Sarı Saltık
| Saltık | |
|---|---|
| صالتق | |
| Personal life | |
| Born | Unknown, possibly Bukhara | 
| Died | c. 1297/98 | 
| Resting place | Mausoleum of Sari Saltuk Baba, Babadag, Romania 44°53′37.3″N 28°43′07.0″E / 44.893694°N 28.718611°E | 
| Era | Late Middle Ages | 
| Known for | Sufi mysticism | 
| Religious life | |
| Religion | Islam | 
| Muslim leader | |
| Period in office | 13th century | 
| Influenced by | |
| Part of a series on | 
| Islam | 
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| Part of a series on the Alevis Alevism | 
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| Islam portal | 
Sarı Saltık (alternatively spelled as Sarı Saltuk and also referred as Sarı Saltuk Baba or Dede, Ottoman Turkish: صارى صالتق, romanized: Ṣârı̊ Ṣâltı̊ḳ; Ṣârı̊ Ṣâltuḳ; sarı meaning 'the blonde', died 1297/98) was a 13th-century Alevi Turkish dervish, venerated as a saint by the Bektashi Sufi Muslims in the Balkans and parts of Middle East as well as the mainstream Sunni Muslim community.