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Ahmed III

Ahmed III (Ottoman Turkish: احمد ثالث, Aḥmed-i sālis) (30 December 1673 – 1 July 1736) was Sultan of the Ottoman Empire and a son of Sultan Mehmed IV (r. 1648–1687). His mother was Gülnuş Sultan, originally named Evmania Voria, who was an ethnic Greek.[1][2][3][4][5] He was born at Hacıoğlu Pazarcık, in Dobruja. He succeeded to the throne in 1703 on the abdication of his brother Mustafa II (1695–1703).[6] Nevşehirli Damat İbrahim Pasha and the Sultan's daughter, Fatma Sultan (wife of the former) directed the government from 1718 to 1730, a period referred to as the Tulip Era.

Ahmed III
احمد ثالث
Amir al-Mu'minin
Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques
Ottoman Caliph
Sultan of the Ottoman Empire (Padishah)
Reign22 August 1703 – 20 September 1730
PredecessorMustafa II
SuccessorMahmud I
Born30 December 1673
Hacıoğlu Pazarcık, Ottoman Empire
Died1 July 1736(1736-07-01) (aged 62)
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
Burial
Tomb of Turhan Sultan, Istanbul, Turkey
ConsortsMihrişah Kadın
Şermi Kadın
among others
Issue
Among others
Names
Ahmed bin Mehmed
DynastyOttoman
FatherMehmed IV
MotherGülnuş Sultan
ReligionSunni Islam
Tughra

During the initial days of Ahmed III's reign, significant efforts were made to appease the janissaries. However, Ahmed's effectiveness in dealing with the janissaries who had elevated him to the sultanate was limited. Grand Vizier Çorlulu Ali Pasha, whom Ahmed appointed, provided valuable assistance in administrative affairs and implemented new measures for the treasury. He supported Ahmed in his struggles against rival factions and provided stability to the government. Ahmed was an avid reader, skilled in calligraphy and knowledgable on history and poetry.

Early life and education

Sultan Ahmed was born on 30 December 1673. His father was Sultan Mehmed IV, and his mother was Gülnuş Sultan, originally named Evmenia.[7] His birth occurred in Hacıoğlupazarı, where Mehmed stayed to hunt on his return from Poland in 1673, while Gülnuş was pregnant at that time.[8] In 1675, He and his brother, Prince Mustafa (future Mustafa II) were circumcised. During the same ceremony their sisters Hatice Sultan and Fatma Sultan were married to Musahip Mustafa Pasha and Kara Mustafa Pasha respectively.[9] The celebrations lasted 20 days.[10]

He grew up in the Edirne Palace. His schooling began during one of the sporadic visits of the court to Istanbul, following a courtly ceremony called bad-i basmala, which took place on 9 August 1679 in the Istavroz Palace. He was brought up in the imperial harem in Edirne with a traditional princely education, studying the Qur’an, the hadiths (traditions of Prophet Muhammad), and the fundamentals of Islamic sciences, history, poetry and music under the supervision of private tutors.[11] One of his tutors was chief mufti Feyzullah Efendi.[12]

 
A miniature of Sultan Ahmed III by the contemporary court painter Abdulcelil Levni

Ahmed was apparently curious and intellectual in nature, spending most of his time reading and practising calligraphy. The poems that he wrote manifest his profound knowledge of poetry, history, Islamic theology and philosophy. He was also interested in calligraphy, which he had studied with the leading court calligraphers, primarily with Hafız Osman Efendi (died 1698), who influenced his art immensely, and, therefore, practiced it because of the influence of his elder brother, the future Sultan Mustafa II, who also became a notable calligrapher.[11]

During his princehood in Edirne, Ahmed made friends with a bright officer-scribe, Ibrahim, from the city of Nevşehir, who was to become one of the outstanding Grand Viziers of his future reign. From 1687, following the deposition of his father, he lived in isolation for sixteen years in the palaces of Edirne and Istanbul. During this period he dedicated himself to calligraphy and intellectual activities.[13][14]

Reign

Accession

The Edirne succession occurred between 19 August to 23 August. Under Mustafa, Istanbul had been out of control for a long time. As arrests and executions mounted, theft and robbery incidents became common. The people were dissatisfied with the poor governing of the Empire. [15] Mustafa was deposed by the Janissaries and Ahmed, who succeeded him to the throne on 22 August 1703. The first Friday salute was held in Bayezid Mosque.[16]

Fındıklılı Mehmed Ağa welcomed the new sultan at the Harem gate on the Hasoda side, entered the arm, brought him to the Cardigan-i Saadet Department and placed them on the throne, and were among the first to pay tribute to him. [17]

As part of the fief system, Ahmed reorganized the land law in 1705. Bringing order to land ownership reduced the crime wave and brought peace to the troubled Empire. Due to his ardent support of the new laws, Ahmed was given the title 'law-giver', a title given to only three sultans earlier, Bayezid II (r. 1481–1512), Selim I (r. 1512–1520) and Suleyman the Magnificent (r. 1520–1566). In the first three years of his reign, Ahmed appointed four separate Grand Viziers. However, the government only gained some stability after the appointment of Çorlulu Ali Pasha in May 1706.[18]

Russo-Turkish War of 1710–1711

Ahmed III cultivated good relations with France, doubtless in view of Russia's menacing attitude. He afforded refuge in Ottoman territory to Charles XII of Sweden (1682–1718) after the Swedish defeat at the hands of Peter I of Russia (1672–1725) in the Battle of Poltava of 1709.[19] In 1710 Charles XII convinced Sultan Ahmed III to declare war against Russia, and the Ottoman forces under Baltacı Mehmet Pasha won a major victory at the Battle of Prut. In the aftermath, Russia returned Azov back to the Ottomans, agreed to demolish the fortress of Taganrog and others in the area, and to stop interfering in the affairs of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

Forced against his will into war with Russia, Ahmed III came nearer than any Ottoman sovereign before or since to breaking the power of his northern rival, whose armies his grand vizier Nevşehirli Damat İbrahim Pasha succeeded in completely surrounding at the Pruth River Campaign in 1711.[6] The subsequent Ottoman victories against Russia enabled the Ottoman Empire to advance to Moscow, had the Sultan wished. However, this was halted as a report reached Istanbul that the Safavids were invading the Ottoman Empire, causing a period of panic, turning the Sultan's attention away from Russia.

Wars with Venice and Austria

 
Ahmed III in the Imperial Darbar of Topkapi Palace.

On 9 December 1714, war was declared on Venice, an army under Silahdar Damat Ali Pasha's command[18] managed to recover the whole Morea (Peloponnese) from Venice through coordinated operations of the army and navy.[20]

This success alarmed Austria and in April 1716, Emperor Charles VI provoked the Porte into a declaration of war. The unsuccessful battle, also commanded by Silahdar Ali Pasha, ended with the Treaty of Passarowitz, signed on 21 July 1718, according to which Belgrade, Banat, and Wallachia were ceded to Austria. This failure was a disappointment for Ahmed as the treaty led to Istanbul's economy sufferring from increased inflation.[21]

Nevşehirli Damat Ibrahim Pasha who was the second leading figure of the empire after Ahmed had joined the Morea campaign in 1715, and was appointed as the city of Nish's minister of finance the following year. This post helped him realize the downturn of the state's finances, which led him to avoid war as much as possible during his vizierate. Ibrahim Pasha's policy of peace suited Ahmed well since he had no wish to lead any military campaigns, in addition to the fact that his interest in art and culture made him reluctant to leave his Istanbul.[21]

Character of Ahmed's rule

 
Sultan Ahmed III at a reception, painted in 1720

While shooting competitions were held in Okmeydanı, Istanbul with the idea of increasing the morale of the soldiers and the people, a new warship was launched in Tersane-i Amir.

