Sagit Agish Explained

Sagit Agish
Birth Date:1905 1, df=yes
Birth Place:Isyangildino village, Orenburgsky Uyezd, Orenburg Governorate, Russian Empire (now Alexandrovsky District, Orenburg Oblast, Russia)
Death Place:Ufa, Bashkir Republic, (now Bashkortostan, Russia)
Occupation:poet, novelist, playwright, librettist
Citizenship:Russian Empire, USSR
Alma Mater:Orenburg Bashkir Pedagogical College
Notableworks:"Our laughter". In the years 1933-1940, he wrote a series of novels and short stories: "With regard to the conditions" ("Шартына килһен"), "The house of the muezzin" ("Мөдзин йортонда"), "Horsemen" ("Егеттәр"), "Mahmutov." During World War II, they were created patriotic works "Ilmurza Rider" ("Атлы Илмырҙа"), "Ahmadullah" In 1950 saw the release of the novel Agish "foundation" of the Bashkir village life. In 1964 came the story "Compatriots" on youth Musa Cälil.

Sagit Agish (Bashkir: Сәғит Агиш, Russian: Саги́т Аги́ш, real name Bashkir: Сәғит Ишмөхәммәт улы Агишев|translit=Säğit İşmöxämmät ulı Agişev, Russian: Саги́т Ишмухаме́тович Аги́шев; 7 January 1905 – 21 May 1973) was a Bashkir poet, writer and playwright.

Early life

Sagit Agish was born as Sagit Ishmukhametovich Agishev on 19 January 1905 in the village of Isangildy, Orenburgsky Uyezd, Orenburg Governorate (now Alexandrovsky District, Orenburg Oblast). He attended Khusaniya School. He later studied at the Orenburg Bashkir Pedagogical College and the Bashkir State Pedagogical Institute.[1]

Literary career

Agish began writing in the 1930s. He started by writing prose. His earliest stories, “Makhmutov” (1939), “Guys” (1939), and “In Mazin’s House” (1940) portrayed life in the Soviet Union in the 1930s.

Books

Agish wrote frequently about the Soviet Union. His books Ilmurza, A Horseman (1942), Akhmadulla (1944), To the Front (1944) and My Three Months (1944) are about tales of patriotism in the Soviet Union. He wrote one novel, Foundation (1951), on Bashkir village life. His other notable books include Selected Stories (1953), Two Dawns (1961), By the River (1961), On the Way (1967) and Gnedko (1972).

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sagit Agish. Culture World of Bashkortostan. 14 March 2014.