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Hafsa Sultan

Hafsa Sultan (Ottoman Turkish: حفصه سلطان, "Young lioness"; c. 1475 or before – 19 March 1534), also called Ayşe Hafsa Sultan, was a concubine of Selim I and the first Valide Sultan of the Ottoman Empire as the mother of Suleiman the Magnificent. During the period between her son's enthronement in 1520 and her death in 1534, she was one of the most influential persons in the Ottoman Empire.[7]

Hafsa Sultan
Bust in Manisa, Turkey
Valide sultan of the Ottoman Empire
Tenure30 September 1520 – 19 March 1534
Bornc. 1475 or before[1]
Died19 March 1534 (aged c. 58–59)[2]
Istanbul, Ottoman Empire
Burial
SpouseSelim I
IssueFatma Sultan
Beyhan Sultan disputed
Hafize Sultan disputed
Hatice Sultan
Suleiman the Magnificent
Names
Ayşe Hafsa Sultan
Ottoman Turkish: حفصه سلطان
HouseHouse of Osman marriage
FatherDisputed. Meñli I Giray denied by moder historical[3]
Abd'ûl-Muin, Abdüllah[4][5] or Abdulhay[5][6]
ReligionSunni Islam

Origins

The traditional view holding that Hafsa Sultan was the daughter of Meñli I Giray (1445–1515), the khan of the Crimean Tatars for much of the period between 1466 and 1515, resting on seventeenth century western authors accounts, has been challenged in favor of a Christian slave origin based on Ottoman documentary evidence.[8][9] Only few historians still follow the traditional view, including Brian Glyn Williams.[3] Reşat Kasaba mentions the marriage between Selim I and Hafsa Sultan as the "last marriage between an Ottoman sultan and a member of a neighboring Muslim royal family".[10] Esin Atıl, however, states that whilst some historians state that she was the daughter of Giray, others have mentioned that the Crimean princess named "Ayse" was another one of Selim I's wives and that "Hafsa" may have been of slave origin.[5] Ilya Zaytsev claims that "Ayshe (daughter of Mengli-Giray I)" first married Şehzade Mehmed, the governor of Kefe, and that she later married his brother Selim I; consequently, her marriage into the Ottoman dynasty was one of two noted instances of wedlock between the Girays and the Ottomans (the other being the marriage of Selim I's daughter to Saadet-Giray).[11] Alan W. Fisher, Leslie Peirce, and Feridun Emecen all see Hafsa as of slave origin and not the daughter of the Crimean Khan.[12][13] Some Turkish historians believe that she was Turkish.[14] Other historians believe that she might have been a Polish Jew,[15] or Albanian.[16][page needed][need quotation to verify]

Life

 
The külliye built on the orders of Hafsa Sultan in Manisa. It is part of the adjoining Sultan Mosque

Having resided in the city of Manisa in western Turkey with her son, Suleiman, who administered the surrounding region between 1513 and 1520 (the town functioned as one of the traditional residences for Ottoman crown princes (veliaht şehzade) in apprenticeship for future power), Hafsa Sultan initiated the Manisa's "Mesir Festival", a local tradition continued today. She also had a large complex built in the city consisting of a mosque known as the Sultan Mosque, a primary school, a college, and a hospice.

As mother of new sultan Suleyman, in the 1521 she was also the first Ottoman imperial women who held title "sultan" after her given name, replacing title "hatun". This usage reflected the Ottoman conception of sovereign power as "family prerogative".[17][page needed] Consequently, the title valide hatun (title for living mother of the reigning Ottoman sultan before 16th century) also turned into valide sultan, making Hafsa the first valide sultan. Her era signalled the shifting status of the sultan's mother and her increased share in power.[18] She was also the first harem woman confirmed to have a kira - Strongilah.[19]

Death

 
The entrance to the türbe of Hafsa Sultan

Hafsa Sultan died in March 1534 and was buried near her husband in a mausoleum behind the qiblah wall of Yavuz Selim Mosque, in Fatih, Istanbul. The mausoleum was largely destroyed in an earthquake in 1884, a reconstruction effort started in the 1900s (decade) having been left discontinued, and her tomb today is much simpler than it was built originally.

