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Harem

Harem (Arabic: حَرِيمٌ ḥarīm, "a sacred inviolable place; harem; female members of the family")[1][2] refers to domestic spaces that are reserved for the women of the house in a Muslim family.[3][4][5] A harem may house a man's wife or wives, their pre-pubescent male children, unmarried daughters, female domestic servants, and other unmarried female relatives. In harems of the past, slave concubines were also housed in the harem. In former times some harems were guarded by eunuchs who were allowed inside. The structure of the harem and the extent of monogamy or polygamy has varied depending on the family's personalities, socio-economic status, and local customs.[3] Similar institutions have been common in other Mediterranean and Middle Eastern civilizations, especially among royal and upper-class families,[4] and the term is sometimes used in other contexts.[6] In traditional Persian residential architecture the women's quarters were known as andaruni (Persian: اندرونی; meaning inside), and in the Indian subcontinent as zenana (Urdu: زنانہ).

Ladies of Kabul (1848 lithograph, by James Rattray) showing unveiling in zenana areas

Although the institution has experienced a sharp decline in the modern era due to a rise in education and economic opportunities for women, as well as the influence of Western culture, the seclusion of women is still practiced in some parts of the world, such as rural Afghanistan and conservative states of the Persian Gulf.[4][7]

In the West, the harem, often depicted as a hidden world of sexual subjugation where numerous women lounged in suggestive poses, has influenced many paintings, stage productions, films and literary works.[3][4] Some earlier European Renaissance paintings dating to the 16th century portray the women of the Ottoman harem as individuals of status and political significance.[8] In many periods of Islamic history, women in the harem exercised various degrees of political power,[9] such as the Sultanate of Women in the Ottoman Empire.

Terminology Edit

The word has been recorded in the English language since the early 17th century. It comes from the Arabic ḥarīm, which can mean "a sacred inviolable place", "harem" or "female members of the family". In English the term harem can mean also "the wives (or concubines) of a polygamous man." The triliteral Ḥ-R-M appears in other terms related to the notion of interdiction such as haram (forbidden), mahram (unmarriageable relative), ihram (a pilgrim's state of ritual consecration during the Hajj) and al-Ḥaram al-Šarīf ("the noble sanctuary", which can refer to the Temple Mount or the sanctuary of Mecca).[1]

In the Ottoman Turkish language, the harem, i.e., the part of the house reserved for women was called haremlik, while the space open for men was known as selamlık.[10]

The practice of female seclusion is not exclusive to Islam, but the English word harem usually denotes the domestic space reserved for women in Muslim households.[11][12] Some scholars have used the term to refer to polygynous royal households throughout history.[13]

The ideal of seclusion Edit

 
New entrant to a prince's harem. Jaipur, late 18 century, National Museum, New Delhi

Leila Ahmed describes the ideal of seclusion as "a man's right to keep his women concealed—invisible to other men." Ahmed identifies the practice of seclusion as a social ideal and one of the major factors that shaped the lives of women in the Mediterranean Middle East. [14] For example, contemporary sources from the Byzantine Empire describe the social norms that governed women's lives. Women were not supposed to be seen in public. They were guarded by eunuchs and could only leave the home "veiled and suitably chaperoned." Some of these customs were borrowed from the Persians, but Greek society also influenced the development of patriarchal tradition.[15]

The ideal of seclusion was not fully realized as social reality. This was in part because working-class women often held jobs that required interaction with men.[11] In the Byzantine Empire, the very ideal of gender segregation created economic opportunities for women as midwives, doctors, bath attendants and artisans since it was considered inappropriate for men to attend to women's needs. At times women lent and invested money, and engaged in other commercial activities.[16] Historical records shows that the women of 14th-century Mamluk Cairo freely visited public events alongside men, despite objections of religious scholars.[11]

Female seclusion has historically signaled social and economic prestige.[11] Eventually, the norms of female seclusion spread beyond the elites, but the practice remained characteristic of upper and middle classes, for whom the financial ability to allow one's wife to remain at home was a mark of high status.[7][11] In some regions, such as the Arabian peninsula, seclusion of women was practiced by poorer families at the cost of great hardship, but it was generally economically unrealistic for the lower classes.[7]

Where historical evidence is available, it indicates that the harem was much more likely to be monogamous. For example, in late Ottoman Istanbul, only 2.29 percent of married men were polygynous, with the average number of wives being 2.08. In some regions, like Sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, prevalence of women in agricultural work leads to wider practice of polygamy but makes seclusion impractical. In contrast, in Eurasian and North African rural communities that rely on male-dominated plough farming, seclusion is economically possible but polygyny is undesirable. This indicates that the fundamental characteristic of the harem is seclusion of women rather than polygyny.[17]

Pre-Islamic background Edit

The idea of the harem or seclusion of women did not originate with Muhammad or Islam.[9] The practice of secluding women was common to many Ancient Near East communities, especially where polygamy was permitted.[18] In pre-Islamic Assyria and Persia, most royal courts had a harem, where the ruler's wives and concubines lived with female attendants, and eunuchs.[9] Encyclopædia Iranica uses the term harem to describe the practices of the ancient Near East.[19]

Ancient Egypt Edit

There has been a modern trend to refer to the women's quarters of the Pharaoh's palace in Ancient Egypt as a harem.[20]

The popular assumption that Pharaonic Egypt had a harem is however an anachronism; while the women and children of the pharaoh, including his mother, wives, and children, had their own living quarters with its own administration in the Palace of the Pharaoh, the royal women did not live isolated from contact with men or in seclusion from the rest of the court in the way associated with the term "harem".[20] The custom of referring to the women's quarters of the pharaoh's palace as a "harem" is therefore apocryphal, and has been used because of incorrect assumptions that Ancient Egypt was similar to later Islamic harem culture.[20]

Assyria Edit

The kings of Ancient Assyria are known to have had a harem regulated by royal edicts, in which the women lived in seclusion guarded by slave eunuchs.[21]

A number of regulations were designed to prevent disputes among the women from developing into political intrigues.[19] The women were guarded by the eunuchs who also prevented their disputes from developing into political plots, banned from giving gifts to their servants (as such gifts could be used as bribes) and not allowed any visitors who had not been examined and approved by officials.[21] When the king traveled, his harem traveled with him, strictly supervised so as not breaking regulations even under transport.[21]

In the 7th century BC, Assyria was conquered by the Median Empire, which appears to have adopted the harem custom, from whom it was in turn taken over by the Achaemenid Empire.

Greece and Byzantium Edit

Female seclusion and a special part of the house reserved for women were common among the elites of ancient Greece, where it was known as the gynaeceum.[22][23] However, while gender segregation was the official ideal in Classical Athens, it is debated how much of this ideal was actually enforced, and it is known that even upper-class women appeared in public and were able to come in contact with men on at least religious occasions.[24]

These traditional Greek ideals were revived as an ideal for women in the Byzantine Empire (in which Greek culture eventually became dominant), though the rigid ideal norms of seclusion expressed in Byzantine literature did not necessarily reflect actual practice.[22][15] The Byzantine Emperors were Greek Orthodox and did not have several wives - or official concubines - secluded in a harem. When Greek culture started to replace the Roman in the Byzantine Empire in the 6th century, it came to be seen as modest for especially upper-class women to keep to a special women's quarters (gynaikonitis), and until the 12th century, men and women are known to have participated in gender-segregated banquets at the Imperial Court; however Imperial women still appeared in public and did not live in seclusion, and the idealized gender segregation was never fully enforced.[25]

 
Khosrow and Shirin (Bukhara, 1648)

The Median and Achaemenid Empires Edit

There is no evidence of among early Iranians for harem practices, that is, to take large numbers of wives or concubines and keeping them in seclusion.[citation needed] However, Iranian dynasties are said to have adopted harem practices after their conquests in the Middle East, where such practices were used in some cultures such as Assyria (the Median Empire conquered Assyria in the 7th-century BC, and Media transformed into the Achaemenid Empire).[19] According to Greek sources, the nobility of the Medes kept no less than five wives, who were watched over by eunuchs.[19]

Greek historians have reported about the harems of the Achaemenid Empire. Herodotus reported that each Persian royal or aristocratic man had several wives and concubines, who came to the husband on a well-regulated turn-basis.[26] and had sole control over their children until these were five years old.[27]

The Old Persian word for the harem is not attested, but it can be reconstructed as xšapā.stāna (lit. night station or place where one spends the night). The royal household was controlled by the chief wife and queen, who as a rule was the daughter of a Persian prince and the mother of the heir to the throne,[citation needed] and who was subject only to the king, with her own living quarter, revenue, estates and staff,[28] which included eunuchs and concubines.[29] The second rank under the queen consisted of the legal secondary wives, with the title bānūka (“Lady”); the third rank consisted of unmarried princesses as well as the married princesses who lived with their own family, with the title duxçī (daughter),[30] The fourth group of women in the harem were the royal slave concubines,[31] who were bought in slave markets,[32] received as a gifts [33] or tribute [34] or taken as prisoners of war.[35] The concubines were trained to entertain the king and his guests as musicians, dancers and singers. The harem of Darius III reportedly consisted of his mother, queen-wife, children, over 300 concubines and nearly 500 household servants.[19]

However, it is a matter of debate if the Achaemenid court had a full harem culture, as women do not appear to have been fully secluded in the harem. The fact that women lived in separate quarters at the Royal Palace does not necessarily mean that they were secluded from contact with men, and despite the (possibly biased) Greek reports, there is no archeological evidence supporting the existence of a harem, or the seclusion of women from contact with men, at the Achaemenid court.[36]

Royal and aristocratic Achaemenid women were given an education in subjects which did not appear compatible with seclusion, such as horsemanship and archery.[37][19] It does not appear that royal and aristocratic women lived in seclusion from men since it is known that they appeared in public and traveled with their husbands,[38] participated in hunting [39] and in feasts:[40] at least the chief wife of a royal or aristocratic man did not live in seclusion, as it is clearly stated that wives customarily accompanied their husbands to dinner banquets, although they left the banquet when the “women entertainers” of the harem came in and the men began "merrymaking".[41]

Little is known about the alleged harems of the Parthians. Parthian royal men reportedly had several wives and kept them fairly secluded from all men but relatives and eunuchs.[42] According to Roman sources, Parthian kings had harems full of female slaves and hetairas secluded from contact with men, and royal women were not allowed to participate in the royal banquets.[43] Also aristocratic Parthian men appear to have had harems, as Roman sources report of rich men travelling with hundreds of guarded concubines.[44] However, the Roman reports about Parthian harems seem to mirror the traditional Greek reports about the Achaemenid harems, and they similarly are biased, and cannot be verified by archeological evidence.[36]

Sasanian Empire Edit

The information about the Sasanian harem reveals a picture that closely mirrors the alleged Achaemenid customs.

