Tevfik Fikret was the pseudonym of Mehmed Tevfik, an Ottoman poet, who is considered the founder of the modern school of Turkish poetry.
Background
Mehmed Tevfik was born in Istanbul on December 24, 1867. His father (Hüseyin Efendi), originally from the district of Çerkeş in the sanjak of Çankırı, was mostly absent, as he was exiled for being a political foe of the ruling regime. While his mother (Hatice Refia Hanım), a Greek Muslim convert from the island of Chios, died when he was very young.
Education
He received his education at the prestigious Galatasaray High School and graduated in 1888 as the valedictorian with the highest grades.
Career
He later became the school"s principal. He left Galatasaray in 1894 and started teaching at another prestigious institution on the Bosphorus, Robert College, in 1896, where he kept working until his death. Named Aşiyan, the house is now a museum.
Fikret is considered the father of modern Turkish poetry, emphasizing literary skill and knowledge over divine inspiration.
Like many classic Turkish poets, he used his considerable knowledge of Turkish music in composing his poetry. In 1894 he published the literary magazine Malûmathematics
In 1896 he became the chief editor of the Servet-i Fünun magazine, that aimed the simplification of the Ottoman language, where he worked with other Ottoman literary lumineries such as Halit Ziya Uşaklıgil, İsmail Safa, Mehmet Rauf, Samipaşazade Sezai and Hüseyin Cahit Yalçın. He had projects for a new school and magazines, however, due to complications from diabetes he refused to treat, he died in 1915 and was buried in the family plot at Eyüp.
Along with many of his avant-garde contemporaries, he contributed to the literary magazine Servet-i Fünun ("The Wealth of Knowledge") until it was censored by the Ottoman government in 1901.
Fikret"s volumes of verse include Rubab-ı Şikeste ("The Broken Lute") from 1900, and Haluk"un Defteri ("Haluk"s Notebook") from 1911. Because of his very fiery writings and poetry in which he criticised the Ottoman regime of Abdul Hamid II, he was immortalized as the "freedom poet".
Politics
He was investigated by the Ottoman police numerous times because of his political views and writings, and his association with known political opponents of the Sultan Abdul Hamid II, such as fellow writer Halid Ziya Uşaklıgil. In 1908, after the Young Turk Revolution, he began publishing the newspaper Tanin, which became a strong supporter of the ruling party, the Committee of Union and Progress (Ittihat ve Terakki Cemiyeti, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom). He was eventually disappointed with their politics, and returned to Galatasaray High School as the principal.
However, during the anti-Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom reactionary 31 March Incident (31 Mart Vakası) of 1909, he chained himself to the school gates as a protest and resigned the same day.