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・ Mul Mantar
・ Mul of Kent
・ Mul Yam
・ Mul, India
・ Mul-Baiyer District
・ Mul-T-Lock
・ MUL.APIN
・ MUL1
・ Mula
・ Mula (nakshatra)
・ Mula (Spain)
・ Mula bagh
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・ Mula Dam
・ Mula Essa Goth
Mula Mustafa Bašeskija
・ Mula River (India)
・ Mula River (Pakistan)
・ Mula Sa Puso
・ Mula Sa Puso (2011 TV series)
・ Mula Sangh
・ Mula, Iran
・ Mula, Spain
・ Mula-Mutha River
・ Mulab
・ Mulab-e Olya
・ Mulab-e Sofla
・ Mulabhadra
・ Mulachara
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Mula Mustafa Bašeskija : ウィキペディア英語版
Mula Mustafa Bašeskija

Mula Mustafa Bašeskija ( – 18 August 1809) was an 18th-century Bosniak chronicler, diarist, poet, calligrapher and retired Jannisary in the Ottoman Empire. He chronicled the history and events in Sarajevo, Bosnia, Herzegovina and in the Ottoman Empire during his lifetime and is considered an important figure in the history of Sarajevo for preserving information that would have otherwise been forgotten.
==Early life and background==
Bašeskija was born into a poor Muslim Bosniak family in a Sarajevo quarter named after Mimar Sinan. Both his paternal grandfather Kadir and maternal grandfather Mehmed were Imams. Bašeskija lost his father Ahmed when he was a child. His mother Fatima remarried and died in 1772 of a stroke after a long illness. His uncle Topal Osman-aga died in Belgrade in 1760.
As a child Bašeskija attended mektab and later medresa. It wasn't until 1763 that he began scribing Bosnian history. During the 1760s he also owned a small shop underneath a clock tower in Sarajevo.
In his shop, in addition to clerical jobs, he taught students and other people in the Arabic calligraphy and Sharia law. In 1779, he wrote that he and few friends met once a week in a house, where, in addition to gathering and conversing for half an hour, were dedicated to reading books.
Bašeskija left Sarajevo on 1 July 1781 and moved with his family to the village Zgošća near Kakanj, only to return to Sarajevo less than a year later in February 1782.
Bosnia and Herzegovina, along with most of Europe, experienced a resurgence of the Black Death plague in the 18th century. Bašeskija chronicled the lives of 4,000 of the dead, mostly adult Bosniaks.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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