In the Sassanian Empire, Roman reports that it was common for men to have multiple wives. The hierarchy of the Sassanian harem is not clear. The Sassanian kings had one chief consort, who was the mother of the heir to the throne, as well as several wives of lower rank and concubines, all of whom accompanied him on travels, even on campaigns.[45] Five titles are attested for royal women: “royal princess” (duxšy, duxt); “Lady” (bānūg); “Queen” (bānbišn); “Queen of the Empire” ([Ērān]šahr bānbišn) and “Queen of Queens” (bānbišnān bānbišn).[19] The rank of these titles has been the matter of debate and it appears that their status varied depending on circumstances and that the highest female rank was not necessarily borne by the chief wife, but could be held by a daughter or a sister.[19] The Sasanian harem was supervised by eunuchs, and also had female singers and musicians.[19]

However, while the Sasanian kings had harems, women in the Sassanid Empire in general did not live in seclusion and elaborate harems were detested and appear to have been exceptions to the rule, which is illustrated by the fact that big harems when they occurred, were abhorred by the public.[19]

According to Sasanian legend, of all the Persian kings, Khosrow II was the most extravagant in his hedonism. He searched his realm to find the most beautiful girls, and it was rumored that about 3,000 of them were kept in his harem.[19] This practice was widely condemned by the public, who abhorred of him keeping those girls in seclusion and denying them the benefit of marriage and progeny, and it was counted as the fourth of the eight crimes for which he was later tried and executed.[19] Khosrow himself claimed that he sent his favorite wife Shirin every year to offer them a possibility of leaving his harem with a dowry for marriage, but that their luxurious lifestyle always prompted them to refuse his offer.[19]

South Asia Edit

South Asian traditions of female seclusion, called purdah, may have been influenced by Islamic customs.[46]

Ashoka, the emperor of the Maurya Empire in India, kept a harem of around 500 women, all of whom were under strict rules of seclusion and etiquette.[47]

In Islamic cultures Edit

Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates Edit

In contrast to the earlier era of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and the Rashidun Caliphate, women in Umayyad and Abbasid society were absent from all arenas of the community's central affairs.[48] While it was very common for early Muslim women to play an active role in community life, and not unseen for women to lead men into battle and even start rebellions as demonstrated in the Hadith literature, by the time of the Abbasid Caliphate, women were ideally kept in seclusion.

The practice of gender segregation in Islam was influenced by an interplay of religion, customs and politics.[7][11]The harem system first became fully institutionalized in the Islamic world under the Abbasid caliphate.[7] Seclusion of women was established in various communities of the Mediterranean, Mesopotamia, and Persia before the advent of Islam,[7] and some scholars believe that Muslims adopted the custom from the Byzantine Empire and Persia, retrospectively interpreting the Quran to justify it.[49] Although the term harem does not denote women's quarters in the Quran, a number of Quranic verses discussing modesty and seclusion were held up by Quranic commentators as religious rationale for the separation of women from men, including the so-called hijab verse (33:53).[7][50] In modern usage hijab colloquially refers to the religious attire worn by Muslim women, but in this verse, it meant "veil" or "curtain" that physically separates female from male space.[11][51] Although classical commentators agreed that the verse spoke about a curtain separating the living quarters of Muhammad's wives from visitors to his house, they usually viewed this practice as providing a model for all Muslim women.[7][17]

The growing seclusion of women were illustrated by the power struggle between the Caliph Al-Hadi and his mother Al-Khayzuran, who refused to live in seclusion but instead challenged the power of the Caliph by giving her own audiences to male supplicants and officials and thus mixing with men.[52] Her son considered this improper, and he publicly addressed the issue of his mothers public life by assembling his generals and asked them:

'Who is the better among us, you or me?' asked Caliph al-Hadi of his audience.
'Obviously you are the better, Commander of the Faithful,' the assembly replied.
'And whose mother is the better, mine or yours?' continued the caliph.
'Your mother is the better, Commander of the Faithful.'
'Who among you', continued al-Hadi, 'would like to have men spreading news about your mother?'
'No one likes to have his mother talked about,' responded those present.
'Then why do men go to my mother to speak to her?'[52]

Conquests had brought enormous wealth and large numbers of slaves to the Muslim elite. The majority of the slaves were women and children,[53] many of whom had been dependents or harem-members of the defeated Sassanian upper classes.[54] In the wake of the conquests an elite man could potentially own a thousand slaves, and ordinary soldiers could have ten people serving them.[53]

Nabia Abbott, preeminent historian of elite women of the Abbasid Caliphate, describes the lives of harem women as follows.

The choicest women were imprisoned behind heavy curtains and locked doors, the strings and keys of which were entrusted into the hands of that pitiable creature – the eunuch. As the size of the harem grew, men indulged to satiety. Satiety within the individual harem meant boredom for the one man and neglect for the many women. Under these conditions ... satisfaction by perverse and unnatural means crept into society, particularly in its upper classes.[54]

The marketing of human beings, particularly women, as objects for sexual use meant that elite men owned the vast majority of women they interacted with, and related to them as would masters to slaves.[55] Being a slave meant relative lack of autonomy, and belonging to a harem caused a wife and her children to have little insurance of stability and continued support due to the volatile politics of harem life.

Elite men expressed in literature the horror they felt for the humiliation and degradation of their daughters and female relatives. For example, the verses addressed to Hasan ibn al-Firat on the death of his daughter read:

To Abu Hassan I offer condolences.
At times of disaster and catastrophe
God multiplies rewards for the patient.
To be patient in misery
Is equivalent to giving thanks for a gift.
Among the blessings of God undoubtedly
Is the preservation of sons
And the death of daughters.[56]

Even so, courtesans and princesses produced prestigious and important poetry. Enough survives to give us access to women's historical experiences, and reveals some vivacious and powerful figures, such as the Sufi mystic Raabi'a al-Adwiyya (714–801 CE), the princess and poet 'Ulayya bint al-Mahdi (777–825 CE), and the singing-girls Shāriyah (c. 815–70 CE), Fadl Ashsha'ira (d. 871 CE) and Arib al-Ma'muniyya (797–890 CE).[57][58]

Al-Andalus Edit

The harem system developed in the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates was reproduced by the Islamic realms which developed from them, such as in the Emirates and Caliphates in Muslim Spain, Al-Andalus, which attracted a lot of attention in Europe during the Middle Ages until the Emirate of Granada was conquered in 1492.

The most famous of the Andalusian harems was perhaps the harem of the Caliph of Cordoba. Except for the female relatives of the Caliph, the harem women consisted of his slave concubines. The slaves of the Caliph were often European saqaliba slaves trafficked from Northern or Eastern Europe; while male saqaliba could be given work in a number of tasks such as offices in the kitchen, falconry, mint, textile workshops, the administration or the royal guard (in the case of harem guards, they were castrated), female saqaliba were placed in the harem.[59]

The harem could contain thousands of slave concubines; the harem of Abd al-Rahman I consisted of 6,300 women.[60] They (the saqaliba concubines) were appreciated for their light skin.[61] The concubines (jawaris) were educated in accomplishments to make them attractive and useful for their master, and many became known and respected for their knowledge in a variety of subjects from music to medicine.[61] A jawaris concubine who gave birth to a child attained the status of an umm walad, and a favorite concubine was given great luxury and honorary titles such as Marjan, who gave birth to al-Hakam II, the heir of Abd al-Rahman III, who called her al-sayyida al-kubra (great lady).[62] Concubines were however always slaves subjected to lack of freedom and the will of their master, and Caliph Abd al-Rahman III is known to have executed two concubines for reciting what he saw as inappropriate verses and tortured another concubine with a burning candle when she refused sexual intercourse;[62] the concubines of Caliph Abu Marwan al-Tubni (d. 1065) were reportedly so badly treated that they conspired to murder him, and women of the harem are also known to have been subjected to rape when rivaling factions conquered different palaces.[62] Several concubines are known to have had great influence through their masters or their sons, notably Subh during the Caliphate of Cordoba, and Isabel de Solís during the Emirate of Granada.

Afghanistan Edit

The rulers of Afghanistan customarily had a harem of four official wives as well as a large number of unofficial wives for the sake of tribal marriage diplomacy.[63] They also had a large amount of enslaved women in the royal harem known as kaniz and surati, guarded by the ghulam bacha (eunuchs).[64] Habibullah Khan (r. 1901–1919) famously had at least 44 wives and hundreds of slave women (mostly Hazara) in his harem in the Harem Sara Palace. The women of the royal harem dressed in Western fashion since at least the reign Habibullah Khan but did not show themselves other than completely covered outside of the enclosed area of the royal palace. The royal harem were first abolished by king Amanullah Khan who in 1923 freed all slaves of the royal harem as well as encouraged his wife queen Soraya Tarzi and the other women of the royal family to unveil and live public lives.[64] While the royal women returned to the purdah of the royal complex after the deposition of Amanullah in 1929, it was finally dissolved with the final unveiling of the royal women in 1959.

