Ozan is used for a poet or bard in Turkish tradition, with roots connected to oral storytelling culture.
Ozan is a Turkish masculine name drawn from an ancient Turkic tradition: the ozan was an itinerant bard, a poet-musician who traveled from village to village reciting epic verse, carrying oral history, and serving as a living archive of communal memory. The ozans occupied a role analogous to the Celtic bards or the Slavic skaziteli — sacred custodians of a people's stories. Their tradition predates Islam in the Turkic world and persisted through centuries of cultural transformation.
The most celebrated figure in this lineage is Yunus Emre, the thirteenth-century Anatolian poet and Sufi mystic whose verses in vernacular Turkish — as opposed to the Persian favored by court poets — made spiritual longing and humanist love accessible to ordinary people. Though Emre himself is not typically called an ozan by title, he embodies the spirit the name carries. The Alevi-Bektashi religious tradition has preserved the ozan legacy most faithfully, and the name Ozan carries a particular resonance in communities connected to that tradition.
In contemporary Turkey, Ozan has become a broadly popular given name, appreciated for its musical and poetic connotations without necessarily requiring the bearer to have any specific religious affiliation. It suggests creativity, sensitivity, and a connection to deep cultural roots — a name that positions its bearer as someone who might yet have something worth singing about.