He tried three grand viziers at short intervals. Instead of Hasan Pasha, he appointed Kalaylikoz Ahmed Pasha on 24 September 1704, and Baltacı Mehmed Pasha on 25 December 1704.[15]

In 1707, a conspiracy led by Eyüplü Ali Ağa was unearthed to bring the sultan off the throne. What resulted were that necks were ordered to be cut in front of the Bab-I-Hümayun.

Ahmed III left the finances of the Ottoman Empire in a flourishing condition, which had remarkably been obtained without excessive taxation or extortionate procedures. He was a cultivated patron of literature and art, and it was in his time that the first printing press was authorized to use either the Arabic or Turkish languages; it was set up in Istanbul, and operated by Ibrahim Muteferrika (while the printing press had been introduced to Constantinople in 1480, all published works before 1729 were in Greek, Armenian, or Hebrew).

It was in his reign that an important change in the government of the Danubian Principalities was introduced: previously, the Porte had appointed Hospodars, usually native Moldavian and Wallachian boyars, to administer those provinces; after the Russian campaign of 1711, during which Peter the Great found an ally in Moldavia Prince Dimitrie Cantemir, the Porte began overtly deputizing Phanariote Greeks in that region, and extended the system to Wallachia after Prince Stefan Cantacuzino established links with Prince Eugene of Savoy. The Phanariotes constituted a kind of Dhimmi nobility, which supplied the Porte with functionaries in many important departments of the state.

Foreign relations

 
Sultan Ahmed III receives French ambassador Vicomte d'Andrezel at Topkapı Palace.
 
French ambassador Marquis de Bonnac being received by Sultan Ahmed III.

The ambassadors of Safavid Iran and the Archduchy of Austria were well received when they came from 1706 to 1707.

In the year 1712, the Mughal Emperor Jahandar Shah, a grandson of Aurangzeb, sent gifts to the Ottoman Sultan Ahmed III and referred to himself as the Ottoman Sultan's devoted admirer.[22]

The Mughal Emperor Farrukhsiyar, another grandson of Aurangzeb, is also known to have sent a letter to the Ottomans but this time it was received by the Grand Vizier Nevşehirli Damad Ibrahim Pasha. The letter provided a graphic description of the efforts of the Mughal commander Syed Hassan Ali Khan Barha fighting against the Rajput and Maratha rebellion.[23]

Deposition

Sultan Ahmed III had become unpopular by reason of the excessive pomp and costly luxury in which he and his principal officers indulged; on 20 September 1730, a mutinous riot of seventeen Janissaries, led by the Albanian Patrona Halil, was aided by the citizens as well as the military until it swelled into an insurrection, this consequently led the Sultan to give up his throne.

Ahmed voluntarily led his nephew Mahmud I (1730–1754) to the seat of sovereignty and paid allegiance to him as Sultan of the Empire. He then retired to the Kafes previously occupied by Mahmud and died at Topkapı Palace after six years of confinement.

Architecture

Ahmed III commissioned the building of water claps, fountains, park waterfalls and three libraries, one inside the Topkapı Palace, with the famous lines "Ahmed was a master in the writings on plates" which have survived. The “Basmala” at the Topkapi Palace apartment door with its plates in the Üsküdar Yeni Mosque are among them.[24]

A library was built by Ahmed in 1724–1725 situated next to the tomb entrance of Turhan Sultan, the structure has stone-brick alternate meshed walls, is square-shaped and covered with a flattened dome with an octagonal rim, which is provided with pendentives. There are original pen works left in the pendentives and dome of the library.[25][26]

Disasters

In 1714, an Egyptian galleon near the Gümrük (Eminönü) Pier caught fire and burned, which resulted in the deaths of 200 people.[27]

While Nevşehirli Damat Ibrahim Pasha continued his preparations for his return to Istanbul, a fire broke out in the city. The districts of Unkapanı, Azapkapı, Zeyrek, Fatih, Saraçhane, Horhor, Etmeydanı, Molla Gürani, Altımermer, Ayazma Gate, Kantarcılar, Vefa, Vez Neciler, Old Rooms, Acemioğlanlar Barracks, Çukur Çeşme, Langa, Davudpaşa were burned from the fire.[28]

A large three-minute earthquake occurred on 14 May 1719. While the city walls of Istanbul were destroyed in the earthquake, 4,000 people died in Izmit and Yalova was destroyed. Reconstruction work followed after the quake ended in Istanbul. The most meaningful element to reflect the cultural aspect or weight of these works today is the Topkapı Palace Enderun Library, which was built in that year. A rich foundation was established for this institution, which is also known as the Sultan Ahmed-i Salis Library, which has a face-to-face with its architectural and valuable manuscripts.[29]

Family

Ahmed III is known to be the Sultan with the largest family (and harem) of the Ottoman dynasty. The hostess of his harem was Dilhayat Kalfa, known to be one of the greatest Turkish composeress of the early modern period.

Consorts

Ahmed III had at least twenty-one consorts: [30][31][32][33]

  • Emetullah Kadın. Baş Kadin (first consort) and her first concubine, she was the mother of the firstborn, Fatma Sultan, the Ahmed's favorite daughter. She was Ahmed's most beloved consort, who dedicated a mosque, a school and a fountain to her. Very devoted and active in charity, she died in 1740 in the Old Palace.
  • Emine Mihrişah Kadın. She was the mother of four sons including Mustafa III, 26th Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, but she premorted at her son's rise and therefore was never Valide sultan. She died in April 1732. Her son built the Ayazma Mosque in her honor in Üsküdar.
  • Rabia Şermi Kadın. She was the mother of Abdülhamid I, 27th Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, but she premorted at the rise of her son and therefore was never Valide Sultan. In 1728, a fountain was dedicated to her in Üsküdar. She died in 1732. Her son built the Beylerbeyi Mosque in her honor.
  • Ayşe Mihri Behri Kadın. Before she became a consort, she was treasurer of the harem.
  • Hatem Kadın. Mother of twins, she died in 1772 and was buried in Eyüp cemetery.
  • Emine Musli Kadın. Also called Muslıhe Kadın, Muslu Kadin or Musalli Kadın. She mother of two daughters, she died in 1750 and was buried with them in the Yeni Cami.
  • Rukiye Kadın. Mother of a daughter and a son, she built a fountain near the Yeni Cami. She died after 1738 and was buried with her daughter in the Yeni Cami.
  • Fatma Hümaşah Kadın. She died in 1732 and was buried by the Yeni Cami.
  • Gülneş Kadın. Also called Gülnuş Kadın. She is listed in a document naming her consorts exiled to Old Palace after the deposition of Ahmed III whose jewels were confiscated. She died after 1730.
  • Hürrem Kadın. Listed in a document that names the consorts exiled to Old Palace after the deposition of Ahmed III whose jewels were confiscated. She died after 1730.
  • Meyli Kadın. Listed in a document that names the consorts exiled to Old Palace after the deposition of Ahmed III whose jewels were confiscated. She died after 1730.
  • Hatice Kadın. She died in 1722 and was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Nazife Kadın. Listed in a document that names the consorts exiled to Old Palace after the deposition of Ahmed III whose jewels were confiscated. She died after 1730, perphaps the 29 December 1764.[34]
  • Nejat Kadın. Listed in a document that names the consorts exiled to Old Palace after the deposition of Ahmed III whose jewels were confiscated. She died after 1730.
  • Sadık Kadın. Also called Sadıka Kadin. Listed in a document that names the consorts exiled to Old Palace after the deposition of Ahmed III whose jewels were confiscated. She died after 1730.
  • Hüsnüşah Kadın. She died in 1733 and was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Şahin Kadın. She died in 1732 and was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Ümmügülsüm Kadın. She died in 1768 and was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Zeyneb Kadın. Mother of a daughter, she died in 1757 and was buried by the Yeni Cami.
  • Hanife Kadın. Mother of a daughter, she died in 1750 and was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Şayeste Hanim. BaşIkbal. She died in 1722 and was buried by the Yeni Cami.