Crimean Khanate Edit

In the Muslim dynasties of Central Asia, the harem culture did not initially exist, since the customary nomad culture made it impractical. The wives of the rulers of the Golden Horde did not live secluded in a harem but was allowed to show themselves and meet unrelated men,[65] and the system of harem gender segregation was not fully implemented in the Islamic dynasties of Central Asia until they stopped living a nomadic lifestyle, such as in the Crimea.[65]

The household organization of the khans of the Giray dynasty in the Crimean Khanate is described first in the reign of Sahib I Giray, while most court offices were initiated by Sahib I Giray.[66] It is clear that there were separate women's quarters in the court of Sahib I Giray, however complete gender segregation in the form of a harem does not appear to have been introduced until the 1560s.[66]

The Giray court appear to have been organized in the slave household normal in other Muslim dynasties, and many of the officials and courtiers (such as the viziers and equerries) as well as the servants were enslaved, while some were free Muslim noble clients and ulema family members.[66] The servants of the royal harem however were all clearly slaves, particularly the eunuchs, who guarded the harem and who were of Black African origin, imported from Africa via the Ottoman Empire and the Middle East and often trained in the Ottoman Imperial harem.[65]

Inside the harem, the highest positions were that of ana biyim and ulug biyim (ulug hani), which were given to the khan's mother and to the khan's first wife or the eldest Giray princess, respectively.[66] The royal women had their own property and administered their property from the harem through their legal agents, known as vekils, who also acted as their intermediaries with supplicants and petitioners.[66]

The princes and the khans normally married free Muslim daughters of the Circassian vassal begs, and trusted high officials; the khans also customarily practiced levirate marriage.[66] Similar to what was normal in the royal harem of other Islamic dynasties, the khans had four official wives (all with their own separate quarters within the harem), and an unknown number of enslaved concubines.[67] In 1669, the khan reportedly received fifteen Circassian slave virgins as an annual tribute from his subjects in the Caucasus; in the 1720s khan Saadet Giray reportedly owned twenty-seven slave concubines, and in the 1760s khan Qirim Giray owned about forty.[67] But not all slave concubines were Circassians: some royal children are recorded to have been born by slave mothers from Central and Eastern Europe, but the occurrence of European women in the royal harem diminished in the 18th century when the Crimean slave raids to Eastern Europe were suppressed.[67] Some of these women, though all formally concubines, would not have been the khan's concubines in practice but rather acted as the servants of his wives; this was the case in the Royal Ottoman harem as well, which served as the role model of the Giray harem.[67] The Giray princesses were normally married off to poor noblemen and vassals who would be provided with great dowries, which put the princesses in advantage to their husbands and made the husbands loyal to the Girays.[66]

Initially, the royal women did not live in seclusion in the harem; they notably gave their own audiences to men, significantly the ceremonial visit of the Russian ambassador, who presented them with diplomatic gifts, but in 1564 the Russian ambassador was met with the message that such audiences were no longer to be given.[66] The Giray women did continue to play a role in diplomacy, as they were allowed to exchange formal diplomatic correspondence with female rulers and consorts.[66] Ğazı II Giray assigned his wife Han Tokai to act as a mediator and write to tsaritsa Irina Godunova, while he himself wrote to tsar Feodor I, negotiating the return of their son Murad Giray from Moscow in 1593.[66]

There are few examples of politically active and influential women of the Giray harem. Only Nur Sultan, wife of Mengli I Giray, Ayse Sultan, wife of Devlet I Giray (r. 1551–1577) and Emine Sultan Biyim, wife of Mehmed IV Giray (1642–44 and 1654–66), have been historically acknowledged as politically influential.[66]

Khedivate of Egypt Edit

The royal harem during the Khedivate of Egypt (1805-1914) was modelled after Ottoman example, the khedives being the Egyptian vice roys of the Ottoman sultans. Similar to the Ottoman Imperial harem, the harem of the khedive was modelled on a system of polygyny based on slave concubinage, in which each wife or concubine was limited to having one son.[68]

The khedive's harem was composed of between several hundreds to over a thousand enslaved women, supervised by his mother, the walida pasha, and his four official wives (hanim) and recognized concubines (qadin).[68] However, the majority of the slave women served as domestics to his mother and wives and could have servant offices such as the bash qalfa, chief servant slave woman of the walida pasha.[68] The enslaved female servants of the khedive harem were manumitted and married off with a trousseau in strategic marriages to the male slaves (kul or mamluk) who were trained to become officers and civil servants, in order to ensure the fidelity of their husband's to the khedive when they began their military or state official career.[68] A minority of the slave women were selected to become the personal servants (concubines) of the khedive, often selected by his mother: they could become his wives, and would in any case become free as an umm walad (or mustawlada) if they had children with him. The Egyptian elite of bureaucrate families, who emulated the khedive, had similar harem customs, and it was noted that it was common for Egyptian upper-class families to have slave women in their harem, which they manumitted to marry off to male protegees.[68] Muhammad Ali of Egypt reportedly had at least 25 consorts (wives and concubines), and Khedive Ismail fourteen.[68]

This system started to change in 1873, when Tewfik Pasha married Emina Ilhamy as his sole consort, making monogamy the fashionable ideal among the elite, after the throne succession had been changed to primogeniture, which favored monogamy. Around the same time, the Tanzimat reforms abolished the custom of training male slaves to become military men and civil servants and replaced them with free students.[68] The Anglo-Egyptian Convention for the Abolition of Slavery in 1877 officially banned the slave trade to Sudan, followed by the 1884 ban on the import of white women as slaves (the harem slave women were normally Circassian), a ban on the selling on existing slaves as well as the introduction of a law giving slaves the right to apply of manumission.[68] All this gradually diminished the royal harem, though the royal harem as well as the harem of the elite families did still maintain a smaller number of both male eunuchs as well as slave women until at least World War I; Khedive Abbas II of Egypt bought six "white female slaves" for his harem in 1894, and his mother still maintained sixty slaves as late as 1931.[68] The royal harem was finally dissolved when the royal women escaped seclusion and took on a public role in the 1930s.

Morocco Edit

Moulay Ismail, Alaouite sultan of Morocco from 1672 to 1727, had over 500 (enslaved) concubines.[69] He is said to have fathered a total of 525 sons and 342 daughters by 1703 and achieved a 700th son in 1721.[70]

Many of his concubines are only fragmentary documented. As concubines, they were slave captives, sometimes from Europe. One of them, an Irishwoman by the name Mrs. Shaw, was brought to his harem after having been enslaved and was made to convert to Islam when the Sultan wished to have intercourse with her, but was manumitted and married off to a Spanish convert when the Sultan grew tired of her; the Spanish convert being very poor, she was described by contemporary witnesses as reduced to beggary.[71][72] Other slave concubines became favorites and as such were allowed some influence, such as an Englishwoman called Lalla Balqis.[71] Another favorite was a Spanish captive renamed Al-Darah, mother to Moulay Ismail's once favorite son that he himself educated: Moulay Mohammed al-Alim; and to Moulay Sharif. Around 1702, Al-Darah tragically died strangled by Moulay Ismail whom Lalla Aisha had made believe she had betrayed him.[73]

According to the writings of the French diplomat Dominique Busnot, Moulay Ismail had at least 500 concubines and even more children. A total of 868 children (525 sons and 343 daughters) is recorded in 1703, with his seven hundredth son being born shortly after his death in 1727, by which time he had well over a thousand children.[74][75] The final total is uncertain: the Guinness Book of Records claims 1042,[76] while Elisabeth Oberzaucher and Karl Grammer of the University of Vienna put the total at 1171.[77] This is widely considered among the largest number of children of any human in history.

Mughal Empire Edit

 
Jahangir and Prince Khurram with Nur Jahan, c. 1624. This scene is probably set in the Aram Bagh garden, which the empress Nur Jahan, a great patron of gardens, had re-modeled in 1621.

The king's wives, concubines, dancing girls and slaves were not the only women of the Mughal harem. Many others, including the king's mother, lived in the harem. Aunts, grandmothers, sisters, daughters and other female relatives of the king all lived in the harem. Male children also lived in the harem until they grew up.[citation needed] Within the precincts of the harem were markets, bazaars, laundries, kitchens, playgrounds, schools and baths. The harem had a hierarchy, its chief authorities being the wives and female relatives of the emperor and below them were the concubines.[78]

Urdubegis were the class of women assigned to protect the emperor and inhabitants of the zenana. Because the women of the Mughal court lived sequestered under purdah, the administration of their living quarters was run entirely by women.[79] The division of the administrative tasks was dictated largely by the vision of Akbar, who organized his zenana of over 5,000 noble women and servants.[80] The women tasked with the protection of the zenana were commonly of Habshi, Tatar, Turk and Kashmiri origin. Kashmiri women were selected because they did not observe purdah. Many of the women were purchased as slaves and trained for their positions.[81]

The women of the Mughal harem could exercise enormous political power. Nur Jahan, chief consort of Jahangir, was the most powerful and influential woman at court during a period when the Mughal Empire was at the peak of its power and glory. More decisive and proactive than her husband, she is considered by historians to have been the real power behind the throne for more than fifteen years. Nur Jahan was granted certain honours and privileges which were never enjoyed by any Mughal empress before or after. Nur Jahan was the only Mughal empress to have coinage struck in her name.[82] She was often present when the Emperor held court, and even held court independently when the Emperor was unwell. She was given charge of his imperial seal, implying that her perusal and consent were necessary before any document or order received legal validity. The Emperor sought her views on most matters before issuing orders. The only other Mughal empress to command such devotion from her husband was Nur Jahan's niece Mumtaz Mahal, for whom Shah Jahan built the Taj Mahal as a mausoleum. However, Mumtaz took no interest in affairs of state and Nur Jahan is therefore unique in the annals of the Mughal Empire for the political influence she wielded.

Ottoman Empire Edit

 
Mihrimah Sultan, daughter of Suleiman the Magnificent

The Imperial Harem of the Ottoman sultan, which was also called seraglio in the West, was part of Topkapı Palace. It also housed the valide sultan, as well as the sultan's daughters and other female relatives. Eunuchs and servant girls were also part of the harem. During the later periods, the sons of the sultan lived in the Harem until they were 12 years old.[83]It is being more commonly acknowledged today that the purpose of harems during the Ottoman Empire was for the upbringing of the future wives of upper-class and royal men. These women would be educated so that they were able to appear in public as a wife.[84] In general, however, the separation of men's and women's quarters was never practiced among the urban poor in large cities such as Constantinople, and by the 1920s and 1930s, it had become a thing of the past in middle and upper-class homes.[85]

Some women of Ottoman harem, especially wives, mothers and sisters of sultans, played very important political roles in Ottoman history, and during the period of the Sultanate of Women, it was common for foreign visitors and ambassadors to claim that the Empire was, de facto ruled by the women in the Imperial Harem.[86] Hürrem Sultan (wife of Suleiman the Magnificent, mother of Selim II), was one of the most powerful women in Ottoman history and wielded vast political power. The title of Haseki Sultan, was created for her and was used by her successors.

Kösem Sultan was one of the most powerful women in Ottoman history.[87] Kösem Sultan achieved power and influenced the politics of the Ottoman Empire when she became Haseki Sultan as favourite consort and later legal wife of Ottoman Sultan Ahmed I (r. 1603–1617) and valide sultan[88] as mother of Murad IV (r. 1623–1640) and Ibrahim (r. 1640–1648), and grandmother of Mehmed IV (r. 1648–1687).

Kösem's son, Sultan Ibrahim the Mad, Ottoman ruler from 1640 to 1648, is said to have drowned 280 concubines of his harem in the Bosphorus.[89][90] At least one of his concubines, Turhan Sultan, a Rus' girl (from the area around modern Ukraine) who came into the Ottoman Empire as a slave sold by Nogai slavers, survived his reign.

Safavid Empire Edit

The royal harem played an important role in the history of Safavid Persia. The Safavid harem consisted of mothers, wives, slave concubines and female relatives, and was staffed with female slaves and with eunuchs who acted as their guards and channel to the rest of the world.[91] Shah Sultan Hossain's (r. 1694–1722) court has been estimated to include five thousand slaves; male and female, black and white, of which one hundred were black eunuchs.[92]

The monarchs of the Safavid dynasty preferred to procreate through slave concubines, which would neutralize potential ambitions from relatives and other inlaws and protect patrimony.[91] The slave concubines (and later mothers) of the Shah's mainly consisted of enslaved Circassian, Georgian and Armenian women, captured as war booty, bought at the slave market or received as gifts from local potentates.[91] The slave concubines were sometimes forced to convert to shia Islam upon entering the harem, and referred to as kaniz.[93][94] In contrast to the common custom in Islamic courts to allow only non-Muslim women to become harem concubines, the Safavid harem also contained Muslim concubines, as some free Persian Muslim daughters were gifted by their families or taken by the royal household to the harem as concubines.[95]

The enslaved harem women could achieve great influence, but there are also examples of the opposite: Shah Abbas II (r. 1642–1666) burned three of his slave-wives alive because they refused to drink with him,[96] as well as another wife for lying about her menstruation period,[97] and Shah Safi (r. 1629–1642) stabbed his wife to death for disobedience.[96]

Slave eunuchs performed various tasks in many levels of the harem as well as the general court. Eunuchs had offices in the general court, such as in the royal treasury and as the tutors and adoptive fathers of non-castrated slaves selected to be slave soldiers (ghilman), as well as inside the harem, and served as a channel between the secluded harem women and the outside court and world, which gave them a potentially powerful role at court.[91]

In the early Safavid period, young princes were placed in the care of a lala (high-ranking Qizilbash chief who acted as a guardian) and eventually given charge of important governorates.[98] Although this system had the danger of encouraging regional rebellions against the shah, it gave the princes education and training which prepared them for dynastic succession.[98] This policy was changed by Shah Abbas I (1571-1629), who "largely banished" the princes to the harem, where their social interactions were limited to the ladies of the harem and eunuchs.[99] This deprived them of administrative and military training as well as experience of dealing with the aristocracy of the realm, which, together with the princes' indulgent upbringing, made them not only unprepared to carry out royal responsibilities, but often also uninterested in doing so.[99] The confinement of royal princes to the harem was an important factor contributing to the decline of the Safavid dynasty.[98][100]

 
Suleiman I and his courtiers (1670)

The administration of the royal harem constituted an independent branch of the court, staffed mainly by eunuchs.[101] These were initially black eunuchs, but white eunuchs from Georgia also began to be employed from the time of Abbas I.[101]

The mothers of rival princes together with eunuchs engaged in palace intrigues in an attempt to place their candidate on the throne.[98] From the middle of the sixteenth century, rivalries between Georgian and Circassian women in the royal harem gave rise to dynastic struggles of an ethnic nature previously unknown at the court.[102] When Shah Abbas II died in 1666, palace eunuchs engineered the succession of Suleiman I and effectively seized control of the state.[103][104] Suleiman set up a privy council, which included the most important eunuchs, in the harem, thereby depriving traditional state institutions of their functions.[103] The eunuchs' influence over military and civil affairs was checked only by their internal rivalries and the religious movement led by Muhammad Baqir Majlisi.[104] The royal harem reached such proportions under Sultan Husayn (1668–1726) that it consumed a large part of state revenues.[104] After the fall of the Safavid dynasty, which occurred soon afterwards, eunuchs were never again able to achieve significant political influence as a class in Persia.[104]

Uzbekistan Edit

In the Islamic Khanates of Central Asia, harems existed until the introduction of Communism by the Soviets after the Russian Revolution.

The royal harem of the ruler of the Khanate of Khiva (1511-1920) in Central Asia (Uzbekistan) was composed of both legal wives and slave concubines. The khan had four legal wives, who were obliged to be practicing Muslim women.

Aside from his legal wives, enslaved women were acquired from slave markets. These were obliged to be non-Muslims since Muslims could not be slaves. The enslaved girls were initially given as servants to the khan's mother. She provided them with an education after some of them were selected to be the concubines to the khan.

Only the khan's legal wives were allowed to give birth to his children, and the slave concubines who conceived were given a forced abortion.[105] The women could be sold off if they did not please the khan, or given in marriage to his favored subjects. The son of the khan were not allowed to inherit his father's concubine, so when a khan died, his concubines were sold at the slave market.[105] Men were normally not allowed to visit the harem, but Jewish tradeswomen were allowed in to sell their wares, such as clothes, to the harem inhabitants.

The royal harem of the ruler of the Emirate of Bukhara (1785-1920) in Central Asia (Uzbekistan) was similar to that of the Khanate of Khiva. The last Emir of Bukhara was reported to have a harem with 100 women, but also a separate "harem" of ‘nectarine-complexioned dancing boys’.[106] The harem was abolished when the Soviet conquered the area and the khan was forced to flee; he reportedly left the harem women behind, but did take some of his dancing boys with him.[106]

Qajar Empire Edit

 
King-wives-and-eunuchs

The harem of the monarchs of the Qajar dynasty (1785-1925) consisted of several thousand people. The harem had a precise internal administration, based on the women's rank.

As was customary in Muslim harems, the highest rank of the harem hierarchy was that of the monarchs' mother, who in Qajar Iran had the title Mahd-e ʿOlyā (Sublime Cradle). She had many duties and prerogatives, such as safeguarding the harem valuables, particularly the jewels, which she administered with the help of female secretaries.[107]

In contrast to what was common in the Ottoman Empire, where the sultans normally only had slave consorts, the Qajar shah's also had a custom of diplomatic marriages with free Muslim women, daughters of Qajar dignitaries and princes.[108] Another phenomena of the Qajar harem was that the Shah entered two different kinds of marriages with his harem women: ṣīḡa (temporary wife), which was often done with concubines, and ʿaqdī (permanent wife), which was a promotion.[109] The wives and slave concubines of Fath-Ali Shah Qajar came from the harems of the vanquished houses of Zand and Afšār; from the Georgian and Armenian campaigns, as well as from the slave markets and presented as gifts to the shah from the provinces.[110][111]

Every consort had white and black slave servants (women or eunuchs), whose number varied according to her status. Some wives had their own residence and stables.[112] There were different types of female officials within the harem: some managed the royal coffeehouse inside the harem; a body of female sentinels commanded by women officials "protected the king's nightly rest";[113] women called ostāds (masters), supervised the group of female dancers and musicians who entertained the harem and were housed with their servants in a separate compound.[114] Young slave boys below puberty (ḡolām-bačča) served as servants and playmates in the harem.[115] Eunuchs were mainly African slaves.[115]

The women of the harem were responsible for everything inside the harem quarters, but the harem were guarded from the other parts of the palace (biruni) by the eunuchs, who together with the visits from relatives, physicians and tailors served as links to the outside world for the women, but the women were not allowed to leave the harem themselves.

The harem women had daily entertainments such as music, dance, theatrical performances and games. They studied the arts, calligraphy and poetry, and entertained themselves and the shah with music, dance and singing, and by reciting verses and telling stories, which the shah enjoyed at bedtime.[116] The harem had its own theatre where passion plays (taʿzia) were performed, and one of the shah's wives was the custodian of all the paraphernalia.[117] Toward the end of the Qajar dynasty, foreign tutors were allowed into the harem.

Inside the harem, women performed religious functions such as rawża-ḵᵛāni (commemoration of the martyrdom of Imam Ḥosayn at Karbalā); preached from the pulpit on the day of ʿĀšurā (q.v., the 10th of Moḥarram) and direct the ritual of sina-zadan (beating of the chest).[118]

The Qajar harem also had the political influence and intrigues common in royal harems. Until a regulated succession order to the throne was established by Nāṣer-al-Din Shah (r. 1848–1896), the harem was a place of intense struggle by mothers of potential heirs to have their own sons elected heir to the throne as well as material benefits for themselves, higher ranks for members of their own families, or precedence for their own children. Nāṣer-al-Din Shah's mother Jahān Ḵānom Mahd-e ʿOlyā wielved a major influenced with secured his own succession and the dismissal and subsequent assassination in of Prime Minister Mirzā Taqi Khan Amir Kabir,[119] and Nāṣer-al-Din Shah's favorite wife Anis-al-Dawla brought about the dismissal of the Premier Mirza Hosein Khan Moshir od-Dowleh in 1873. Both Persian policymakers as well as foreign diplomats, therefore, sought support within the royal harem.[120]

Modern Era Edit

The practice of female seclusion witnessed a sharp decline in the early 20th century as a result of education and increased economic opportunity for women, as well as Western influences, but it is still practiced in some parts of the world, such as rural Afghanistan and conservative states of the Persian Gulf region.[4][7] Since the early 1980s, a rise in conservative Islamic currents has led to a greater emphasis on traditional notions of modesty and gender segregation, with some radical preachers in Saudi Arabia calling for a return to seclusion of women and an end of female employment. Many working women in conservative societies have adopted hijab as a way of coping with a social environment where men are uncomfortable interacting with women in the public space. Some religious women have tried to emulate seclusion practices abandoned by their grandmothers' generation in an effort to affirm traditional religious values in the face of pervasive Westernization.[7]

Eunuchs and slavery Edit

 
19th-century depiction of the Chief Black Eunuch (left), a court dwarf (middle) and the Chief White Eunuch (right)

Eunuchs were probably introduced into Islamic civilizations (despite castration being Islamically forbidden) through the influence of Persian and Byzantine imperial courts.[121] The Ottomans employed eunuchs as guardians of the harem. Istanbul's Topkapı Palace housed several hundred eunuchs in the late-sixteenth century. The head eunuch who guarded the entrance of the harem was known as kızlar ağası.[122] Eunuchs were either Nilotic slaves captured in the Nile vicinity and transported through ports in Upper Egypt, the Sudan and Abyssinia,[123] or European slaves such as Slavs and Franks.[121]

According to Encyclopedia of Islam, castration was prohibited in Islamic law "by a sort of tacit consensus" and eunuchs were acquired from Christian and Jewish traders.[124] Al-Muqaddasi identifies a town in Spain where the operation was performed by Jews and the survivors were then sent overseas.[124] Encyclopedia Judaica states that Talmudic law counts castration among mutilations entitling a slave to immediate release so that the ability of Jewish slave traders to supply eunuchs to harems depended on whether they could acquire castrated males.[125]

The dark eunuch was held as the embodiment of the sensual tyranny that held sway in the fantasized Ottoman palace, for he had been "clipped" or "completely sheared" to make of him the "ultimate slave" for the supreme ruler.[126] In the Ottoman court, white eunuchs, who were mostly brought from castration centers in Christian Europe and Circassia, were responsible for much of the palace administration, while black eunuchs, who had undergone a more radical form of castration, were the only male slaves employed in the royal harem.[127]

The chief black eunuch, or the Kizlar Agha, came to acquire a great deal of power within the Ottoman Empire. He not only managed every aspect of the Harem women's lives but was also responsible for the education and social etiquette of the princes and young women in the Harem. He arranged for all ceremonial events within the Harem including weddings and circumcision parties, and even notified women of death sentences when "accused of crimes or implicated in intrigues of jealousy and corruption."[128]

Nineteenth-century travelers accounts tell of being served by black eunuch slaves.[129] The trade was suppressed in the Ottoman Empire beginning in the mid-19th century, and slavery was legally abolished in 1887 or 1888.[130] Late 19th-century slaves in Palestine included enslaved Africans and the sold daughters of poor Palestinian peasants. Both Arabs and Jews owned slaves.[130] Circassians and Abazins from North of the Black Sea may also have been involved in the Ottoman slave trade.[131]

Non-Islamic equivalents Edit

African royal polygamy Edit

In Africa south of the Sahara, many non-Muslim chieftains have traditionally had harems.

The Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini had six wives, for example, and members of the Nigerian chieftaincy system have historically had as many as three hundred of them.[132][133] Usually, African royal polygamy does not expect for the wives to be secluded from men or to be prevented from moving outside of the harem. Where this is not the case, and the royal wives do live in the harems in isolation, they tend to have a ritual significance in their kingdoms' traditions.

The wives of the Oba of Benin City, a Nigerian kingdom, lived alone in the women's quarters of the Royal Palace; they were allowed to receive female visitors, but no male ones were allowed to enter the harem, and they themselves normally did not leave it and thus were never seen in public.[134] As stated above, their seclusion was tied to the religion of Benin City, which held them to be sacred due to their position as wives of the Oba.

Aztec Empire Edit

In Mesoamerica, Aztec ruler Montezuma II, who met Hernán Cortés, kept 4,000 concubines; every member of the Aztec nobility was supposed to have had as many consorts as he could afford.[135]

Cambodia Edit

There were no support for a harem in Buddhist writings. However, harems have nevertheless been common for Buddhist royal rulers. Normally, the royal Buddhist harems of South East Asia were not as strict as Muslim harems and did allow the women some limited freedom outside of the harem, but the royal harem of Cambodia was particularly severe, and secluded women for fear that they would be unfaithful.[136]

The king of Cambodia had a royal harem consisting of hundreds of women. In a custom common for royal rulers in South East Asia, girls were sent to the king's harem by powerful local families all over the country, as tributes and living acknowledgements of their submission, and the king's right to rule.[137] The girls sent to the harem became court ladies and given a number of different tasks. After every coronation, the new king and his main wife and queen would appoint the palace women to different ranks and tasks: after the queen came the four wives called preah moneang or preah snang rank; then the preah neang-wives; the neak moneang-wives and the neak neang-wives.[138] Other palace women became servants, singers or dancers.[138] The harem women could be seen in public only on a few ceremonial occasions but were otherwise not allowed contact with the outside world and communicated with it through go-betweens in the shape of female old palace women servants called ak yeay chastum.[138]

When Cambodia became a French colony, the French colonial officials viewed an abolition of the royal harem and an emancipation of the harem women as a part of modernization, as well as a way of cutting the costs of the royal court.[137] After the death of king Norodom in April 1904, the French officials took control of the royal finances, reviewed the allowances of each person in the royal palace, and reduced the number of the number of women that the king could support, effectively dissolving the harem.[137] King Sisowath (r. 1904–1927) did keep some of the No kang chao (concubines) he had prior to his accession, but no more were added, and the custom of giving daughters as tribute to the royal harem had waned by 1913; after this, the palace women, at least officially, were servants and staffed the royal ballet corps.[137]

India Edit

The harem likely existed in Hindu India before the Islamic conquest. It is for example mentioned in the Ancient stories of Buddha. However, it appears to have become more common and strict after the Islamic conquests.

After the Islamic conquest of India and the loss of Hindu rulership, the gender segregation and seclusion of women practiced by the Muslim conquerors were adopted also by Hindus in India, where it became known as purdah.[139] It is noted that the whole society became more gender segregated after the Muslim conquests onward and men and women more separated; in Bengal, for example, where men and women had previously worked together reaping, men started to do the reaping alone and women referred to the more domestic task of husking.[139] Male Hindu rulers commonly had harems as well as Muslim rulers in India from the Middle ages until the 20th-century. One of the factors why upper-class Hindu men started to seclude women in harems after the Muslim conquest was the practice of the Muslim conquerors to place the wives of defeated Hindus in their harems, and the disruption of the Hindu social system that followed from the mixing of Hindus and Muslims.[139] The seclusion of Hindu women was thus a way to preserve the cast.[139]

Imperial China Edit

Harem is also the usual English translation of the Chinese language term hougong (hou-kung; Chinese: 後宮; lit. 'the palace(s) behind'), in reference to the Imperial Chinese Harem. Hougong refers to the large palaces for the Chinese emperor's consorts, concubines, female attendants and eunuchs.

The women who lived in an emperor's hougong sometimes numbered in the thousands.

Muscovite Terem Edit

In Muscovite Russia the area of aristocratic houses where women were secluded was known as terem.[22] However, aristocratic Muscovite women were not entirely secluded from mixing with men: it was a common custom for the lady of the house to greet a male guest with a welcoming drink ritual when he arrived. She was also waited upon male staff as well as female upon retiring to her chamber. [140]

Western representations Edit

A distinct, imaginary vision of the harem emerged in the West starting from the 17th century when Europeans became aware of Muslim harems housing numerous women. In contrast to the medieval European views, which conceived Muslim women as victimized but powerful through their charms and deceit, during the era of European colonialism, the "imaginary harem" came to represent what Orientalist scholars saw as an abased and subjugated status of women in the Islamic civilization. These notions served to cast the West as culturally superior and justify colonial enterprises.[4] Under the influence of One Thousand and One Nights, the harem was often conceived as a personal brothel, where numerous women lounged in suggestive poses, directing their strong but oppressed sexuality toward a single man in a form of "competitive lust".[3][4]

A centuries-old theme in Western culture is the depiction of European women forcibly taken into Oriental harems as evident, for example, in the Mozart opera Die Entführung aus dem Serail ("The Abduction from the Seraglio") concerning the attempt of the hero Belmonte to rescue his beloved Konstanze from the seraglio/harem of the Pasha Selim; or in Voltaire's Candide, in chapter 12 of which the old woman relates her experiences of being sold into harems across the Ottoman Empire.

Much of Verdi's opera Il corsaro takes place in the harem of the Pasha Seid—where Gulnara, the Pasha's favorite, chafes at life in the harem, and longs for freedom and true love. Eventually, she falls in love with the dashing invading corsair Corrado, kills the Pasha, and escapes with the corsair—only to discover that he loves another woman.

The Lustful Turk was a Victorian novel published in 1828. The novel focuses on a Western woman who is forced into sexual slavery in the harem of the Dey of Algiers. Similar themes were expressed in A Night in a Moorish Harem, an erotic novel of 1896 when a shipwrecked Western sailor is invited into a harem and engages in "illicit sex" with nine concubines.[141][142]

The 1919 novel The Sheik, by E. M. Hull, and the 1921 film of the same name are probably the most famous novels from the "desert romance" genre which flourished after the conclusion of the First World War, involving relationships between Western women and Arab sheiks. The novel has received strong criticisms for its central plot element: the idea that rape leads to love, i.e. forced seduction.[143] Other criticisms have been directed at ideas closely related to the central rape plot: that for women, sexual submission is a necessary and natural condition; and that rape is excused by marriage. Historians have also criticized the orientalist portrayal of the Arabs in the novel and the film.[144][143][145][146][147][148]

Angelique and the Sultan, part of the Angélique historical novel series by Anne and Serge Golon and later made into a film, has the theme of a 17th Century French noblewoman captured by pirates and taken into the harem of the King of Morocco. Thereupon, she stabs the King with his own dagger when he tries to have sex with her and stages a daring escape.

The Russian writer Leonid Solovyov, adapting the Middle Eastern and Central Asian folktales of Nasreddin into his book Возмутитель спокойствия (English translations under the varying titles "The Beggar in the Harem: Impudent Adventures in Old Bukhara", 1956, and "The Tale of Hodja Nasreddin: Disturber of the Peace", 2009[149]) added prominently the theme of Nasreddin's beloved being taken into the harem of the Emir of Bukhara and the protagonist's efforts to extract her from there - a theme completely absent from the original folktales.

A Study in Scarlet, the first of Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes mysteries, applies many of the above conventions to the historically different phenomenon of Mormon polygamous marriage. In the wild days of the early Mormon settlement of Utah, the protagonist's beloved is kidnapped and placed against her will in the harem of a Mormon elder, where she dies. Having failed to rescue her, the protagonist is bent on deadly revenge on the kidnappers - which is the background to the mystery solved by Holmes.

In H.G. Wells' The War in the Air, civilization breaks down due to global war. With the world reverting to barbarism, a strongman takes over a town and among other things starts forcing young women into a harem which he is building up. The protagonist must fight and kill him in order to save his girlfriend from being included.

Science Fiction writer Poul Anderson included among the adventures of his Galactic Secret Agent Dominic Flandry an episode where one of Flandry's love interests is forcibly taken into the harem of the corrupt planetary governor Harald and must be rescued. The far-future harem described follows the well-established literary depictions of a harem, except that the place of the traditional eunuchs is taken by extraterrestrials.

Image gallery Edit

Many Western artists have depicted their imaginary conceptions of the harem.

See also Edit

People Edit

Places Edit

Other Edit

Bibliography Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b Wehr & Cowan 1976, pp. 171–172.
  2. ^ Harem at WordReference.com
  3. ^ a b c d Cartwright-Jones 2013, "Harem".
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Anwar 2004, "Harem".
  5. ^ Harem in Merriam-Webster Dictionary
  6. ^ Haslauer 2005, "Harem".
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Doumato 2009, "Seclusion".
  8. ^ Madar 2011.
  9. ^ a b c Britannica 2002.
  10. ^ Quataert 2005, p. 152.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Patel 2013, "Seclusion".
  12. ^ "harem". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d. Retrieved 2017-04-04.
  13. ^ Betzig 1994.
  14. ^ Ahmed 1992, p. 103.
  15. ^ a b Ahmed 1992, pp. 26–28.
  16. ^ Ahmed 1992, p. 27.
  17. ^ a b Schi̇ck, İrvi̇n Cemi̇l (2009). "Space: Harem: Overview". In Suad Joseph (ed.). Encyclopedia of Women & Islamic Cultures. Brill. doi:10.1163/1872-5309_ewic_EWICCOM_0283.
  18. ^ Mitchell, John Malcolm (1911). "Harem" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). pp. 950–952.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m A. Shapur Shahbazi (2012). "HAREM i. IN ANCIENT IRAN". Encyclopaedia Iranica.
  20. ^ a b c Silke Roth, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology 2012, escholarship.org
  21. ^ a b c A. K. Grayson, Assyrian and Babylonian Chronicles, Locust Valley, New York, 1975.
  22. ^ a b c Fay 2012, pp. 38–39.
  23. ^ Edmund Burke; Nejde Yaghoubian (2006). Struggle and Survival in the Modern Middle East. University of California Press. p. 48. ISBN 9780520246614.
  24. ^ Pomeroy, Sarah B, Goddesses, whores, wives, and slaves: women in classical antiquity, Schocken Books, New York, 1995
  25. ^ Lynda Garland:Byzantine Women: Varieties of Experience 800-1200
  26. ^ (Herodotus 3.69)
  27. ^ (Herodotus 1.136)
  28. ^ (Herodotus 3.134)
  29. ^ (Diodorus Siclulus 17.38, 1)
  30. ^ Brosius 1996, pp. 70–82.
  31. ^ (Plutarch, Artoxerxes, 27; Diodorus, 17.77.6; Esther 2.3)
  32. ^ (Herodotus 8.105; Plutarch, Themistocles, 26.4)
  33. ^ (Xenophon, Cyropaedia, 4.6, 11; 5.1, 1; 5, 2, 9, 39)
  34. ^ (Herodotus 3. 97)
  35. ^ (Herodotus 4.19, 32)
  36. ^ a b Brosius, Maria (2000). "WOMEN i. In Pre-Islamic Persia". Encyclopaedia Iranica.
  37. ^ (Ctesias, frg. 16 (56) in Jacoby, Fragmente III/C, p. 471)
  38. ^ Brosius 1996, pp. 83–93.
  39. ^ (Heracleides of Cyme apud Athenaeus, 514b)
  40. ^ Brosius 1996, pp. 94–97.
  41. ^ (Plutarch, Moralia, 140B)
  42. ^ Justin (41.3)
  43. ^ Lerouge, Ch. 2007. L’image des Parthes dans le monde gréco-romain. Stuttgart.
  44. ^ (Plutarch, Crassus 21.6)
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Further reading Edit

External links Edit

harem, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, haram, herem, this, article, section, should, specify, language, english, content, using, lang, transliteration, transliterated, languages, phonetic, transcriptions, with, appropriate, code, wikipedia, multil. For other uses see Harem disambiguation Not to be confused with Haram or Herem This article or section should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why October 2021 Harem Arabic ح ر يم ḥarim a sacred inviolable place harem female members of the family 1 2 refers to domestic spaces that are reserved for the women of the house in a Muslim family 3 4 5 A harem may house a man s wife or wives their pre pubescent male children unmarried daughters female domestic servants and other unmarried female relatives In harems of the past slave concubines were also housed in the harem In former times some harems were guarded by eunuchs who were allowed inside The structure of the harem and the extent of monogamy or polygamy has varied depending on the family s personalities socio economic status and local customs 3 Similar institutions have been common in other Mediterranean and Middle Eastern civilizations especially among royal and upper class families 4 and the term is sometimes used in other contexts 6 In traditional Persian residential architecture the women s quarters were known as andaruni Persian اندرونی meaning inside and in the Indian subcontinent as zenana Urdu زنانہ Ladies of Kabul 1848 lithograph by James Rattray showing unveiling in zenana areasAlthough the institution has experienced a sharp decline in the modern era due to a rise in education and economic opportunities for women as well as the influence of Western culture the seclusion of women is still practiced in some parts of the world such as rural Afghanistan and conservative states of the Persian Gulf 4 7 In the West the harem often depicted as a hidden world of sexual subjugation where numerous women lounged in suggestive poses has influenced many paintings stage productions films and literary works 3 4 Some earlier European Renaissance paintings dating to the 16th century portray the women of the Ottoman harem as individuals of status and political significance 8 In many periods of Islamic history women in the harem exercised various degrees of political power 9 such as the Sultanate of Women in the Ottoman Empire Contents 1 Terminology 2 The ideal of seclusion 3 Pre Islamic background 3 1 Ancient Egypt 3 2 Assyria 3 3 Greece and Byzantium 3 4 The Median and Achaemenid Empires 3 5 Sasanian Empire 3 6 South Asia 4 In Islamic cultures 4 1 Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates 4 2 Al Andalus 4 3 Afghanistan 4 4 Crimean Khanate 4 5 Khedivate of Egypt 4 6 Morocco 4 7 Mughal Empire 4 8 Ottoman Empire 4 9 Safavid Empire 4 10 Uzbekistan 4 11 Qajar Empire 4 12 Modern Era 5 Eunuchs and slavery 6 Non Islamic equivalents 6 1 African royal polygamy 6 2 Aztec Empire 6 3 Cambodia 6 4 India 6 5 Imperial China 6 6 Muscovite Terem 7 Western representations 7 1 Image gallery 8 See also 8 1 People 8 2 Places 8 3 Other 9 Bibliography 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 9 3 Further reading 10 External linksTerminology EditThe word has been recorded in the English language since the early 17th century It comes from the Arabic ḥarim which can mean a sacred inviolable place harem or female members of the family In English the term harem can mean also the wives or concubines of a polygamous man The triliteral Ḥ R M appears in other terms related to the notion of interdiction such as haram forbidden mahram unmarriageable relative ihram a pilgrim s state of ritual consecration during the Hajj and al Ḥaram al Sarif the noble sanctuary which can refer to the Temple Mount or the sanctuary of Mecca 1 In the Ottoman Turkish language the harem i e the part of the house reserved for women was called haremlik while the space open for men was known as selamlik 10 The practice of female seclusion is not exclusive to Islam but the English word harem usually denotes the domestic space reserved for women in Muslim households 11 12 Some scholars have used the term to refer to polygynous royal households throughout history 13 The ideal of seclusion Edit nbsp New entrant to a prince s harem Jaipur late 18 century National Museum New DelhiLeila Ahmed describes the ideal of seclusion as a man s right to keep his women concealed invisible to other men Ahmed identifies the practice of seclusion as a social ideal and one of the major factors that shaped the lives of women in the Mediterranean Middle East 14 For example contemporary sources from the Byzantine Empire describe the social norms that governed women s lives Women were not supposed to be seen in public They were guarded by eunuchs and could only leave the home veiled and suitably chaperoned Some of these customs were borrowed from the Persians but Greek society also influenced the development of patriarchal tradition 15 The ideal of seclusion was not fully realized as social reality This was in part because working class women often held jobs that required interaction with men 11 In the Byzantine Empire the very ideal of gender segregation created economic opportunities for women as midwives doctors bath attendants and artisans since it was considered inappropriate for men to attend to women s needs At times women lent and invested money and engaged in other commercial activities 16 Historical records shows that the women of 14th century Mamluk Cairo freely visited public events alongside men despite objections of religious scholars 11 Female seclusion has historically signaled social and economic prestige 11 Eventually the norms of female seclusion spread beyond the elites but the practice remained characteristic of upper and middle classes for whom the financial ability to allow one s wife to remain at home was a mark of high status 7 11 In some regions such as the Arabian peninsula seclusion of women was practiced by poorer families at the cost of great hardship but it was generally economically unrealistic for the lower classes 7 Where historical evidence is available it indicates that the harem was much more likely to be monogamous For example in late Ottoman Istanbul only 2 29 percent of married men were polygynous with the average number of wives being 2 08 In some regions like Sub Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia prevalence of women in agricultural work leads to wider practice of polygamy but makes seclusion impractical In contrast in Eurasian and North African rural communities that rely on male dominated plough farming seclusion is economically possible but polygyny is undesirable This indicates that the fundamental characteristic of the harem is seclusion of women rather than polygyny 17 Pre Islamic background EditThe idea of the harem or seclusion of women did not originate with Muhammad or Islam 9 The practice of secluding women was common to many Ancient Near East communities especially where polygamy was permitted 18 In pre Islamic Assyria and Persia most royal courts had a harem where the ruler s wives and concubines lived with female attendants and eunuchs 9 Encyclopaedia Iranica uses the term harem to describe the practices of the ancient Near East 19 Ancient Egypt Edit There has been a modern trend to refer to the women s quarters of the Pharaoh s palace in Ancient Egypt as a harem 20 The popular assumption that Pharaonic Egypt had a harem is however an anachronism while the women and children of the pharaoh including his mother wives and children had their own living quarters with its own administration in the Palace of the Pharaoh the royal women did not live isolated from contact with men or in seclusion from the rest of the court in the way associated with the term harem 20 The custom of referring to the women s quarters of the pharaoh s palace as a harem is therefore apocryphal and has been used because of incorrect assumptions that Ancient Egypt was similar to later Islamic harem culture 20 Assyria Edit The kings of Ancient Assyria are known to have had a harem regulated by royal edicts in which the women lived in seclusion guarded by slave eunuchs 21 A number of regulations were designed to prevent disputes among the women from developing into political intrigues 19 The women were guarded by the eunuchs who also prevented their disputes from developing into political plots banned from giving gifts to their servants as such gifts could be used as bribes and not allowed any visitors who had not been examined and approved by officials 21 When the king traveled his harem traveled with him strictly supervised so as not breaking regulations even under transport 21 In the 7th century BC Assyria was conquered by the Median Empire which appears to have adopted the harem custom from whom it was in turn taken over by the Achaemenid Empire Greece and Byzantium Edit Female seclusion and a special part of the house reserved for women were common among the elites of ancient Greece where it was known as the gynaeceum 22 23 However while gender segregation was the official ideal in Classical Athens it is debated how much of this ideal was actually enforced and it is known that even upper class women appeared in public and were able to come in contact with men on at least religious occasions 24 These traditional Greek ideals were revived as an ideal for women in the Byzantine Empire in which Greek culture eventually became dominant though the rigid ideal norms of seclusion expressed in Byzantine literature did not necessarily reflect actual practice 22 15 The Byzantine Emperors were Greek Orthodox and did not have several wives or official concubines secluded in a harem When Greek culture started to replace the Roman in the Byzantine Empire in the 6th century it came to be seen as modest for especially upper class women to keep to a special women s quarters gynaikonitis and until the 12th century men and women are known to have participated in gender segregated banquets at the Imperial Court however Imperial women still appeared in public and did not live in seclusion and the idealized gender segregation was never fully enforced 25 nbsp Khosrow and Shirin Bukhara 1648 The Median and Achaemenid Empires Edit See also Women in the Achaemenid Empire and Women in the Parthian Empire There is no evidence of among early Iranians for harem practices that is to take large numbers of wives or concubines and keeping them in seclusion citation needed However Iranian dynasties are said to have adopted harem practices after their conquests in the Middle East where such practices were used in some cultures such as Assyria the Median Empire conquered Assyria in the 7th century BC and Media transformed into the Achaemenid Empire 19 According to Greek sources the nobility of the Medes kept no less than five wives who were watched over by eunuchs 19 Greek historians have reported about the harems of the Achaemenid Empire Herodotus reported that each Persian royal or aristocratic man had several wives and concubines who came to the husband on a well regulated turn basis 26 and had sole control over their children until these were five years old 27 The Old Persian word for the harem is not attested but it can be reconstructed as xsapa stana lit night station or place where one spends the night The royal household was controlled by the chief wife and queen who as a rule was the daughter of a Persian prince and the mother of the heir to the throne citation needed and who was subject only to the king with her own living quarter revenue estates and staff 28 which included eunuchs and concubines 29 The second rank under the queen consisted of the legal secondary wives with the title banuka Lady the third rank consisted of unmarried princesses as well as the married princesses who lived with their own family with the title duxci daughter 30 The fourth group of women in the harem were the royal slave concubines 31 who were bought in slave markets 32 received as a gifts 33 or tribute 34 or taken as prisoners of war 35 The concubines were trained to entertain the king and his guests as musicians dancers and singers The harem of Darius III reportedly consisted of his mother queen wife children over 300 concubines and nearly 500 household servants 19 However it is a matter of debate if the Achaemenid court had a full harem culture as women do not appear to have been fully secluded in the harem The fact that women lived in separate quarters at the Royal Palace does not necessarily mean that they were secluded from contact with men and despite the possibly biased Greek reports there is no archeological evidence supporting the existence of a harem or the seclusion of women from contact with men at the Achaemenid court 36 Royal and aristocratic Achaemenid women were given an education in subjects which did not appear compatible with seclusion such as horsemanship and archery 37 19 It does not appear that royal and aristocratic women lived in seclusion from men since it is known that they appeared in public and traveled with their husbands 38 participated in hunting 39 and in feasts 40 at least the chief wife of a royal or aristocratic man did not live in seclusion as it is clearly stated that wives customarily accompanied their husbands to dinner banquets although they left the banquet when the women entertainers of the harem came in and the men began merrymaking 41 Little is known about the alleged harems of the Parthians Parthian royal men reportedly had several wives and kept them fairly secluded from all men but relatives and eunuchs 42 According to Roman sources Parthian kings had harems full of female slaves and hetairas secluded from contact with men and royal women were not allowed to participate in the royal banquets 43 Also aristocratic Parthian men appear to have had harems as Roman sources report of rich men travelling with hundreds of guarded concubines 44 However the Roman reports about Parthian harems seem to mirror the traditional Greek reports about the Achaemenid harems and they similarly are biased and cannot be verified by archeological evidence 36 Sasanian Empire Edit The information about the Sasanian harem reveals a picture that closely mirrors the alleged Achaemenid customs In the Sassanian Empire Roman reports that it was common for men to have multiple wives The hierarchy of the Sassanian harem is not clear The Sassanian kings had one chief consort who was the mother of the heir to the throne as well as several wives of lower rank and concubines all of whom accompanied him on travels even on campaigns 45 Five titles are attested for royal women royal princess duxsy duxt Lady banug Queen banbisn Queen of the Empire Eran sahr banbisn and Queen of Queens banbisnan banbisn 19 The rank of these titles has been the matter of debate and it appears that their status varied depending on circumstances and that the highest female rank was not necessarily borne by the chief wife but could be held by a daughter or a sister 19 The Sasanian harem was supervised by eunuchs and also had female singers and musicians 19 However while the Sasanian kings had harems women in the Sassanid Empire in general did not live in seclusion and elaborate harems were detested and appear to have been exceptions to the rule which is illustrated by the fact that big harems when they occurred were abhorred by the public 19 According to Sasanian legend of all the Persian kings Khosrow II was the most extravagant in his hedonism He searched his realm to find the most beautiful girls and it was rumored that about 3 000 of them were kept in his harem 19 This practice was widely condemned by the public who abhorred of him keeping those girls in seclusion and denying them the benefit of marriage and progeny and it was counted as the fourth of the eight crimes for which he was later tried and executed 19 Khosrow himself claimed that he sent his favorite wife Shirin every year to offer them a possibility of leaving his harem with a dowry for marriage but that their luxurious lifestyle always prompted them to refuse his offer 19 South Asia Edit South Asian traditions of female seclusion called purdah may have been influenced by Islamic customs 46 Ashoka the emperor of the Maurya Empire in India kept a harem of around 500 women all of whom were under strict rules of seclusion and etiquette 47 In Islamic cultures EditUmayyad and Abbasid Caliphates Edit See also Abbasid harem In contrast to the earlier era of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and the Rashidun Caliphate women in Umayyad and Abbasid society were absent from all arenas of the community s central affairs 48 While it was very common for early Muslim women to play an active role in community life and not unseen for women to lead men into battle and even start rebellions as demonstrated in the Hadith literature by the time of the Abbasid Caliphate women were ideally kept in seclusion The practice of gender segregation in Islam was influenced by an interplay of religion customs and politics 7 11 The harem system first became fully institutionalized in the Islamic world under the Abbasid caliphate 7 Seclusion of women was established in various communities of the Mediterranean Mesopotamia and Persia before the advent of Islam 7 and some scholars believe that Muslims adopted the custom from the Byzantine Empire and Persia retrospectively interpreting the Quran to justify it 49 Although the term harem does not denote women s quarters in the Quran a number of Quranic verses discussing modesty and seclusion were held up by Quranic commentators as religious rationale for the separation of women from men including the so called hijab verse 33 53 7 50 In modern usage hijab colloquially refers to the religious attire worn by Muslim women but