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  • Kamal BASHIR, translator.|Mikhail Yuryevich LERMONTOV (1814-1841), author;

    Edité par Kazan: Tipografia T. D. Br. Karimov [Publishing House Brothers Karimov] ., 1918

    Vendeur : Antiquariat Dasa Pahor GbR, München, Allemagne

    Membre d'association : ILAB VDA

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    A Tatar translation of an Azeri tale by a Russian writer Lermontov was published in Kazan in a turbulent year 1918, when the city founded its independent state of Turkic peoples and Volga Germans, was briefly sieged by the Czechoslovakian Legion and was eventually defeated by the Bolsheviks. 8°. 15 pp., trimmed rear original wrapper with lettering mounted with top on the last blank page, 20th century brown cloth binding with lettering on the cover and spine (minor age-toning and foxing, handwritten old price on the inner side of back cover, otherwise in a good conditi This is a rare first Tatar translation of Ashik-Kerib, an Azeri love story, adapted by Mikhail Yuryevich Lermontov (1814-1841) in Russian language in 1837 and first published after his death in 1846. The story was set in Tiflis, where the writer spent a part of his life. The original title was Ashik Kerib, A Turkish Folktale (???????? ??????), which was in our publication changed to An Eastern Tale. The book was printed in Kazan in 1918, which was a turbulent year in the city history. After becoming one of the centres of the Revolution of 1917, a Congress of Muslims from central Russia and Siberia founded in 1918 theIdel-Ural State, also known as a Volga-Ural State, a short-lived independent state of Turkic peoples and Volga Germans. The Bolsheviks supressed the state and annexed Kazan to the Soviet Union. In the same year, the city was briefly sieged by the Czechoslovakian Legion. As some inhabitants of Kazan sympathised with the Bolsheviks, hoping to receive more privileges than under the Tsed the Communism and joining the Soviet Union. The test, mounted on the last page, lists other publications by the publishing house Brothers Karimnov, which was specialised in the Tatar publications in Kazan. We could not find any institutional copies of the book on Worldcat.