Background
Ilhamija was born into a Bosniak family in Žepče, Sanjak of Bosnia (modern Bosnia and Herzegovina). His father"s name was Abdulvehab.
Ilhamija was born into a Bosniak family in Žepče, Sanjak of Bosnia (modern Bosnia and Herzegovina). His father"s name was Abdulvehab.
Ilhamija was educated in his birth town and in Tešanj and Fojnica. He also attended the Ferhadija Mosque in Tešanj.
In addition to Bosnian, his work was written in Turkish, Arabic and Persian. His name Abd-ul-vehhab means "Servant of the Generous" — one of the attributes of God. Ilhamija, his Dervish name, means "inspired."
lieutenant was published posthumously in 1831, a decade after his death.
The book is printed in Arebica, the variant of the Perso-Arabic script used to write the Bosnian language, mainly between the 15th and 19th centuries, after the inclusion of Bosnia in the Ottoman Empire and its adoption of Islamic civilization and culture.
In the year 1820, a man named Dželaludin-paša became the Ottoman pasha of Bosnia, a title he would hold until his brutal death in 1821. At first, Abdulvehab Ilhamija supported Dželaludin, believing him to be a fair and just ruler.
But over a short time the illusion faded and Abdulvehab Ilhamija openly criticized Dželaludin"s harsh rule over the Bosnian population in his poetry and writings. In 1821, Dželaludin became aware of Ilhamija"s criticisms and invited him to his home in Travnik.
Ilhamija traveled without a horse, on foot from Žepče to Travnik.
Before he left, he bid a final farewell to his family and friends, anticipating a grim ending to his meeting with the pasha. To this day, what happened in Travnik remains in the sphere of assumption. There is a legend that says that Dželaludin-paša asked of Ilhamija to renounce his critical writings, when Ilhamija refused to do so, he was either strangled to death or decapitated in the Travnik Fortress.
News of his death was received with sorrow and revolt among the Bosnian people.
He was buried in Travnik in mausoleum near a former railway station and former hospital, where he remained buried for 138 years until 1959, when his bones and headstone were moved to a different grave. Fellow Bosniak writer Muhamed Hadžijamaković wrote a biography of Abdulvehab Ilhamija entitled Ilhamija: Život i djelo (Ilhamija: Life and Work).
Rešad Kadić (1912–1988) wrote a book about Abdulvehab Ilhamija"s death entitled Ilhamijin put u smrt (Ilhamija"s Journey to Death), originally published in 1976.