagreb: Faculty of Philosophy in Zagreb. 2022. pp. 103–105. ISBN 978-953-175-937-3.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Stein 2014.
  4. ^ a b c É. Á. Csató, B. Isaksson, C Jahani. Linguistic Convergence and Areal Diffusion: Case Studies from Iranian, Semitic and Turkic, Routledge, 2004, p. 228, ISBN 0-415-30804-6.
  5. ^ Lars Johanson; Éva Á. Castó (1998). "14". The Turkic Languages. Routledge. pp. 248–261.

Sources

  • Stein, Heidi (2014). "Ajem-Turkic". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (3rd ed.). Brill Online. ISSN 1873-9830.

Further reading

  • Claudia Römer (2022). "Elements of Türkī-yi ʿacemī in an eyewitness report on the Ottoman siege of Baghdad (1034-35/1625-26) preserved in Iskandar Munşī's ʿĀlam-ārā-yi ʿAbbāsī". Institut für Orientalistik der Universität Wien.
  • Johanson, Lars (2020). "Restricted Access Isfahan – Moscow – Uppsala. On Some Middle Azeri Manuscripts and the Stations Along Their Journey to Uppsala". In Csató, Éva Á.; Gren-Eklund, Gunilla; Johanson, Lars; Karakoç, Birsel (eds.). Turcologica Upsaliensia: An Illustrated Collection of Essays. Brill. pp. 167–179. ISBN 978-9004435704.
  • Stein, Heidi (2005). "Ajem-Türkisch: Annäherung an eine historische Sprachform zwischen Osmanisch, Persisch und Osttürkisch [Ajem-Turkish: Convergence of a historical variety between Ottoman, Persian, and East Turkic]". Orientalia Suecana (in German). 54: 179–200.
  • v
  • t
  • e
OriginDevelopment
Alphabet
History
Tsar era
Republican era
  • Afandizade's reform proposal [az]
Soviet era
GrammarVocabulary
  • Verbs
  • Adverbs
  • Adjectives
  • Nouns
  • Pronouns
  • Numerals
  • Conjunctions
  • Particles
  • Postpositions
  • Determiners
Regulation and PromotionLegislation
  • Enactment on the proclamation of Turkic language as a state language (1918) [az]
  • Decision of the CCB of the Azerbaijan CP on adding an article about the state language to the Constitution of Azerbaijan SSR (1956)
Dictionaries
  • Azərbaycan dilinin izahlı lüğəti [az]
  • Azərbaycan dilinin orfoqrafiya lüğəti [az]
Online
  • Azerdict [az]
  • Azleks
  • Obastan
Researchers
LiteratureOfficial statusNative regionsCommemoration
  • Ana dili (monument) [az]
  • National Day of Azerbaijani Alphabet and Azerbaijani Language [az]
Related topics
  • flag Azerbaijan portal
  • v
  • t
  • e
Proto-language
  • Proto-Turkic
Common Turkic
Argu
Karluk
Western
Eastern
Old
  • Chagatai
  • Khorezmian
  • Karakhanid
Kipchak
Bulgar
Cuman
Kyrgyz
Nogai
Oghuz
Eastern
Southern
Western
Siberian
Northern
Southern
Sayan
Steppe
Taiga
Yenisei
Old
  • Old Uyghur
  • Orkhon Turkic
Oghur
Creoles and pidgins
  • Italics indicate extinct languages
  • Languages between parentheses are varieties of the language on their left.