Family

From Selim, Hafsa had at least three children:[20]

  • Hatice Sultan (1493?, Trabzon - after 1543, Constantinople). She married twice, she had five sons and at least three daughters.
  • Fatma Sultan (1492 or before, Trabzon –1573, Constantinople). She married at least twice. It is uncertain whether she had children.

To these there are two other daughters, whose motherhood of Hafsa is however discussed:[21]

  • Hafize Sultan (1492 or before, Trabzon - 10 July 1538, Constantinople). She married twice, she had one son.
  • Beyhan Sultan (1492 or before, Trabzon - 1559, Skopje). She married at least once, she had at least a daughter.

Representations in popular culture

In the historical TV series The Magnificent Century she is played by the Turkish actress Nebahat Çehre. Here for plot reasons she is represented as the mother of Şah Sultan (one of other Selim's daughters by other concubine) rather than Hafize Sultan.

References

  1. ^ Sakaoğlu, Necdet [in Turkish] (2008). Bu mülkün kadın sultanları: Vâlide sultanlar, hâtunlar, hasekiler, kadınefendiler, sultanefendiler. Oğlak Yayıncılık. p. 199. ISBN 978-9-753-29623-6.
  2. ^ Peirce, Leslie P. (1993). The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire. Oxford University Press. p. 121. ISBN 0-19-508677-5.
  3. ^ a b Glyn Williams, Brian (2001), The Crimean Tatars: The Diaspora Experience and the Forging of a Nation, BRILL, p. 56, ISBN 0295801492, Ottoman princes, such as the future Ottoman Sultans Selim I (who married Mengli Giray Khan's daughter, Hafsa Hatun...
  4. ^ Sakaoğlu, Necdet [in Turkish] (2008). Bu mülkün kadın sultanları: Vâlide sultanlar, hâtunlar, hasekiler, kadınefendiler, sultanefendiler. Oğlak Yayıncılık. p. 148. ISBN 978-9-753-29623-6. (Her name is given as "Hafsa bint-i Abdü'l-Muin" in Kitâbeler by İ. H. Uzunçarşılı. This shows that she was of non-Turkish origin, and later converted to Islam.)
  5. ^ a b c Atıl, Esin (1987), The Age of Sultan Süleyman the Magnificent, National Gallery of Art, p. 27, ISBN 0810918552, Some historians state that she was the daughter of Mengili Giray Han, the ruler of the Crimean Tatars. Others mention that Ayse, another wife of Selim I, was the Crimean princess and give as Hafsa's father a man named Abdulmumin or Abdulhay, and unknown person - suggesting that she was of slave origin.
  6. ^ Name of girl, daughter of Abdüllah" (Ottoman Turkish: Name bin Abdüllah) was the typical Ottoman term for slave girls who converted to Islam. Therefore Abdüllah would not be the real name of Hafsa's father, but an indication of her origins as a Christian slave
  7. ^ Pietro Bragadin, Venetian Republic's ambassador in the early years of Suleiman the Magnificent's reign notes "a very beautiful woman of 48, for whom the sultan bears great reverence and love..." Peirce, Leslie (1993). The Imperial Harem : Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire. Oxford University Press. p. 62. ISBN 0-19-508677-5.