Sons

Ahmed III had at least twenty-one sons, all buried, apart from the two who became Sultans, in the Yeni Cami:[35][31][32][33]

  • Şehzade Mehmed (24 November 1705 - 30 July 1706).
  • Şehzade Isa (23 February 1706 - 14 May 1706).
  • Şehzade Ali (18 June 1706 - 12 September 1706).
  • Şehzade Selim (29 August 1706 - 15 April 1708).
  • Şehzade Murad (17 November 1707 - 1707).
  • Şehzade Murad (25 January 1708 - 1 April 1708).
  • Şehzade Abdülmecid (12 December 1709 - 18 March 1710). Twin of Şehzade Abdülmelek.
  • Şehzade Abdülmelek (12 December 1709 - 7 March 1711). Twin of Şehzade Abdülmecid.
  • Şehzade Süleyman (25 August 1710 - 11 October 1732) - with Mihrişah Kadin. He died in the Kafes after two years of imprisonment.
  • Şehzade Mehmed (8 October 1712 - 15 July 1713).
  • Şehzade Selim (21 March 1715 - February 1718) - with Hatem Kadın. Twin of Saliha Sultan.
  • Şehzade Mehmed (2 January 1717 - 2 January 1756) - with Rukiye Kadın. He died in the Kafes after twenty-six years of imprisonment.
  • Mustafa III (28 January 1717 - 21 January 1774) - with Mihrişah Kadin. 26th Sultan of the Ottoman Empire after twenty-seven years of imprisonment in the Kafes.
  • Şehzade Bayezid (4 October 1718 - 24 January 1771) - with Mihrişah Kadin. He died in the Kafes after forty-one years of imprisonment.
  • Şehzade Abdüllah (18 December 1719 - 19 December 1719).
  • Şehzade Ibrahim (12 September 1720 - 16 March 1721).
  • Şehzade Numan (22 February 1723 - 29 December 1764). He died in the Kafes after thirthy-four years of imprisonment.
  • Abdülhamid I (20 March 1725 - 7 April 1789) - with Rabia Şermi Kadın. 27th Sultan of the Ottoman Empire after forty-four years of imprisonment in the Kafes.
  • Şehzade Seyfeddin (3 February 1728 - 1732) - with Mihrişah Kadin. He died in the Kafes after two years of imprisonment.
  • Şehzade Mahmud (? - 22 December 1756). He died in the Kafes after twenty-six years of imprisonment.
  • Şehzade Hasan (? - ?). He probably died in the Kafes.

Daughters

Ahmed III had at least thirty-six daughters:[35][31][32][33]

  • Fatma Sultan (22 September 1704 - May 1733) - with Emetullah Kadın.[36] She was her father's favorite daughter. She married twice and had two sons and two daughters. She and her second husband were the real power during the Tulip Era. She fell from grace after the Patrona Halil revolt and was confined to Çırağan Palace, where she died three years later.
  • Hatice Sultan (21 January 1701 - 29 August 1707). Buried in the mausoleum Turhan Sultan in the Yeni Cami.
  • Ayşe Sultan (? - 1706). Buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Mihrimah Sultan (17 June 1706 - ?). She died as a child and was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Rukiye Sultan (3 March 1707 - 29 August 1707). She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Ümmügülsüm Sultan (11 February 1708 - 28 November 1732). Twin of Zeynep Sultan. She married once and had four sons and a daughter.
  • Zeynep Sultan (11 February 1708 - 5 November 1708). Twin sister of Ümmügülsüm Sultan. She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Zeynep Sultan (5 January 1710 - July 1710). She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Hatice Sultan (8 February 1710 - 1710, before September). She was buried in the Turhan Sultan mausoleum in Yeni Cami.
  • Hatice Sultan (27 September 1710 - 1738) - with Rukiye Kadın. She married twice and had a son.
  • Emine Sultan (1711 - 1720). She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Atike Sultan (29 February 1712 - 2 April 1737). She got married once and she had a son.
  • Rukiye Sultan (7 March 1713 - October 1715). Buried in the Turhan Sultan mausoleum in Yeni Cami.
  • Zeynep Asima Sultan (8 April 1714 - March 25, 1774). She married twice and she had a son.
  • Saliha Sultan (21 March 1715 - 11 October 1778) - with Hatem Kadın. Twin of Şehzade Selim. She was married five times and had a son and four daughters.
  • Ayşe Sultan (10 October 1715 - 9 July 1775) - with Musli Kadın. Nicknamed Küçük Ayşe (meaning Ayşe the youngest) to distinguish her from her cousin Ayşe the eldest, daughter of Mustafa II. She married three times and had a daughter.
  • Ferdane Sultan (? - 1718). She died as a child and she was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Reyhane Sultan (1718 - 1729). Also called Reyhan Sultan or Rihane Sultan. She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Ümmüseleme Sultan (? - 1719). Also called Ümmüselma Sultan. She died as a child and was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Rabia Sultan (19 November 1719 - before 1727). She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Emetullah Sultan (1719 - 1723) Also called Ümmetullah Sultan. She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Rukiye Sultan (? - 1720). She died as a child and was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Beyhan Sultan (? - 1720). She died as a child and was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Emetullah Sultan (17 September 1723 - 28 January 1724). She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Emine Sultan (late 1723/early 1724 - 1732). She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Nazife Sultan (May 1723/1725 - before 1730 or 29 December 1764). Exceptionally, she never married, most likely because she was chronically ill or had physical and/or mental problems. She lived in seclusion in the Old Palace all her life. However, according to other historians, she actually died a child and the Nazife who died in the Old Palace in 1764 was instead one of Ahmed III's consorts with the same name, Nazife Kadin.
  • Ümmüselene Sultan (12 October 1724 - 5 December 1732). She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Naile Sultan (15 December 1725 - October 1727). She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Esma Sultan (14 March 1726 - 13 August 1778) - with Hanife Kadın or Zeyneb Kadın. Nicknamed Büyük Esma (meaning Esma the eldest) to distinguish her from her niece Esma the younger, daughter of Abdülhamid I. She married three times and had a daughter.
  • Sabiha Sultan (19 December 1726 - 17 December 1726). She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Rabia Sultan (28 October 1727 - 4 April 1728). Also called Rebia Sultan. She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Zübeyde Sultan (28 March 1728 - 4 June 1756) - with Musli Kadın. She married twice.
  • Ümmi Sultan (? - 1729). Called also Ümmügülsüm Sultan. She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Ümmühabibe Sultan (? - 1730). She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Akile Sultan (? - 1737). She was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Ümmi Sultan (1730 - 1742). Called also Ümmügülsüm Sultan. She was buried in the Yeni Cami.

