The (Tales of a Parrot), known in Turkish as Papağan’ın Hikayeleri , is a cornerstone of Indo-Persian literature that eventually became a beloved fixture in Turkish folk and courtly traditions. Rooted in ancient Sanskrit storytelling, this collection serves as a moralistic and entertaining frame story that explores themes of loyalty, wisdom, and the "wiles of women". Origins and Evolution
In the 14th century (around 1330 AD), the Sufi saint and physician Ziya'al-Din Nakhshabi translated and reworked the Sanskrit tales into Persian. He refined the language into a more elegant, "erudite" style suitable for the Delhi Sultanate court. Tuti-name (PapaДџanД±n Hikayeleri)
The text is most famous visually for the illustrated manuscript commissioned by Emperor Akbar in the 1550s, which features 250 miniature paintings that defined early Mughal art . The Framing Narrative The (Tales of a Parrot), known in Turkish