: The clever parrot, witnessing the mynah's fate, adopts a more subtle strategy. For 52 successive nights , he tells her a fascinating, cliffhanger-style story that keeps her intrigued until dawn, effectively preventing her from meeting her lover until her husband returns. Historical and Cultural Significance
The Ṭuṭīnāma (“Tales of a Parrot”); Text of Żiāʿ-al-Dīn Naḵšabī Tuti-name (PapaДџanД±n Hikayeleri)
: Longing for a lover, Khojasta attempts to leave the house. When the mynah tries to stop her, she strangles it. : The clever parrot, witnessing the mynah's fate,
: A merchant named Maimunis goes on a long business trip, leaving his young wife, Khojasta , under the care of a mynah and a wise parrot. When the mynah tries to stop her, she strangles it
The (or Tutinama ), known in Turkish as Papağan’ın Hikayeleri (Tales of a Parrot), is a 14th-century anthology of 52 moralizing adventure stories. Originally written in Persian by the Sufi poet and physician Ziya'al-Din Nakhshabi around 1330 AD, it is an adaptation of the 12th-century Sanskrit work Śukasaptati . Narrative Structure
The collection is built on a frame story intended to provide moral instruction, particularly concerning fidelity: