Latifî (1491–1582), or Kastamonulu Latifî Çelebi, was an Ottoman poet and bibliographer. Born in Kastamonu, in northern Anatolia, he became famous for his tezkire Tezkiretü'ş-Şuara (Memoirs of the Poets), the second Ottoman collection of bibliographical data on poets and poetry in overall.
Latifî was born Abdüllatif Hatibzâde
[1] into a notable family in Kastamonu and was educated there. He worked as accountant and
katib (secretary) in various
vakifs (pious foundation), including
Belgrade,
Constantinople,
Rhodes, and
Egypt.
[2]
His major work was Tezkiretü'ş-Şuara (Memoirs of the Poets), which was the second tezkire in chronological order after that of
Sehi Bey. It is also the one with most extent copies, 91 in total.
[3] The tezkire was organized in three sections with an introduction.
[1] It narrated the life and work of around 300 poets of the period from the reign of
Murad II (reigned between 1421 and 1451) until 1543,
[2] and was finished and presented it to Sultan
Suleiman the Magnificent in 1546.
[4]
[5] The Sultan was so pleased that he appointed Latifi as secretary at the "
Ayyub al-Ansari" complex endowment. According to
Aşık Çelebi's work Senses of Poets (Meşairü'ş-Şuara), the poet wrote it mostly during the era of Suleiman, but presented it to
Murad III in 1574 after making minor changes to the introduction.
[4]
Another important work of him was Evsaf-ı İstanbul (Qualities of Istanbul) written in 1525. It gives a historical overview on the city of Istanbul, intertwined with geographical data, and information on the city's neighborhoods, architecture, and social life.
[2]
Latifi spent the last years of his life in Istanbul. [1] He died by drowning when the ship he was traveling to Yemen sank in the Red Sea. [2]