enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of Persian-language poets and authors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Persian-language...

    The list is not comprehensive, but is continuously being expanded and includes Persian poets as well as poets who write in Persian from Iran, Azerbaijan, Iraq, Georgia, Dagestan, Turkey, Syria, Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Lebanon, China, Pakistan, India and elsewhere.

  3. List of Persian-language poets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Persian-language_poets

    The list is not comprehensive, but is continuously being expanded and includes Persian poets as well as poets who write in Persian from Iran, Azerbaijan, Iraq, Georgia, Dagestan, Turkey, Syria, Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Lebanon, Pakistan and elsewhere.

  4. Persian literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persian_literature

    Post Modern Persian poetry. In 1990s a progressive evolution called Postmodern Ghazal begun in the Persian poetry leading to the modern poetry that changed the balancing principle of rhythm and rhyme of the traditional Persian poetry, as did in the Free Verse poetry following the rhythm of natural speech. Now, the center of the attention was ...

  5. Hafez - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hafez

    His influence on Persian speakers appears in divination by his poems (Persian: فال حافظ, romanized: fāl-e hāfez, somewhat similar to the Roman tradition of Sortes Vergilianae) and in the frequent use of his poems in Persian traditional music, visual art and Persian calligraphy. His tomb is located in his birthplace of Shiraz ...

  6. Layla and Majnun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Layla_and_Majnun

    Layla and Majnun (Arabic: مجنون ليلى majnūn laylā "Layla's Mad Lover"; Persian: لیلی و مجنون, romanized: laylâ o majnun) [1] is a Persian poem by the 12th century Iranian poet Nizami Ganjavi, inspired by an old story of Arab origin, [2] [3] about the 7th-century Arabic poet Qays ibn al-Mulawwah and his lover Layla binti ...

  7. The Divān of Hafez - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Divān_of_Hafez

    The Divān of Hafez (Persian: دیوان حافظ) is a collection of poems written by the Iranian poet Hafez. Most of these poems are in Persian, but there are some macaronic language poems (in Persian and Arabic) and a completely Arabic ghazal. The most important part of this Divān is the ghazals. Poems in other forms such as qetʿe, qasida ...

  8. Shahnameh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shahnameh

    Famous poets of Persia and the Persian tradition have praised and eulogized Ferdowsi. Many of them were heavily influenced by his writing and used his genre and stories to develop their own Persian epics, stories and poems: [36] Anvari remarked about the eloquence of the Shahnameh, "He was not just a Teacher and we his students. He was like a ...

  9. Ferdowsi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdowsi

    Statue in Tehran Statue of Ferdowsi in Tus by Abolhassan Sadighi. Abu'l-Qâsem Ferdowsi Tusi (also Firdawsi, [2] Persian: ابوالقاسم فردوسی توسی; 940 – 1019/1025) [3] was a Persian [4] [5] poet and the author of Shahnameh ("Book of Kings"), which is one of the world's longest epic poems created by a single poet, and the greatest epic of Persian-speaking countries.