Imadaddin Nasimi was a 14th-century Azerbaijani poet and Hurufiyya mystic whose verse pushed the boundaries of orthodox Islamic thought so far that he was executed in Aleppo around 1417 — allegedly skinned alive on the orders of the Mamluk governor. Turkey's commemorative lira series has periodically honored Turkic literary and cultural figures from across the broader historical world, and Nasimi's inclusion reflects ongoing cultural claims to a shared Oghuz Turkic heritage that stretches well beyond Anatolia's borders.
Imadaddin Nasimi was a 14th-century Azerbaijani poet and Hurufiyya mystic whose verse pushed the boundaries of orthodox Islamic thought so far that he was executed in Aleppo around 1417 — allegedly skinned alive on the orders of the Mamluk governor. Turkey's commemorative lira series has periodically honored Turkic literary and cultural figures from across the broader historical world, and Nasimi's inclusion reflects ongoing cultural claims to a shared Oghuz Turkic heritage that stretches well beyond Anatolia's borders.