Background
Zakir was born in 1784 in a noble family of bey in Panahabad, then the capital of the Karabakh khanate.
Zakir was born in 1784 in a noble family of bey in Panahabad, then the capital of the Karabakh khanate.
Zakir belonged to the clan of Javanshir, which was the ruling clan in the Karabakh khanate. Zakir"s childhood and youth comes to the period of upheavals in Azerbaijan, which was made the battlefield between Russia and Iran. He had special deserts in preventing the Iranian troops from relocating the Azeri population of Karabakh to the inner parts of Iran.
From the 1830s Zakir, who spent his life mostly in the battlefields, settled down and began to run his household.
Foreign his straightforward and generous nature he was highly esteemed among the people. However, Zakir had many enemies too, whom he earned mainly because of his satirical verses.
In his satirical poetry and fables Zakir lashed out at the vices then rampant in society, at the hypocrisy and bigotry of the clergy, at the venality of the Tsarist officials, the greed of merchants and the cruelty of the landowners. Zakir had been constantly persecuted for his satire.
Zakir lived in need and under the police surveillance till his last days.
Only in 1857 the authorities decided to allocate a pension for him "for his deserts before the Russian State ". But when this pension reached Shusha, the poet has already departed. Gasim bey"s poetry is characterized by diversity of genres.
In lyric poetry the poet follows Molla Panah Vagif"s traditions, writes gazals, goshmas, gerayli, in which he glorifies love.
Zakir, the author of lyrics and beautiful patterns of love poetry, was famed for his satirical works. Zakir sharply criticized tsar"s officers and arbitrariness of local beys (landlords) and clergies.
Today Zakir"s literary legacy has been preserved in verses ranging from sharply critical satire to the tender lyrics praising pure and passionate love.
Gasim bey was the prominent representative of critical realism of Azerbaijani literature in the first half of the 19th century.