Death

Ahmed lived in Kafes of the Topkapi Palace for six years following his deposition, where he fell ill and died on 1 July 1736. He was buried in his grandmother's tomb in Turhan Sultan Mausoleum in New Mosque, at Eminönü in Istanbul.[37]

In fiction

In Voltaire's Candide, the eponymous main character meets the deposed Ahmed III on a ship from Venice to Constantinople. The Sultan is in the company of five other deposed European monarchs, and he tells Candide, who initially doubts his credentials:

I am not jesting, my name is Achmet III. For several years I was Sultan; I dethroned my brother; my nephew dethroned me; they cut off the heads of my viziers; I am ending my days in the old seraglio; my nephew, Sultan Mahmoud, sometimes allows me to travel for my health, and I have come to spend the Carnival at Venice."[38]

This episode was taken up by the modern Turkish writer Nedim Gürsel as the setting of his 2001 novel Le voyage de Candide à Istanbul.

In fact, there is no evidence of the deposed Sultan being allowed to make such foreign travels, nor did Voltaire (or Gürsel) assert that it had any actual historical foundation.

See also

References

  1. ^ Freely, John (2001). The lost Messiah. Viking. p. 132. ISBN 0-670-88675-0. He set up his harem there, his favourite being Rabia Giilniis Ummetiillah, a Greek girl from Rethymnon on Crete
  2. ^ Bromley, J. S. (1957). The New Cambridge Modern History. University of California: University Press. p. 554. ISBN 0-521-22128-5. the mother of Mustafa II and Ahmed III was a Greek
  3. ^ Sardo, Eugenio Lo (1999). Tra greci e turchi: fonti diplomatiche italiane sul Settecento ottomano. Consiglio nazionale delle ricerche. p. 82. ISBN 88-8080-014-0. Their mother, a Greek, lady named Rabia Gülnûş, continued to wield influence as the Valide sultan - mother of the reigning sultan
  4. ^ Library Information and Research Service (2005). The Middle East. Library Information and Research Service. p. 91. She was the daughter of a Greek family and she was the mother of Mustafa II (1664–1703), and Ahmed III (1673–1736).
  5. ^ Baker, Anthony E; Freely, John (1993). The Bosphorus. Redhouse Press. p. 146. ISBN 975-413-062-0. The Valide Sultan was born Evmania Voria, daughter of a Greek priest in a village near Rethymnon on Crete. She was captured by the Turks when they took Rethymnon in 1645.
  6. ^ a b   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Ahmed III.". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 431.
  7. ^ Baker, Anthony E (1993). The Bosphorus. Redhouse Press. p. 146. ISBN 975-413-062-0. The Valide Sultan was born Evmania Voria, daughter of a Greek priest in a village near Rethymnon on Crete. She was captured by the Turks when they took Rethymnon in 1645.
  8. ^ Sakaoğlu 2015, p. 295.
  9. ^ Uluçay 2011, p. 110.
  10. ^ Sakaoğlu 2015, p. 286.
  11. ^ a b Keskiner 2012, p. 47.
  12. ^ Hathaway, Jane (August 30, 2018). The Chief Eunuch of the Ottoman Harem: From African Slave to Power-Broker. Cambridge University Press. p. 133. ISBN 978-1-107-10829-5.
  13. ^ Keskiner 2012, p. 47-8.
  14. ^ Sakaoğlu 2015, p. 296.
  15. ^ a b Sakaoğlu 2015, p. 297.
  16. ^ Sakaoğlu, Necdet (2015) Bu mülkün sultanları
  17. ^ Türkal 2013, p. 31.
  18. ^ a b Keskiner 2012, p. 56.
  19. ^ Chisholm 1911.
  20. ^ Ágoston & Masters 2009, p. 25.
  21. ^ a b Keskiner 2012, p. 57.
  22. ^ Farooqi, N.R. (1989). Mughal-Ottoman relations: a study of political & diplomatic relations between Mughal India and the Ottoman Empire, 1556-1748. Idarah-i Adabiyat-i Delli.
  23. ^ Farooqi, Naimur Rahman (1989). Mughal-Ottoman relations: a study of political & diplomatic relations ... - Naimur Rahman Farooqi. Retrieved 2012-04-29.
  24. ^ Sakaoğlu 2015, p. 307.
  25. ^ "YENİCAMİ KÜLLİYESİ İstanbul'da XVI. yüzyılın sonlarında inşasına başlanan ve XVII. yüzyılın ikinci yarısında tamamlanan külliye". İslam Ansiklopedisi. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
  26. ^ "YENİCAMİ KÜTÜPHANESİ". TDV İslâm Ansiklopedisi (in Turkish). Retrieved 2023-06-30.
  27. ^ Sakaoğlu 2015, p. 299.
  28. ^ Sakaoğlu 2015, p. 300.
  29. ^ Sakaoğlu 2015, p. 301.
  30. ^ Topal 2001, p. 600 and beyond.
  31. ^ a b c Onur, Oral (1994). Edirne türbeleri ve evlad-ı Fatihan mezarları. O. Onur. p. 27.
  32. ^ a b c Aktaş, Ali (2008). ÇELEBİZÂDE ÂSIM TARİHİ: Transkripsiyonlu metin.
  33. ^ a b c Sakaoğlu, Necdet. (2008). Bu mülkün kadın sultanları: vâlide sultanlar , hâtunlar, hasekiler, kadınefendiler, sultanefendiler (1. baskı ed.). Oğlak Yayıncılık. ISBN 978-975-329-623-6. OCLC 316234394. Retrieved 2021-01-22.
  34. ^ According to other historians, this would instead be the date of death of Nazife Sultan, a daughter of Ahmed III, survival is controversial due to the fact that it turns out she never married.
  35. ^ a b Topal 2001, p. 680 and beyond.
  36. ^ According to Alderson, she was instead the daughter of Ayşe Behri Mihri Kadın, but this has been discredited .
  37. ^ Sakaoğlu 2015, p. 306.
  38. ^ Woolf, H. I.; Jackson, Wilfrid (2008). "Full text of "Candide, and other romances. Translated by Richard Aldington, with an introd. and notes. Illustrated by Norman Tealby"". Internet Archive.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

Sources

  • This article incorporates text from the History of Ottoman Turks (1878)
  • Aktep, Münir (1989). "Ahmed III". TDV Encyclopedia of Islam, Vol. 2 (Ahlâk – Amari̇) (in Turkish). Istanbul: Turkiye Diyanet Foundation, Centre for Islamic Studies. pp. 34–38. ISBN 978-975-389-429-6.
  • Ágoston, Gábor; Masters, Bruce, eds. (2009). Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire. New York, NY: Facts On File. ISBN 9780816062591.
  • Aktaş, Ali (2008). ÇELEBİZÂDE ÂSIM TARİHİ: Transkripsiyonlu metin.
  • Haskan, Mehmet Nermi (2001). Yüzyıllar boyunca Üsküdar - Volume 3. Üsküdar Belediyesi. p. 1332. ISBN 978-9-759-76063-2.
  • Keskiner, Philippe Bora (2012). Sultan Ahmed III (r.1703-1730) as a Calligrapher and Patron of Calligraphy.
  • Sakaoğlu, Necdet (2008). Bu mülkün kadın sultanları: Vâlide sultanlar, hâtunlar, hasekiler, kadınefendiler, sultanefendiler. Oğlak Yayıncılık. ISBN 978-9-753-29623-6.
  • Sakaoğlu, Necdet (2015). Bu Mülkün Sultanları. Alfa Yayıncılık. ISBN 978-6-051-71080-8.
  • Topal, Mehmet (2001). Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Agha Nusretnâme: Tahlil ve Metin (1106-1133/1695-1721).
  • Türkal, Merve (2013). Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Ağa'nin Hayati ve eserleri (1658 / 1726-27).
  • Uluçay, Mustafa Çağatay (2011). Padişahların kadınları ve kızları. Ankara: Ötüken. ISBN 978-9-754-37840-5.
  • Uysal, Zekiye (2019). Topkapı Sarayındaki III. Ahmet Kütüphanesi'nin Alçı Bezemeleri.

