Nurmyrat Saryhanow (also transliterated as Sarykhanov: , Nurmurat Sarykhanov; 1906 â 4 May 1944) was a Soviet Turkmen short story writer and novelist.
Saryhanow was born to a poor Turkmen family in the village of Geok-Tepe in the Russian Empire's Transcaspian Region (now in Turkmenistan) in 1906.
Educated at Soviet schools after the Russian Revolution, he graduated from the Tashkent branch of the Communist University of the Toilers of the East. He served in the Red Army as a military journalist from 1929 to 1937 and became known his short stories, devoted to life in Soviet Turkmenistan. His well-received novel à Âükür bagà Ây appeared in 1941.
Saryhanow returned to the Red Army to serve in World War II after the German invasion of the Soviet Union, serving in the 958th Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky Rifle Regiment of the 299th Kharkov Rifle Division. He died in the war in 1944 in Moldova.
His works were translated into the Russian language and were anthologized in both languages during the post-war period. In April 2017 in the Moldavian village of DelacÃÂu where he died, his memorial was restored. A month later, it was visited by a Turkmen delegation led by foreign minister Raà Âit Meredow.