  8. ^ Alan Fisher (1993). "The Life and Family of Suleyman I". In İnalcık, Halil; Kafadar, Cemal (eds.). Süleymân The Second [i.e. the First] and his time. Isis Press. That she was a Tatar, a daughter of the Crimean Khan Mengli Giray, was a story apparently begun by Jovius, repeated by other western sources, and taken up by Merriman in his biography of Suleyman
  9. ^ Encyclopedia of Islam vol. IX (1997), s.v. Suleyman p.833
  10. ^ Kasaba, Resat (2011), A Moveable Empire: Ottoman Nomads, Migrants, and Refugees, University of Washington Press, p. 44, ISBN 978-0295801490, The last marriage between an Ottoman sultan and a member of a neighboring Muslim royal family was the one between Selim I and Hafsa Sultan, the daughter of the Crimean ruler Mengli Giray Khan.
  11. ^ Zaytsev, Ilya (2006), "The Structure of the Giray Dynasty (15th-16th centuries): Matrimonial and Kinship Relations of the Crimean Khans", Kinship in the Altaic World: Proceedings of the 48th Permanent International Altaistic Conference, Moscow 10-15 July 2005, Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, p. 341, ISBN 3447054166, Only two instances concerning the Ottomans are noted. Ayshe (daughter of Mengli-Giray I) was married to şehzade and governor of Kefe Mehmed, and to his brother Selim I later on (917/1511). Sultan Selim's daughter was married to Saadet-Giray.
  12. ^
    • Alan Fisher (1993). "The Life and Family of Süleymân I". In İnalcık, Halil; Cemal Kafadar (eds.). Süleymân The Second [i.e. the First] and His Time. Istanbul: Isis Press. p. 9. ISBN 975-428-052-5.
    • Emecen, Feridun (2010). "Süleyman I". İslâm Ansiklopedisi. Vol. 38. İslâm Araştırmaları Merkezi. pp. 62–74. Information indicating that she was the daughter of the Crimean Khan or was related to the family of Dulkadıroğlu is incorrect.
    • Peirce, Leslie (1993). The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire. Oxford University Press. pp. 40. ISBN 0-19-508677-5.
  13. ^ Natalia von Anrep (2016). Mahidevran. Lychatz Verlag.
  14. ^ Iyigun, Murat (2015). War, Peace & Prosperity in the Name of God: The Ottoman Role in Europe's Socioeconomic Evolution. University of Chicago Press. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-226-23228-7.
  15. ^ Tang, Li; Winkler, Dietmar W. (2013). From the Oxus River to the Chinese Shores: Studies on East Syriac Christianity in China and Central Asia. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 308. ISBN 978-3-643-90329-7.
  16. ^ Natalia von Anrep (2016). Mahidevran. Lychatz Verlag.
  17. ^ Peirce, Leslie P. (1993). The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-508677-5.
  18. ^ Amy Singer (2002). Constructing Ottoman beneficence: An imperial soup kitchen in Jerusalem. State University of New York Press. p. 90. ISBN 0-7914-5351-0.
  19. ^ Minna Rozen: A History of the Jewish Community in Istanbul, The Formative Years, 1453 – 1566 (2002).
  20. ^ Leslie Peirce, The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire, Oxford University Press, 1993, ISBN 0-19-508677-5
  21. ^ Leslie Peirce, The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire, Oxford University Press, 1993, ISBN 0-19-508677-5