External links

  Media related to Ahmed III at Wikimedia Commons

  Works by or about Ahmed III at Wikisource

Ahmed III
Born: 30 December 1673 Died: 1 July 1736
Regnal titles
Preceded by Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
22 August 1703 – 1 October 1730
Succeeded by
Sunni Islam titles
Preceded by Caliph of the Ottoman Caliphate
22 August 1703 – 1 October 1730
Succeeded by

ahmed, ottoman, turkish, احمد, ثالث, aḥmed, sālis, december, 1673, july, 1736, sultan, ottoman, empire, sultan, mehmed, 1648, 1687, mother, gülnuş, sultan, originally, named, evmania, voria, ethnic, greek, born, hacıoğlu, pazarcık, dobruja, succeeded, throne, . Ahmed III Ottoman Turkish احمد ثالث Aḥmed i salis 30 December 1673 1 July 1736 was Sultan of the Ottoman Empire and a son of Sultan Mehmed IV r 1648 1687 His mother was Gulnus Sultan originally named Evmania Voria who was an ethnic Greek 1 2 3 4 5 He was born at Hacioglu Pazarcik in Dobruja He succeeded to the throne in 1703 on the abdication of his brother Mustafa II 1695 1703 6 Nevsehirli Damat Ibrahim Pasha and the Sultan s daughter Fatma Sultan wife of the former directed the government from 1718 to 1730 a period referred to as the Tulip Era Ahmed IIIاحمد ثالثAmir al Mu mininCustodian of the Two Holy MosquesOttoman CaliphSultan of the Ottoman Empire Padishah Reign22 August 1703 20 September 1730PredecessorMustafa IISuccessorMahmud IBorn30 December 1673Hacioglu Pazarcik Ottoman EmpireDied1 July 1736 1736 07 01 aged 62 Constantinople Ottoman EmpireBurialTomb of Turhan Sultan Istanbul TurkeyConsortsMihrisah KadinSermi Kadinamong othersIssueAmong othersAbdul Hamid I Mustafa III Sehzade Mehmed Fatma Sultan Ummugulsum Sultan Hatice Sultan Atike Sultan Zeynep Sultan Saliha Sultan Ayse Sultan Esma Sultan Zubeyde SultanNamesAhmed bin MehmedDynastyOttomanFatherMehmed IVMotherGulnus SultanReligionSunni IslamTughraDuring the initial days of Ahmed III s reign significant efforts were made to appease the janissaries However Ahmed s effectiveness in dealing with the janissaries who had elevated him to the sultanate was limited Grand Vizier Corlulu Ali Pasha whom Ahmed appointed provided valuable assistance in administrative affairs and implemented new measures for the treasury He supported Ahmed in his struggles against rival factions and provided stability to the government Ahmed was an avid reader skilled in calligraphy and knowledgable on history and poetry Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Reign 2 1 Accession 2 2 Russo Turkish War of 1710 1711 2 3 Wars with Venice and Austria 2 4 Character of Ahmed s rule 2 5 Foreign relations 2 6 Deposition 3 Architecture 4 Disasters 5 Family 5 1 Consorts 5 2 Sons 5 3 Daughters 6 Death 7 In fiction 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksEarly life and education EditSultan Ahmed was born on 30 December 1673 His father was Sultan Mehmed IV and his mother was Gulnus Sultan originally named Evmenia 7 His birth occurred in Hacioglupazari where Mehmed stayed to hunt on his return from Poland in 1673 while Gulnus was pregnant at that time 8 In 1675 He and his brother Prince Mustafa future Mustafa II were circumcised During the same ceremony their sisters Hatice Sultan and Fatma Sultan were married to Musahip Mustafa Pasha and Kara Mustafa Pasha respectively 9 The celebrations lasted 20 days 10 He grew up in the Edirne Palace His schooling began during one of the sporadic visits of the court to Istanbul following a courtly ceremony called bad i basmala which took place on 9 August 1679 in the Istavroz Palace He was brought up in the imperial harem in Edirne with a traditional princely education studying the Qur an the hadiths traditions of Prophet Muhammad and the fundamentals of Islamic sciences history poetry and music under the supervision of private tutors 11 One of his tutors was chief mufti Feyzullah Efendi 12 A miniature of Sultan Ahmed III by the contemporary court painter Abdulcelil LevniAhmed was apparently curious and intellectual in nature spending most of his time reading and practising calligraphy The poems that he wrote manifest his profound knowledge of poetry history Islamic theology and philosophy He was also interested in calligraphy which he had studied with the leading court calligraphers primarily with Hafiz Osman Efendi died 1698 who influenced his art immensely and therefore practiced it because of the influence of his elder brother the future Sultan Mustafa II who also became a notable calligrapher 11 During his princehood in Edirne Ahmed made friends with a bright officer scribe Ibrahim from the city of Nevsehir who was to become one of the outstanding Grand Viziers of his future reign From 1687 following the deposition of his father he lived in isolation for sixteen years in the palaces of Edirne and Istanbul During this period he dedicated himself to calligraphy and intellectual activities 13 14 Reign EditAccession Edit Main article Edirne event The Edirne succession occurred between 19 August to 23 August Under Mustafa Istanbul had been out of control for a long time As arrests and executions mounted theft and robbery incidents became common The people were dissatisfied with the poor governing of the Empire 15 Mustafa was deposed by the Janissaries and Ahmed who succeeded him to the throne on 22 August 1703 The first Friday salute was held in Bayezid Mosque 16 Findiklili Mehmed Aga welcomed the new sultan at the Harem gate on the Hasoda side entered the arm brought him to the Cardigan i Saadet Department and placed them on the throne and were among the first to pay tribute to him 17 As part of the fief system Ahmed reorganized the land law in 1705 Bringing order to land ownership reduced the crime wave and brought peace to the troubled Empire Due to his ardent support of the new laws Ahmed was given the title law giver a title given to only three sultans earlier Bayezid II r 1481 1512 Selim I r 1512 1520 and Suleyman the Magnificent r 1520 1566 In the first three years of his reign Ahmed appointed four separate Grand Viziers However the government only gained some stability after the appointment of Corlulu Ali Pasha in May 1706 18 Russo Turkish War of 1710 1711 Edit Main article Pruth River Campaign Ahmed III cultivated good relations with France doubtless in view of Russia s menacing attitude He afforded refuge in Ottoman territory to Charles XII of Sweden 1682 1718 after the Swedish defeat at the hands of Peter I of Russia 1672 1725 in the Battle of Poltava of 1709 19 In 1710 Charles XII convinced Sultan Ahmed III to declare war against Russia and the Ottoman forces under Baltaci Mehmet Pasha won a major victory at the Battle of Prut In the aftermath Russia returned Azov back to the Ottomans agreed to demolish the fortress of Taganrog and others in the area and to stop interfering in the affairs of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Forced against his will into war with Russia Ahmed III came nearer than any Ottoman sovereign before or since to breaking the power of his northern rival whose armies his grand vizier Nevsehirli Damat Ibrahim Pasha succeeded in completely surrounding at the Pruth River Campaign in 1711 6 The subsequent Ottoman victories against Russia enabled the Ottoman Empire to advance to Moscow had the Sultan wished However this was halted as a report reached Istanbul that the Safavids