Dergâh (Turkish: Dervish lodge) was a conservative literary magazine which was published during the final days of the Ottoman Empire in Istanbul from 1921 to 1922.
[4] Major contributors of Dergâh included Hasan Ali Yücel and Abdülhak Şinasi who were adherents of the symbolist poetry.
[2] Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar, a leading Turkish novelist, started his literary career in Dergâh.
[7][8] All these writers were supporters of the Independence War due to which some issues of the magazine were censored by the Allied administration.
[3][9] They also supported the ideas of the French philosopher Henri Bergson, and the magazine became the mouthpiece for his Turkish followers.