External links

  • "Hafsa Sultan Complex". Archnet. 2005.
Ottoman royalty
Preceded byas Valide Hatun Valide Sultan
30 September 1520 – 19 March 1534
Succeeded by

hafsa, sultan, confused, with, ayşe, hatun, wife, selim, hafsa, hatun, this, ottoman, turkish, style, name, given, name, hafsa, title, sultan, there, family, name, ottoman, turkish, حفصه, سلطان, young, lioness, 1475, before, march, 1534, also, called, ayşe, co. Not to be confused with Ayse Hatun wife of Selim I or Hafsa Hatun In this Ottoman Turkish style name the given name is Hafsa the title is Sultan and there is no family name Hafsa Sultan Ottoman Turkish حفصه سلطان Young lioness c 1475 or before 19 March 1534 also called Ayse Hafsa Sultan was a concubine of Selim I and the first Valide Sultan of the Ottoman Empire as the mother of Suleiman the Magnificent During the period between her son s enthronement in 1520 and her death in 1534 she was one of the most influential persons in the Ottoman Empire 7 Hafsa SultanBust in Manisa TurkeyValide sultan of the Ottoman EmpireTenure30 September 1520 19 March 1534Bornc 1475 or before 1 Died19 March 1534 aged c 58 59 2 Istanbul Ottoman EmpireBurialYavuz Selim Mosque Fatih IstanbulSpouseSelim IIssueFatma SultanBeyhan Sultan disputedHafize Sultan disputedHatice Sultan Suleiman the MagnificentNamesAyse Hafsa SultanOttoman Turkish حفصه سلطانHouseHouse of Osman marriageFatherDisputed Menli I Giray denied by moder historical 3 Abd ul Muin Abdullah 4 5 or Abdulhay 5 6 ReligionSunni Islam Contents 1 Origins 2 Life 3 Death 4 Family 5 Representations in popular culture 6 References 7 External linksOrigins EditThe traditional view holding that Hafsa Sultan was the daughter of Menli I Giray 1445 1515 the khan of the Crimean Tatars for much of the period between 1466 and 1515 resting on seventeenth century western authors accounts has been challenged in favor of a Christian slave origin based on Ottoman documentary evidence 8 9 Only few historians still follow the traditional view including Brian Glyn Williams 3 Resat Kasaba mentions the marriage between Selim I and Hafsa Sultan as the last marriage between an Ottoman sultan and a member of a neighboring Muslim royal family 10 Esin Atil however states that whilst some historians state that she was the daughter of Giray others have mentioned that the Crimean princess named Ayse was another one of Selim I s wives and that Hafsa may have been of slave origin 5 Ilya Zaytsev claims that Ayshe daughter of Mengli Giray I first married Sehzade Mehmed the governor of Kefe and that she later married his brother Selim I consequently her marriage into the Ottoman dynasty was one of two noted instances of wedlock between the Girays and the Ottomans the other being the marriage of Selim I s daughter to Saadet Giray 11 Alan W Fisher Leslie Peirce and Feridun Emecen all see Hafsa as of slave origin and not the daughter of the Crimean Khan 12 13 Some Turkish historians believe that she was Turkish 14 Other historians believe that she might have been a Polish Jew 15 or Albanian 16 page needed need quotation to verify Life Edit The kulliye built on the orders of Hafsa Sultan in Manisa It is part of the adjoining Sultan Mosque Having resided in the city of Manisa in western Turkey with her son Suleiman who administered the surrounding region between 1513 and 1520 the town functioned as one of the traditional residences for Ottoman crown princes veliaht sehzade in apprenticeship for future power Hafsa Sultan initiated the Manisa s Mesir Festival a local tradition continued today She also had a large complex built in the city consisting of a mosque known as the Sultan Mosque a primary school a college and a hospice As mother of new sultan Suleyman in the 1521 she was also the first Ottoman imperial women who held title sultan after her given name replacing title hatun This usage reflected the Ottoman conception of sovereign power as family prerogative 17 page needed Consequently the title valide hatun title for living mother of the reigning Ottoman sultan before 16th century also turned into valide sultan making Hafsa the first valide sultan Her era signalled the shifting status of the sultan s mother and her increased share in power 18 She was also the first harem woman confirmed to have a kira Strongilah 19 Death Edit The entrance to the turbe of Hafsa Sultan Hafsa Sultan died in March 1534 and was buried near her husband in a mausoleum behind the qiblah wall of Yavuz Selim Mosque in Fatih Istanbul The mausoleum was largely destroyed in an earthquake in 1884 a reconstruction effort started in the 1900s decade having been left discontinued and her tomb today is much simpler than it was built originally Family EditFrom Selim Hafsa had at least three children 20 Suleiman the Magnificent 1494 Trabzon 1566 Constantinople 10th Sultan of the Ottoman Empire after his father Hatice Sultan 1493 Trabzon after 1543 Constantinople She married twice she had five sons and at least three daughters Fatma Sultan 1492 or before Trabzon 1573 Constantinople She married at least twice It is uncertain whether she had children To these there are two other daughters whose motherhood of Hafsa is however discussed 21 Hafize Sultan 1492 or before Trabzon 10 July 1538 Constantinople She married twice she had one son Beyhan Sultan 1492 or before Trabzon 1559 Skopje She married at least once she had at least a daughter Representations in popular culture EditIn