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Sedat Simavi (1896 11 December 1953) was a Turkish journalist, writer and film director. He established many newspapers and magazines.

Sedat Simavi
"The Sheep of Ankara, shows its hand last." Political cartoon by Sedat Simavi, in Istanbul magazine Güleryüz on October 1922. In the Background: Ankara, In the Foreground: Istanbul
Born1896
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
DiedDecember 11, 1953(1953-12-11) (aged 57)
Istanbul, Turkey
NationalityTurkish
Alma materGalatasaray High School
OccupationJournalist, writer, film director

Biography


Simavi was born in 1896.[1] His grandfather and uncles served in different positions in the office of Ottoman Sultans.[1] His parents were Halil Hamdi Bey and Aliye Hanım. She was granddaughter of Grand Vizier Saffet Pasha.[1] Simavi graduated from Galatasaray High School in 1912.[1]

In 1916 Simavi started his first publication entitled Hande, a weekly women's magazine.[1] Then he launched a satirical magazine, Diken (The Thorn in English) and another women's magazine İnci (The Pearl in English).[1] His first daily newspaper was Dersaadet which was established in 1920.[1] The other papers established by Simavi included Payihat (The Capital in English), Güleryüz (The Happy Face in English), Yedigün and Resimli Gazete (The Illustrated Gazette in English).[1]

Simavi co-founded the Turkish Journalists' Association in 1946, and the Hürriyet newspaper in 1948. He was also a political cartoonist, and as well as plays and screenplays he also wrote a novel, Fuji-Yama (1944), and non-fiction books. He published around 60 books in total.[2]

Sedat Simavi died on 11 December 1953, and was buried at Kanlıca Cemetery in Istanbul.[3]


Legacy


The Sedat Simavi Literature Award, along with Sedat Simavi awards in other categories, is awarded annually by the Sedat Simavi Foundation since 1977. The Turkish Journalists' Association awards the Sedat Simavi Journalism Award.


Filmography



Books



References


  1. Camilla Trud Nereid (July 2012). "Domesticating Modernity: The Turkish Magazine "Yedigün", 1933—9". Journal of Contemporary History. 47 (3): 485. doi:10.1177/0022009412441651. JSTOR 23249003.
  2. "Simavi, Sedat". Ministry of Culture.
  3. "Sedat Simavi mezarı başında anıldı". Cumhuriyet (in Turkish). 11 December 2008. Retrieved 13 June 2016.





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