Rasul Mir

imām-e-ishqiya shairi

Rasul Mir

Shahabadi
Rasul Mir on the cover of Sahitya Akademi 1990 edition
Rasul Mir on the cover of Sahitya Akademi 1990 edition
Native name
رَسوٗل میٖر شاہ آبادی
Born1840
Dooru Shahabad, Anantnag, Kashmir
Died1870
Resting placeKhanqah Faiz Panah[1](shrine of Amir-i-Kabir), Dooru Shahabad, Anantnag, Kashmir
OccupationPoet, Muqdam
LanguageKashmiri
EducationPersian literature
GenreGhazal, Vatsun, Nazm (Naʽat)
Literary movementRomanticism, Sufism
Notable worksBal Maraeyo, Baeliye ruthe mai yaar, Chaw mai jami jamai, Lalas vantai chus sawaal, Lo lati lo, Rind posh maal
Influences :

Muhammad, Hafez, Saadi Shirazi, Bedil, Firdausi, Shah-e-Hamadan, Rumi, Nizami, Attar, Ghani Kashmiri

Influenced :

Mahjoor, Abdul Ahad Azad, Mohiuddin Hajni, G.N Firaq, Fazil Kashmiri,Zarif Ahmad Zarif, Rahman Rahi, Miskin, Mohammad Taing

Rasul Mir (Kashmiri: رَسوٗل میٖر) also known as Rasul Mir Shahabadi, was a Kashmiri romantic poet born in Doru Shahabad. He is often referred to as imām-e-ishqiya shairi' (The epitome of romantic poetry) for his literary contribution to Kashmiri romanticism. Mir was said to have been alive in around 1855 when Mahmud Gami and Swoch Kral died. He died a few years before Maqbool Shah Kralawari. Though, Muhammad Y. Taing, in his book کلیاتِ رسول میر (Kulliyat-e-Rasul Mir) mentions of a document from Revenue Department, dated 5 April 1889, acknowledging Rasul Mir as a muqdam (village chieftain, in accord to the agrarian system of Kashmir).[2][3]

He is one of the most celebrated Kashmiri poets and is popularly called the John Keats of Kashmir.[4] He formally inaugurated Gazal to Kashmiri poetry.[1]

  1. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference :0 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Rasul Mir; Muhammad Yusuf Taing (1960). Rasūl Mīr. Srīnagar: Jammūn va Kashmīr Kalcaral Akādmī. ISBN 9781137546227. OCLC 499723598.
  3. ^ "Kulyat-e-Rasul Mir". Greater Kashmir. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  4. ^ Mohd Ashraf Mir; Ali Mohd Dar; Mujtaba Ahmad Dev (May 2014). "Rasul Mir- John Keats of Kashmir, India" (PDF). International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Invention. 3 (5): 34–36.