the historical TV series The Magnificent Century she is played by the Turkish actress Nebahat Cehre Here for plot reasons she is represented as the mother of Sah Sultan one of other Selim s daughters by other concubine rather than Hafize Sultan References Edit Sakaoglu Necdet in Turkish 2008 Bu mulkun kadin sultanlari Valide sultanlar hatunlar hasekiler kadinefendiler sultanefendiler Oglak Yayincilik p 199 ISBN 978 9 753 29623 6 Peirce Leslie P 1993 The Imperial Harem Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire Oxford University Press p 121 ISBN 0 19 508677 5 a b Glyn Williams Brian 2001 The Crimean Tatars The Diaspora Experience and the Forging of a Nation BRILL p 56 ISBN 0295801492 Ottoman princes such as the future Ottoman Sultans Selim I who married Mengli Giray Khan s daughter Hafsa Hatun Sakaoglu Necdet in Turkish 2008 Bu mulkun kadin sultanlari Valide sultanlar hatunlar hasekiler kadinefendiler sultanefendiler Oglak Yayincilik p 148 ISBN 978 9 753 29623 6 Her name is given as Hafsa bint i Abdu l Muin in Kitabeler by I H Uzuncarsili This shows that she was of non Turkish origin and later converted to Islam a b c Atil Esin 1987 The Age of Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent National Gallery of Art p 27 ISBN 0810918552 Some historians state that she was the daughter of Mengili Giray Han the ruler of the Crimean Tatars Others mention that Ayse another wife of Selim I was the Crimean princess and give as Hafsa s father a man named Abdulmumin or Abdulhay and unknown person suggesting that she was of slave origin Name of girl daughter of Abdullah Ottoman Turkish Name bin Abdullah was the typical Ottoman term for slave girls who converted to Islam Therefore Abdullah would not be the real name of Hafsa s father but an indication of her origins as a Christian slave Pietro Bragadin Venetian Republic s ambassador in the early years of Suleiman the Magnificent s reign notes a very beautiful woman of 48 for whom the sultan bears great reverence and love Peirce Leslie 1993 The Imperial Harem Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire Oxford University Press p 62 ISBN 0 19 508677 5 Alan Fisher 1993 The Life and Family of Suleyman I In Inalcik Halil Kafadar Cemal eds Suleyman The Second i e the First and his time Isis Press That she was a Tatar a daughter of the Crimean Khan Mengli Giray was a story apparently begun by Jovius repeated by other western sources and taken up by Merriman in his biography of Suleyman Encyclopedia of Islam vol IX 1997 s v Suleyman p 833 Kasaba Resat 2011 A Moveable Empire Ottoman Nomads Migrants and Refugees University of Washington Press p 44 ISBN 978 0295801490 The last marriage between an Ottoman sultan and a member of a neighboring Muslim royal family was the one between Selim I and Hafsa Sultan the daughter of the Crimean ruler Mengli Giray Khan Zaytsev Ilya 2006 The Structure of the Giray Dynasty 15th 16th centuries Matrimonial and Kinship Relations of the Crimean Khans Kinship in the Altaic World Proceedings of the 48th Permanent International Altaistic Conference Moscow 10 15 July 2005 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 341 ISBN 3447054166 Only two instances concerning the Ottomans are noted Ayshe daughter of Mengli Giray I was married to sehzade and governor of Kefe Mehmed and to his brother Selim I later on 917 1511 Sultan Selim s daughter was married to Saadet Giray Alan Fisher 1993 The Life and Family of Suleyman I In Inalcik Halil Cemal Kafadar eds Suleyman The Second i e the First and His Time Istanbul Isis Press p 9 ISBN 975 428 052 5 Emecen Feridun 2010 Suleyman I Islam Ansiklopedisi Vol 38 Islam Arastirmalari Merkezi pp 62 74 Information indicating that she was the daughter of the Crimean Khan or was related to the family of Dulkadiroglu is incorrect Peirce Leslie 1993 The Imperial Harem Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire Oxford University Press pp 40 ISBN 0 19 508677 5 Natalia von Anrep 2016 Mahidevran Lychatz Verlag Iyigun Murat 2015 War Peace amp Prosperity in the Name of God The Ottoman Role in Europe s Socioeconomic Evolution University of Chicago Press p 119 ISBN 978 0 226 23228 7 Tang Li Winkler Dietmar W 2013 From the Oxus River to the Chinese Shores Studies on East Syriac Christianity in China and Central Asia LIT Verlag Munster p 308 ISBN 978 3 643 90329 7 Natalia von Anrep 2016 Mahidevran Lychatz Verlag Peirce Leslie P 1993 The Imperial Harem Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 508677 5 Amy Singer 2002 Constructing Ottoman beneficence An imperial soup kitchen in Jerusalem State University of New York Press p 90 ISBN 0 7914 5351 0 Minna Rozen A History of the Jewish Community in Istanbul The Formative Years 1453 1566 2002 Leslie Peirce The Imperial Harem Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire Oxford University Press 1993 ISBN 0 19 508677 5 Leslie Peirce The Imperial Harem Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire Oxford University Press 1993 ISBN 0 19 508677 5External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hafsa Sultan Hafsa Sultan Complex Archnet 2005 Ottoman royaltyPreceded byGulbahar Hatunas Valide Hatun Valide Sultan30 September 1520 19 March 1534 Succeeded byNurbanu Sultan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hafsa Sultan amp oldid 1134994182, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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