were invading the Ottoman Empire causing a period of panic turning the Sultan s attention away from Russia Wars with Venice and Austria Edit Main article Ottoman Venetian War 1714 1718 Ahmed III in the Imperial Darbar of Topkapi Palace On 9 December 1714 war was declared on Venice an army under Silahdar Damat Ali Pasha s command 18 managed to recover the whole Morea Peloponnese from Venice through coordinated operations of the army and navy 20 This success alarmed Austria and in April 1716 Emperor Charles VI provoked the Porte into a declaration of war The unsuccessful battle also commanded by Silahdar Ali Pasha ended with the Treaty of Passarowitz signed on 21 July 1718 according to which Belgrade Banat and Wallachia were ceded to Austria This failure was a disappointment for Ahmed as the treaty led to Istanbul s economy sufferring from increased inflation 21 Nevsehirli Damat Ibrahim Pasha who was the second leading figure of the empire after Ahmed had joined the Morea campaign in 1715 and was appointed as the city of Nish s minister of finance the following year This post helped him realize the downturn of the state s finances which led him to avoid war as much as possible during his vizierate Ibrahim Pasha s policy of peace suited Ahmed well since he had no wish to lead any military campaigns in addition to the fact that his interest in art and culture made him reluctant to leave his Istanbul 21 Character of Ahmed s rule Edit Sultan Ahmed III at a reception painted in 1720While shooting competitions were held in Okmeydani Istanbul with the idea of increasing the morale of the soldiers and the people a new warship was launched in Tersane i Amir He tried three grand viziers at short intervals Instead of Hasan Pasha he appointed Kalaylikoz Ahmed Pasha on 24 September 1704 and Baltaci Mehmed Pasha on 25 December 1704 15 In 1707 a conspiracy led by Eyuplu Ali Aga was unearthed to bring the sultan off the throne What resulted were that necks were ordered to be cut in front of the Bab I Humayun Ahmed III left the finances of the Ottoman Empire in a flourishing condition which had remarkably been obtained without excessive taxation or extortionate procedures He was a cultivated patron of literature and art and it was in his time that the first printing press was authorized to use either the Arabic or Turkish languages it was set up in Istanbul and operated by Ibrahim Muteferrika while the printing press had been introduced to Constantinople in 1480 all published works before 1729 were in Greek Armenian or Hebrew It was in his reign that an important change in the government of the Danubian Principalities was introduced previously the Porte had appointed Hospodars usually native Moldavian and Wallachian boyars to administer those provinces after the Russian campaign of 1711 during which Peter the Great found an ally in Moldavia Prince Dimitrie Cantemir the Porte began overtly deputizing Phanariote Greeks in that region and extended the system to Wallachia after Prince Stefan Cantacuzino established links with Prince Eugene of Savoy The Phanariotes constituted a kind of Dhimmi nobility which supplied the Porte with functionaries in many important departments of the state Foreign relations Edit Sultan Ahmed III receives French ambassador Vicomte d Andrezel at Topkapi Palace French ambassador Marquis de Bonnac being received by Sultan Ahmed III The ambassadors of Safavid Iran and the Archduchy of Austria were well received when they came from 1706 to 1707 In the year 1712 the Mughal Emperor Jahandar Shah a grandson of Aurangzeb sent gifts to the Ottoman Sultan Ahmed III and referred to himself as the Ottoman Sultan s devoted admirer 22 The Mughal Emperor Farrukhsiyar another grandson of Aurangzeb is also known to have sent a letter to the Ottomans but this time it was received by the Grand Vizier Nevsehirli Damad Ibrahim Pasha The letter provided a graphic description of the efforts of the Mughal commander Syed Hassan Ali Khan Barha fighting against the Rajput and Maratha rebellion 23 Deposition Edit Main article Patrona Halil Sultan Ahmed III had become unpopular by reason of the excessive pomp and costly luxury in which he and his principal officers indulged on 20 September 1730 a mutinous riot of seventeen Janissaries led by the Albanian Patrona Halil was aided by the citizens as well as the military until it swelled into an insurrection this consequently led the Sultan to give up his throne Ahmed voluntarily led his nephew Mahmud I 1730 1754 to the seat of sovereignty and paid allegiance to him as Sultan of the Empire He then retired to the Kafes previously occupied by Mahmud and died at Topkapi Palace after six years of confinement Architecture EditAhmed III commissioned the building of water claps fountains park waterfalls and three libraries one inside the Topkapi Palace with the famous lines Ahmed was a master in the writings on plates which have survived The Basmala at the Topkapi Palace apartment door with its plates in the Uskudar Yeni Mosque are among them 24 A library was built by Ahmed in 1724 1725 situated next to the tomb entrance of Turhan Sultan the structure has stone brick alternate meshed walls is square shaped and covered with a flattened dome with an octagonal rim which is provided with pendentives There are original pen works left in the pendentives and dome of the library 25 26 Disasters EditIn 1714 an Egyptian galleon near the Gumruk Eminonu Pier caught fire and burned which resulted in the deaths of 200 people 27 While Nevsehirli Damat Ibrahim Pasha continued his preparations for his return to Istanbul a fire broke out in the city The districts of Unkapani Azapkapi Zeyrek Fatih Sarachane Horhor Etmeydani Molla Gurani Altimermer Ayazma Gate Kantarcilar Vefa Vez Neciler Old Rooms Acemioglanlar Barracks Cukur Cesme Langa Davudpasa were burned from the fire 28 A large three minute earthquake occurred on 14 May 1719 While the city walls of Istanbul were destroyed in the earthquake 4 000 people died in Izmit and Yalova was destroyed Reconstruction work followed after the quake ended in Istanbul The most meaningful element to reflect the cultural aspect or weight of these works today is the Topkapi Palace Enderun Library which was built in that year A rich foundation was established for this institution which is also known as the Sultan Ahmed i Salis Library which has a face to face with its architectural and valuable manuscripts 29 Family EditSee also Ottoman Imperial Harem Ahmed III is known to be the Sultan with the largest family and harem of the Ottoman dynasty The hostess of his harem was Dilhayat Kalfa known to be one of the greatest Turkish composeress of the early modern period Consorts Edit Ahmed III had at least twenty one consorts 30 31 32 33 Emetullah Kadin Bas Kadin first consort and her first concubine she was the mother of the firstborn Fatma Sultan the Ahmed s favorite daughter She was Ahmed s most beloved consort who dedicated a mosque a school and a fountain to her Very devoted and active in charity she died in 1740 in the Old Palace Emine Mihrisah Kadin She was the mother of four sons including Mustafa III 26th Sultan of the Ottoman Empire but she premorted at her son s rise and therefore was never Valide sultan She died in April 1732 Her son built the Ayazma Mosque in her honor in Uskudar Rabia Sermi Kadin She was the mother of Abdulhamid I 27th Sultan of the Ottoman Empire but she premorted at the rise of her son and therefore was never Valide Sultan In 1728 a fountain was dedicated to her in Uskudar She died in 1732 Her son built the Beylerbeyi Mosque in her honor Ayse Mihri Behri Kadin Before she became a consort she was treasurer of the harem Hatem Kadin Mother of twins she died in 1772 and was buried in Eyup cemetery Emine Musli Kadin Also called Muslihe Kadin Muslu Kadin or Musalli Kadin She mother of two daughters she died in 1750 and was buried with them in the Yeni Cami Rukiye Kadin Mother of a daughter and a son she built a fountain near the Yeni Cami She died after 1738 and was buried with her daughter in the Yeni Cami Fatma Humasah Kadin She died in 1732 and was buried by the Yeni Cami Gulnes Kadin Also called Gulnus Kadin She is listed in a document naming her consorts exiled to Old Palace after the deposition of Ahmed III whose jewels were confiscated She died after 1730 Hurrem Kadin Listed in a document that names the consorts exiled to Old Palace after the deposition of Ahmed III whose jewels were confiscated She died after 1730 Meyli Kadin Listed in a document that names the consorts exiled to Old Palace after the deposition of Ahmed III whose jewels were confiscated She died after 1730 Hatice Kadin She died in 1722 and was buried in the Yeni Cami Nazife Kadin Listed in a document that names the consorts exiled to Old Palace after the deposition of Ahmed III whose jewels were confiscated She died after 1730 perphaps the 29 December 1764 34 Nejat Kadin Listed in a document that names the consorts exiled to Old Palace after the deposition of Ahmed III whose jewels were confiscated She died after 1730 Sadik Kadin Also called Sadika Kadin Listed in a document that names the consorts exiled to Old Palace after the deposition of Ahmed III whose jewels were confiscated She died after 1730 Husnusah Kadin She died in 1733 and was buried in the Yeni Cami Sahin Kadin She died in 1732 and was buried in the Yeni Cami Ummugulsum Kadin She died in 1768 and was buried in the Yeni Cami Zeyneb Kadin Mother of a daughter she died in 1757 and was buried by the Yeni Cami Hanife Kadin Mother of a daughter she died in 1750 and was buried in the Yeni Cami Sayeste Hanim BasIkbal She died in 1722 and was buried by the Yeni Cami Sons Edit Ahmed III had at least twenty one sons all buried apart from the two who became Sultans in the Yeni Cami 35 31 32 33 Sehzade Mehmed 24 November 1705 30 July 1706 Sehzade Isa 23 February 1706 14 May 1706 Sehzade Ali 18 June 1706 12 September 1706 Sehzade Selim 29 August 1706 15 April 1708 Sehzade Murad 17 November 1707 1707 Sehzade Murad 25 January 1708 1 April 1708 Sehzade Abdulmecid 12 December 1709 18 March 1710 Twin of Sehzade Abdulmelek Sehzade Abdulmelek 12 December 1709 7 March 1711 Twin of Sehzade Abdulmecid Sehzade Suleyman 25 August 1710 11 October 1732 with Mihrisah Kadin He died in the Kafes after two years of imprisonment Sehzade Mehmed 8 October 1712 15 July 1713 Sehzade Selim 21 March 1715 February 1718 with Hatem Kadin Twin of Saliha Sultan Sehzade Mehmed 2 January 1717 2 January 1756 with Rukiye Kadin He died in the Kafes after twenty six years of imprisonment Mustafa III 28 January 1717 21 January 1774 with Mihrisah Kadin 26th Sultan of the Ottoman Empire after twenty seven years of imprisonment in the Kafes Sehzade Bayezid 4 October 1718 24 January 1771 with Mihrisah Kadin He died in the Kafes after forty one years of imprisonment Sehzade Abdullah 18 December 1719 19 December 1719 Sehzade Ibrahim 12 September 1720 16 March 1721 Sehzade Numan 22 February 1723 29 December 1764 He died in the Kafes after thirthy four years of imprisonment Abdulhamid I 20 March 1725 7 April 1789 with Rabia Sermi Kadin 27th Sultan of the Ottoman Empire after forty four years of imprisonment in the Kafes Sehzade Seyfeddin 3 February 1728 1732 with Mihrisah Kadin He died in the Kafes after two years of imprisonment Sehzade Mahmud 22 December 1756 He died in the Kafes after twenty six years of imprisonment Sehzade Hasan He probably died in the Kafes Daughters Edit Ahmed III had at least thirty six daughters 35 31 32 33 Fatma Sultan 22 September 1704 May 1733 with Emetullah Kadin 36 She was her father s favorite daughter She married twice and had two sons and two daughters She and her second husband were the real power during the Tulip Era She fell from grace after the Patrona Halil revolt and was confined to Ciragan Palace where she died three years later Hatice Sultan 21 January 1701 29 August 1707 Buried in the mausoleum Turhan Sultan in the Yeni Cami Ayse Sultan 1706 Buried in the Yeni Cami Mihrimah Sultan 17 June 1706 She died as a child and was buried in the Yeni Cami Rukiye Sultan 3 March 1707 29 August 1707 She was buried in the Yeni Cami Ummugulsum Sultan 11 February 1708 28 November 1732 Twin of Zeynep Sultan She married once and had four sons and a daughter Zeynep Sultan 11 February 1708 5 November 1708 Twin sister of Ummugulsum Sultan She was buried in the Yeni Cami Zeynep Sultan 5 January 1710 July 1710 She was buried in the Yeni Cami Hatice Sultan 8 February 1710 1710 before September She was buried in the Turhan Sultan mausoleum in Yeni Cami Hatice Sultan 27 September 1710 1738 with Rukiye Kadin She married twice and had a son Emine Sultan 1711 1720 She was buried in the Yeni Cami Atike Sultan 29 February 1712 2 April 1737 She got married once and she had a son Rukiye Sultan 7 March 1713 October 1715 Buried in the Turhan Sultan mausoleum in Yeni Cami Zeynep Asima Sultan 8 April 1714 March 25 1774 She married twice and she had a son Saliha Sultan 21 March 1715 11 October 1778 with Hatem Kadin Twin of Sehzade Selim She was married five times and had a son and four daughters Ayse Sultan 10 October 1715 9 July 1775 with Musli Kadin Nicknamed Kucuk Ayse meaning Aysethe youngest to distinguish her from her cousin Aysethe eldest daughter of Mustafa II She married three times and had a daughter Ferdane Sultan 1718 She died as a child and she was buried in the Yeni Cami Reyhane Sultan 1718 1729 Also called Reyhan Sultan or Rihane Sultan She was buried in the Yeni Cami Ummuseleme Sultan 1719 Also called Ummuselma Sultan She died as a child and was buried in the Yeni Cami Rabia Sultan 19 November 1719 before 1727 She was buried in the Yeni Cami Emetullah Sultan 1719 1723 Also called Ummetullah Sultan She was buried in the Yeni Cami Rukiye Sultan 1720 She died as a child and was buried in the Yeni Cami Beyhan Sultan 1720 She died as a child and was buried in the Yeni Cami Emetullah Sultan 17 September 1723 28 January 1724 She was buried in the Yeni Cami Emine Sultan late 1723 early 1724 1732 She was buried in the Yeni Cami Nazife Sultan May 1723 1725 before 1730 or 29 December 1764 Exceptionally she never married most likely because she was chronically ill or had physical and or mental problems She lived in seclusion in the Old Palace all her life However according to other historians she actually died a child and the Nazife who died in the Old Palace in 1764 was instead one of Ahmed III s consorts with the same name Nazife Kadin Ummuselene Sultan 12 October 1724 5 December 1732 She was buried in the Yeni Cami Naile Sultan 15 December 1725 October 1727 She was buried in the Yeni Cami Esma Sultan 14 March 1726 13 August 1778 with Hanife