Ájiniyaz | |
Native Name: | Ájiniyaz Qosıbay ulı |
Pseudonym: | Ziywar |
Birth Date: | 1824 |
Birth Place: | Khanate of Khiva |
Death Date: | 1878 |
Nationality: | Karakalpak |
Genres: | --> |
Subjects: | --> |
Notableworks: | Bozataw |
Spouses: | --> |
Partners: | --> |
Azhiniyaz Kosybay Uly (Karakalpak: Әжинияз Қосыбай улы, 1824–1878) was a Karakalpak poet, who is also known by his pen name Ziywar.[1]
Ajiniyaz was born in 1824 at the southern coast of the Aral Sea, in the village of Qamısh buǵat of the Muynak district, at the mouth of the river Amu Darya, where the Karakalpak tribes (ruw) as ashamayli and kiyat used to live. The area was at the time part of the Khanate of Khiva. Ajiniyaz’s father Qosıbay, his brothers Baltabek and Aqzhigit were the brave men of their time. His mother Nazira was an eloquent and charming lady.
Since his childhood, Ajiniyaz had been interested in academia. He first attended the madrasa of Xozhamurat-imam, then, after his mother’s death, took classes from his uncle Elmurat. Apart from attending classes, the future poet was engaged in rewriting books, which made him well-known. By the age of 16 he had rewritten some poems by Alisher Navoi. Ajiniyaz continued his education in Khiva. In the cultural center of ancient Khorezm he attended first the madrasa of Sher-Gozi where the classic Turkmen poet Maktumkuli had studied before, and then joined the madrasa of Kutlimurat-Inak. Today, at the entrance of this madrasa, one can see written: “Here in 1840-1845 a poet Ájiniyaz Qosıbay Ulı used to study.” In addition to spiritual disciplines, Ajiniyaz studied the poetry of Oriental classical poets such as Navoi, Khafiz, Saadi, and Fizuli in the madrasa of Kutlimurat-Inak, which greatly influenced his progressive lyric poetry.
After graduation from the madrasa of Kutlimurat-Inak, Ajiniyaz returned to his native village but soon left again for Kazakhstan, where he remained for a year. Upon his return, he married a girl named Khamra from the tribe ashamayli, who bore two sons and a daughter for him. His descendants presently live in the Kungrad, Qanlikōl, Shomanay regions, and in the city of Nukus.
The Kungrad rebellion of 1858−1859, one of the important events in the history of the people inhabiting the Khorezm oasis, had a large influence on the poetic nature of Ajiniyaz. A patriot and scholar, he could not remain indifferent to this event, instead choosing to take an active part in it. He was subsequently deported to Turkmenistan by the authorities of Khiva as one of the leaders of the rebellion. During the deportation period the poet translated into Karakalpak many poems by Maktumkuli.
Three years later Ajiniyaz came back home, where he was persecuted. Under these circumstances he left for Kazakhstan. It is considered that it was in 1864, during his trip to Kazakhstan that he takes part in aytis, a lyrical competition with a Kazakh poet called Kyz-Menesh. Compared with other contemporary folk genres of the region, aytis was particularly popular. In 1878 it was described in the Tashkent newspaper Turkistan walayati. According to the contents of one of Ajiniyaz’s poems, he was 40 years old at that time:
Ajiniyaz was not only one of the ideologists of the people’s rebellion but also an active participant of the Bozataw tragedy, which like a serious injury had left an awful scar in the history and in minds of the Karakalpak people. The hard trial suffered by the native people bore Ajiniyaz’s famous poem Bozataw: