Author: | Turkish Fairy Tales | ISBN: | 1230000808941 |
Publisher: | Media Galaxy | Publication: | November 25, 2015 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | Turkish Fairy Tales |
ISBN: | 1230000808941 |
Publisher: | Media Galaxy |
Publication: | November 25, 2015 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
Ignac Kunos (1860–1945) was a Hungarian folklorist, linguist, turkologist. He was one of the most avowed scientists of Turkish dialectology and folk literature. He started his career focusing on the dialectology, phonological and morphological of the Hungarian language, and at university he started interesting in Turkish philology and language. After his trip at the Orient he collected Turkish fairy tales and published it in Forty-four Turkish Fairy Tales.
This fairy-tale was collected and retold by Ignac Kunos and it tells us about a Padishah every child of which was stolen when he reached the age of seven. One by one he lost forty children. He went to a spring and saw there a dark cloud that appeared to be the gathering of forty birds. Those bird began to drink out of the spring and talking about the grief of having no parents…
Ignac Kunos (1860–1945) was a Hungarian folklorist, linguist, turkologist. He was one of the most avowed scientists of Turkish dialectology and folk literature. He started his career focusing on the dialectology, phonological and morphological of the Hungarian language, and at university he started interesting in Turkish philology and language. After his trip at the Orient he collected Turkish fairy tales and published it in Forty-four Turkish Fairy Tales.
This fairy-tale was collected and retold by Ignac Kunos and it tells us about a Padishah every child of which was stolen when he reached the age of seven. One by one he lost forty children. He went to a spring and saw there a dark cloud that appeared to be the gathering of forty birds. Those bird began to drink out of the spring and talking about the grief of having no parents…
Ignac Kunos (1860–1945) was a Hungarian folklorist, linguist, turkologist. He was one of the most avowed scientists of Turkish dialectology and folk literature. He started his career focusing on the dialectology, phonological and morphological of the Hungarian language, and at university he started interesting in Turkish philology and language. After his trip at the Orient he collected Turkish fairy tales and published it in Forty-four Turkish Fairy Tales.
This fairy-tale was collected and retold by Ignac Kunos and it tells us about a Padishah every child of which was stolen when he reached the age of seven. One by one he lost forty children. He went to a spring and saw there a dark cloud that appeared to be the gathering of forty birds. Those bird began to drink out of the spring and talking about the grief of having no parents…
Ignac Kunos (1860–1945) was a Hungarian folklorist, linguist, turkologist. He was one of the most avowed scientists of Turkish dialectology and folk literature. He started his career focusing on the dialectology, phonological and morphological of the Hungarian language, and at university he started interesting in Turkish philology and language. After his trip at the Orient he collected Turkish fairy tales and published it in Forty-four Turkish Fairy Tales.
This fairy-tale was collected and retold by Ignac Kunos and it tells us about a Padishah every child of which was stolen when he reached the age of seven. One by one he lost forty children. He went to a spring and saw there a dark cloud that appeared to be the gathering of forty birds. Those bird began to drink out of the spring and talking about the grief of having no parents…