Kadin or Zeyneb Kadin Nicknamed Buyuk Esma meaning Esma the eldest to distinguish her from her niece Esma the younger daughter of Abdulhamid I She married three times and had a daughter Sabiha Sultan 19 December 1726 17 December 1726 She was buried in the Yeni Cami Rabia Sultan 28 October 1727 4 April 1728 Also called Rebia Sultan She was buried in the Yeni Cami Zubeyde Sultan 28 March 1728 4 June 1756 with Musli Kadin She married twice Ummi Sultan 1729 Called also Ummugulsum Sultan She was buried in the Yeni Cami Ummuhabibe Sultan 1730 She was buried in the Yeni Cami Akile Sultan 1737 She was buried in the Yeni Cami Ummi Sultan 1730 1742 Called also Ummugulsum Sultan She was buried in the Yeni Cami Death EditAhmed lived in Kafes of the Topkapi Palace for six years following his deposition where he fell ill and died on 1 July 1736 He was buried in his grandmother s tomb in Turhan Sultan Mausoleum in New Mosque at Eminonu in Istanbul 37 In fiction EditIn Voltaire s Candide the eponymous main character meets the deposed Ahmed III on a ship from Venice to Constantinople The Sultan is in the company of five other deposed European monarchs and he tells Candide who initially doubts his credentials I am not jesting my name is Achmet III For several years I was Sultan I dethroned my brother my nephew dethroned me they cut off the heads of my viziers I am ending my days in the old seraglio my nephew Sultan Mahmoud sometimes allows me to travel for my health and I have come to spend the Carnival at Venice 38 This episode was taken up by the modern Turkish writer Nedim Gursel as the setting of his 2001 novel Le voyage de Candide a Istanbul In fact there is no evidence of the deposed Sultan being allowed to make such foreign travels nor did Voltaire or Gursel assert that it had any actual historical foundation See also EditFountain of Ahmed III Fountain of Ahmed III Uskudar Ibrahim Muteferrika Esma Sultan daughter of Ahmed IIIReferences Edit Freely John 2001 The lost Messiah Viking p 132 ISBN 0 670 88675 0 He set up his harem there his favourite being Rabia Giilniis Ummetiillah a Greek girl from Rethymnon on Crete Bromley J S 1957 The New Cambridge Modern History University of California University Press p 554 ISBN 0 521 22128 5 the mother of Mustafa II and Ahmed III was a Greek Sardo Eugenio Lo 1999 Tra greci e turchi fonti diplomatiche italiane sul Settecento ottomano Consiglio nazionale delle ricerche p 82 ISBN 88 8080 014 0 Their mother a Greek lady named Rabia Gulnus continued to wield influence as the Valide sultan mother of the reigning sultan Library Information and Research Service 2005 The Middle East Library Information and Research Service p 91 She was the daughter of a Greek family and she was the mother of Mustafa II 1664 1703 and Ahmed III 1673 1736 Baker Anthony E Freely John 1993 The Bosphorus Redhouse Press p 146 ISBN 975 413 062 0 The Valide Sultan was born Evmania Voria daughter of a Greek priest in a village near Rethymnon on Crete She was captured by the Turks when they took Rethymnon in 1645 a b One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Ahmed III Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 431 Baker Anthony E 1993 The Bosphorus Redhouse Press p 146 ISBN 975 413 062 0 The Valide Sultan was born Evmania Voria daughter of a Greek priest in a village near Rethymnon on Crete She was captured by the Turks when they took Rethymnon in 1645 Sakaoglu 2015 p 295 Ulucay 2011 p 110 Sakaoglu 2015 p 286 a b Keskiner 2012 p 47 Hathaway Jane August 30 2018 The Chief Eunuch of the Ottoman Harem From African Slave to Power Broker Cambridge University Press p 133 ISBN 978 1 107 10829 5 Keskiner 2012 p 47 8 Sakaoglu 2015 p 296 a b Sakaoglu 2015 p 297 Sakaoglu Necdet 2015 Bu mulkun sultanlari Turkal 2013 p 31 a b Keskiner 2012 p 56 Chisholm 1911 Agoston amp Masters 2009 p 25 a b Keskiner 2012 p 57 Farooqi N R 1989 Mughal Ottoman relations a study of political amp diplomatic relations between Mughal India and the Ottoman Empire 1556 1748 Idarah i Adabiyat i Delli Farooqi Naimur Rahman 1989 Mughal Ottoman relations a study of political amp diplomatic relations Naimur Rahman Farooqi Retrieved 2012 04 29 Sakaoglu 2015 p 307 YENICAMI KULLIYESI Istanbul da XVI yuzyilin sonlarinda insasina baslanan ve XVII yuzyilin ikinci yarisinda tamamlanan kulliye Islam Ansiklopedisi Retrieved 11 April 2020 YENICAMI KUTUPHANESI TDV Islam Ansiklopedisi in Turkish Retrieved 2023 06 30 Sakaoglu 2015 p 299 Sakaoglu 2015 p 300 Sakaoglu 2015 p 301 Topal 2001 p 600 and beyond a b c Onur Oral 1994 Edirne turbeleri ve evlad i Fatihan mezarlari O Onur p 27 a b c Aktas Ali 2008 CELEBIZADE ASIM TARIHI Transkripsiyonlu metin a b c Sakaoglu Necdet 2008 Bu mulkun kadin sultanlari valide sultanlar hatunlar hasekiler kadinefendiler sultanefendiler 1 baski ed Oglak Yayincilik ISBN 978 975 329 623 6 OCLC 316234394 Retrieved 2021 01 22 According to other historians this would instead be the date of death of Nazife Sultan a daughter of Ahmed III survival is controversial due to the fact that it turns out she never married a b Topal 2001 p 680 and beyond According to Alderson she was instead the daughter of Ayse Behri Mihri Kadin but this has been discredited Sakaoglu 2015 p 306 Woolf H I Jackson Wilfrid 2008 Full text of Candide and other romances Translated by Richard Aldington with an introd and notes Illustrated by Norman Tealby Internet Archive a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Sources EditThis article incorporates text from the History of Ottoman Turks 1878 Aktep Munir 1989 Ahmed III TDV Encyclopedia of Islam Vol 2 Ahlak Amari in Turkish Istanbul Turkiye Diyanet Foundation Centre for Islamic Studies pp 34 38 ISBN 978 975 389 429 6 Agoston Gabor Masters Bruce eds 2009 Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire New York NY Facts On File ISBN 9780816062591 Aktas Ali 2008 CELEBIZADE ASIM TARIHI Transkripsiyonlu metin Haskan Mehmet Nermi 2001 Yuzyillar boyunca Uskudar Volume 3 Uskudar Belediyesi p 1332 ISBN 978 9 759 76063 2 Keskiner Philippe Bora 2012 Sultan Ahmed III r 1703 1730 as a Calligrapher and Patron of Calligraphy Sakaoglu Necdet 2008 Bu mulkun kadin sultanlari Valide sultanlar hatunlar hasekiler kadinefendiler sultanefendiler Oglak Yayincilik ISBN 978 9 753 29623 6 Sakaoglu Necdet 2015 Bu Mulkun Sultanlari Alfa Yayincilik ISBN 978 6 051 71080 8 Topal Mehmet 2001 Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Agha Nusretname Tahlil ve Metin 1106 1133 1695 1721 Turkal Merve 2013 Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Aga nin Hayati ve eserleri 1658 1726 27 Ulucay Mustafa Cagatay 2011 Padisahlarin kadinlari ve kizlari Ankara Otuken ISBN 978 9 754 37840 5 Uysal Zekiye 2019 Topkapi Sarayindaki III Ahmet Kutuphanesi nin Alci Bezemeleri External links Edit Media related to Ahmed III at Wikimedia Commons Works by or about Ahmed III at Wikisource Ahmed IIIHouse of OsmanBorn 30 December 1673 Died 1 July 1736Regnal titlesPreceded byMustafa II Sultan of the Ottoman Empire22 August 1703 1 October 1730 Succeeded byMahmud ISunni Islam titlesPreceded byMustafa II Caliph of the Ottoman Caliphate22 August 1703 1 October 1730 Succeeded byMahmud I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ahmed III amp oldid 1168995813, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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