Hamit Zübeyir Koşay

Koşay, Hamit Zübeyir (Bashkir: Абдулхәмит Зөбәйер Ҡушай, born 1897, Telänçe Tamaq village / Minzälä / Ufa province (present day Tuqay District of the Republic of Tatarstan) – died 1984, Ankara)[1] - archaeologist, ethnographer, writer and folklore researcher.

Biography

He was the son of Ubeydullah Efendi who was a scholar of the period and Rizaetdin Fäxretdin (close friend of Musa Carullah) a famous scientist, was his brother-in-law. He was sent to Turkey with the support of Rizaetdin Fäxretdin for his education in 1909.

He graduated from Thessalonica Central Secondary School in 1911. At the break of the Balkan War, he returned to Istanbul when he was in Sultaniye. He finished teacher training school in 1916 and became a teacher. After attending courses on ethnography and the Hungarian language at university for the winter semester, he went to Hungary to continue his education where he completed pedagogy.

He was accepted to the Advanced Teachers Training School at Eötvöş Kollegium (Eötvös Loránd University ) with the support of Prof. Ne’meth Gyula. Then he attended the same university’s Faculty of Philosophy and received the title of Doctor of Language and Turcology. He went to Germany in 1924 to attend the courses of Prof. Bang Koup at Berlin University and did research at the State Library and museums.

In 1925 he returned to Turkey and worked at the Ministry of National Education. After working as the Inspector of Libraries at the Ministry of Culture he was a director for the Department of Culture, Antique Works and Libraries at the same ministry. He continued as the General Director of Antique Works and Museums, board member of Culture Training and for the second time as the Director of the Ethnography Museum. He retired on 1 December 1969 after working for two years as Deputy Director of the Ethnography Museum and Consulting General Director of Antique Works and Museums.

Professor Hamit Zübeyir Koşay died on October 2, 1984 from a heart attack. He is buried at Cebeci Asri Cemetery (Ankara).

Membership to Committees and Communities

Works

Excavation Reports

Novels and Short Stories

Study

See also

References

  1. (English) Article on the Official website of Ministry of Culture of Turkish Republic, cache as retrieved on 4 January 2008 10:18:03 GMT.
  2. (Turkish) Private Library of Talat Öncü, accessed on Jan., 22, 2008.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.