in this verse it meant veil or curtain that physically separates female from male space 11 51 Although classical commentators agreed that the verse spoke about a curtain separating the living quarters of Muhammad s wives from visitors to his house they usually viewed this practice as providing a model for all Muslim women 7 17 The growing seclusion of women were illustrated by the power struggle between the Caliph Al Hadi and his mother Al Khayzuran who refused to live in seclusion but instead challenged the power of the Caliph by giving her own audiences to male supplicants and officials and thus mixing with men 52 Her son considered this improper and he publicly addressed the issue of his mothers public life by assembling his generals and asked them Who is the better among us you or me asked Caliph al Hadi of his audience Obviously you are the better Commander of the Faithful the assembly replied And whose mother is the better mine or yours continued the caliph Your mother is the better Commander of the Faithful Who among you continued al Hadi would like to have men spreading news about your mother No one likes to have his mother talked about responded those present Then why do men go to my mother to speak to her 52 Conquests had brought enormous wealth and large numbers of slaves to the Muslim elite The majority of the slaves were women and children 53 many of whom had been dependents or harem members of the defeated Sassanian upper classes 54 In the wake of the conquests an elite man could potentially own a thousand slaves and ordinary soldiers could have ten people serving them 53 Nabia Abbott preeminent historian of elite women of the Abbasid Caliphate describes the lives of harem women as follows The choicest women were imprisoned behind heavy curtains and locked doors the strings and keys of which were entrusted into the hands of that pitiable creature the eunuch As the size of the harem grew men indulged to satiety Satiety within the individual harem meant boredom for the one man and neglect for the many women Under these conditions satisfaction by perverse and unnatural means crept into society particularly in its upper classes 54 The marketing of human beings particularly women as objects for sexual use meant that elite men owned the vast majority of women they interacted with and related to them as would masters to slaves 55 Being a slave meant relative lack of autonomy and belonging to a harem caused a wife and her children to have little insurance of stability and continued support due to the volatile politics of harem life Elite men expressed in literature the horror they felt for the humiliation and degradation of their daughters and female relatives For example the verses addressed to Hasan ibn al Firat on the death of his daughter read To Abu Hassan I offer condolences At times of disaster and catastrophe God multiplies rewards for the patient To be patient in misery Is equivalent to giving thanks for a gift Among the blessings of God undoubtedly Is the preservation of sons And the death of daughters 56 dd Even so courtesans and princesses produced prestigious and important poetry Enough survives to give us access to women s historical experiences and reveals some vivacious and powerful figures such as the Sufi mystic Raabi a al Adwiyya 714 801 CE the princess and poet Ulayya bint al Mahdi 777 825 CE and the singing girls Shariyah c 815 70 CE Fadl Ashsha ira d 871 CE and Arib al Ma muniyya 797 890 CE 57 58 Al Andalus Edit The harem system developed in the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates was reproduced by the Islamic realms which developed from them such as in the Emirates and Caliphates in Muslim Spain Al Andalus which attracted a lot of attention in Europe during the Middle Ages until the Emirate of Granada was conquered in 1492 The most famous of the Andalusian harems was perhaps the harem of the Caliph of Cordoba Except for the female relatives of the Caliph the harem women consisted of his slave concubines The slaves of the Caliph were often European saqaliba slaves trafficked from Northern or Eastern Europe while male saqaliba could be given work in a number of tasks such as offices in the kitchen falconry mint textile workshops the administration or the royal guard in the case of harem guards they were castrated female saqaliba were placed in the harem 59 The harem could contain thousands of slave concubines the harem of Abd al Rahman I consisted of 6 300 women 60 They the saqaliba concubines were appreciated for their light skin 61 The concubines jawaris were educated in accomplishments to make them attractive and useful for their master and many became known and respected for their knowledge in a variety of subjects from music to medicine 61 A jawaris concubine who gave birth to a child attained the status of an umm walad and a favorite concubine was given great luxury and honorary titles such as Marjan who gave birth to al Hakam II the heir of Abd al Rahman III who called her al sayyida al kubra great lady 62 Concubines were however always slaves subjected to lack of freedom and the will of their master and Caliph Abd al Rahman III is known to have executed two concubines for reciting what he saw as inappropriate verses and tortured another concubine with a burning candle when she refused sexual intercourse 62 the concubines of Caliph Abu Marwan al Tubni d 1065 were reportedly so badly treated that they conspired to murder him and women of the harem are also known to have been subjected to rape when rivaling factions conquered different palaces 62 Several concubines are known to have had great influence through their masters or their sons notably Subh during the Caliphate of Cordoba and Isabel de Solis during the Emirate of Granada Afghanistan Edit The rulers of Afghanistan customarily had a harem of four official wives as well as a large number of unofficial wives for the sake of tribal marriage diplomacy 63 They also had a large amount of enslaved women in the royal harem known as kaniz and surati guarded by the ghulam bacha eunuchs 64 Habibullah Khan r 1901 1919 famously had at least 44 wives and hundreds of slave women mostly Hazara in his harem in the Harem Sara Palace The women of the royal harem dressed in Western fashion since at least the reign Habibullah Khan but did not show themselves other than completely covered outside of the enclosed area of the royal palace The royal harem were first abolished by king Amanullah Khan who in 1923 freed all slaves of the royal harem as well as encouraged his wife queen Soraya Tarzi and the other women of the royal family to unveil and live public lives 64 While the royal women returned to the purdah of the royal complex after the deposition of Amanullah in 1929 it was finally dissolved with the final unveiling of the royal women in 1959 Crimean Khanate Edit In the Muslim dynasties of Central Asia the harem culture did not initially exist since the customary nomad culture made it impractical The wives of the rulers of the Golden Horde did not live secluded in a harem but was allowed to show themselves and meet unrelated men 65 and the system of harem gender segregation was not fully implemented in the Islamic dynasties of Central Asia until they stopped living a nomadic lifestyle such as in the Crimea 65 The household organization of the khans of the Giray dynasty in the Crimean Khanate is described first in the reign of Sahib I Giray while most court offices were initiated by Sahib I Giray 66 It is clear that there were separate women s quarters in the court of Sahib I Giray however complete gender segregation in the form of a harem does not appear to have been introduced until the 1560s 66 The Giray court appear to have been organized in the slave household normal in other Muslim dynasties and many of the officials and courtiers such as the viziers and equerries as well as the servants were enslaved while some were free Muslim noble clients and ulema family members 66 The servants of the royal harem however were all clearly slaves particularly the eunuchs who guarded the harem and who were of Black African origin imported from Africa via the Ottoman Empire and the Middle East and often trained in the Ottoman Imperial harem 65 Inside the harem the highest positions were that of ana biyim and ulug biyim ulug hani which were given to the khan s mother and to the khan s first wife or the eldest Giray princess respectively 66 The royal women had their own property and administered their property from the harem through their legal agents known as vekils who also acted as their intermediaries with supplicants and petitioners 66 The princes and the khans normally married free Muslim daughters of the Circassian vassal begs and trusted high officials the khans also customarily practiced levirate marriage 66 Similar to what was normal in the royal harem of other Islamic dynasties the khans had four official wives all with their own separate quarters within the harem and an unknown number of enslaved concubines 67 In 1669 the khan reportedly received fifteen Circassian slave virgins as an annual tribute from his subjects in the Caucasus in the 1720s khan Saadet Giray reportedly owned twenty seven slave concubines and in the 1760s khan Qirim Giray owned about forty 67 But not all slave concubines were Circassians some royal children are recorded to have been born by slave mothers from Central and Eastern Europe but the occurrence of European women in the royal harem diminished in the 18th century when the Crimean slave raids to Eastern Europe were suppressed 67 Some of these women though all formally concubines would not have been the khan s concubines in practice but rather acted as the servants of his wives this was the case in the Royal Ottoman harem as well which served as the role model of the Giray harem 67 The Giray princesses were normally married off to poor noblemen and vassals who would be provided with great dowries which put the princesses in advantage to their husbands and made the husbands loyal to the Girays 66 Initially the royal women did not live in seclusion in the harem they notably gave their own audiences to men significantly the ceremonial visit of the Russian ambassador who presented them with diplomatic gifts but in 1564 the Russian ambassador was met with the message that such audiences were no longer to be given 66 The Giray women did continue to play a role in diplomacy as they were allowed to exchange formal diplomatic correspondence with female rulers and consorts 66 Gazi II Giray assigned his wife Han Tokai to act as a mediator and write to tsaritsa Irina Godunova while he himself wrote to tsar Feodor I negotiating the return of their son Murad Giray from Moscow in 1593 66 There are few examples of politically active and influential women of the Giray harem Only Nur Sultan wife of Mengli I Giray Ayse Sultan wife of Devlet I Giray r 1551 1577 and Emine Sultan Biyim wife of Mehmed IV Giray 1642 44 and 1654 66 have been historically acknowledged as politically influential 66 Khedivate of Egypt Edit The royal harem during the Khedivate of Egypt 1805 1914 was modelled after Ottoman example the khedives being the Egyptian vice roys of the Ottoman sultans Similar to the Ottoman Imperial harem the harem of the khedive was modelled on a system of polygyny based on slave concubinage in which each wife or concubine was limited to having one son 68 The khedive s harem was composed of between several hundreds to over a thousand enslaved women supervised by his mother the walida pasha and his four official wives hanim and recognized concubines qadin 68 However the majority of the slave women served as domestics to his mother and wives and could have servant offices such as the bash qalfa chief servant slave woman of the walida pasha 68 The enslaved female servants of the khedive harem were manumitted and married off with a trousseau in strategic marriages to the male slaves kul or mamluk who were trained to become officers and civil servants in order to ensure the fidelity of their husband s to the khedive when they began their military or state official career 68 A minority of the slave women were selected to become the personal servants concubines of the khedive often selected by his mother they could become his wives and would in any case become free as an umm walad or mustawlada if they had children with him The Egyptian elite of bureaucrate families who emulated the khedive had similar harem customs and it was noted that it was common for Egyptian upper class families to have slave women in their harem which they manumitted to marry off to male protegees 68 Muhammad Ali of Egypt reportedly had at least 25 consorts wives and concubines and Khedive Ismail fourteen 68 This system started to change in 1873 when Tewfik Pasha married Emina Ilhamy as his sole consort making monogamy the fashionable ideal among the elite after the throne succession had been changed to primogeniture which favored monogamy Around the same time the Tanzimat reforms abolished the custom of training male slaves to become military men and civil servants and replaced them with free students 68 The Anglo Egyptian Convention for the Abolition of Slavery in 1877 officially banned the slave trade to Sudan followed by the 1884 ban on the import of white women as slaves the harem slave women were normally Circassian a ban on the selling on existing slaves as well as the introduction of a law giving slaves the right to apply of manumission 68 All this gradually diminished the royal harem though the royal harem as well as the harem of the elite families did still maintain a smaller number of both male eunuchs as well as slave women until at least World War I Khedive Abbas II of Egypt bought six white female slaves for his harem in 1894 and his mother still maintained sixty slaves as late as 1931 68 The royal harem was finally dissolved when the royal women escaped seclusion and took on a public role in the 1930s Morocco Edit Moulay Ismail Alaouite sultan of Morocco from 1672 to 1727 had over 500 enslaved concubines 69 He is said to have fathered a total of 525 sons and 342 daughters by 1703 and achieved a 700th son in 1721 70 Many of his concubines are only fragmentary documented As concubines they were slave captives sometimes from Europe One of them an Irishwoman by the name Mrs Shaw was brought to his harem after having been enslaved and was made to convert to Islam when the Sultan wished to have intercourse with her but was manumitted and married off to a Spanish convert when the Sultan grew tired of her the Spanish convert being very poor she was described by contemporary witnesses as reduced to beggary 71 72 Other slave concubines became favorites and as such were allowed some influence such as an Englishwoman called Lalla Balqis 71 Another favorite was a Spanish captive renamed Al Darah mother to Moulay Ismail s once favorite son that he himself educated Moulay Mohammed al Alim and to Moulay Sharif Around 1702 Al Darah tragically died strangled by Moulay Ismail whom Lalla Aisha had made believe she had betrayed him 73 According to the writings of the French diplomat Dominique Busnot Moulay Ismail had at least 500 concubines and even more children A total of 868 children 525 sons and 343 daughters is recorded in 1703 with his seven hundredth son being born shortly after his death in 1727 by which time he had well over a thousand children 74 75 The final total is uncertain the Guinness Book of Records claims 1042 76 while Elisabeth Oberzaucher and Karl Grammer of the University of Vienna put the total at 1171 77 This is widely considered among the largest number of children of any human in history Mughal Empire Edit nbsp Jahangir and Prince Khurram with Nur Jahan c 1624 This scene is probably set in the Aram Bagh garden which the empress Nur Jahan a great patron of gardens had re modeled in 1621 Main articles Mughal Empire Mughal Harem Padshah Begum Zenana and Purdah The king s wives concubines dancing girls and slaves were not the only women of the Mughal harem Many others including the king s mother lived in the harem Aunts grandmothers sisters daughters and other female relatives of the king all lived in the harem Male children also lived in the harem until they grew up citation needed Within the precincts of the harem were markets bazaars laundries kitchens playgrounds schools and baths The harem had a hierarchy its chief authorities being the wives and female relatives of the emperor and below them were the concubines 78 Urdubegis were the class of women assigned to protect the emperor and inhabitants of the zenana Because the women of the Mughal court lived sequestered under purdah the administration of their living quarters was run entirely by women 79 The division of the administrative tasks was dictated largely by the vision of Akbar who organized his zenana of over 5 000 noble women and servants 80 The women tasked with the protection of the zenana were commonly of Habshi Tatar Turk and Kashmiri origin Kashmiri women were selected because they did not observe purdah Many of the women were purchased as slaves and trained for their positions 81 The women of the Mughal harem could exercise enormous political power Nur Jahan chief consort of Jahangir was the most powerful and influential woman at court during a period when the Mughal Empire was at the peak of its power and glory More decisive and proactive than her husband she is considered by historians to have been the real power behind the throne for more than fifteen years Nur Jahan was granted certain honours and privileges which were never enjoyed by any Mughal empress before or after Nur Jahan was the only Mughal empress to have coinage struck in her name 82 She was often present when the Emperor held court and even held court independently when the Emperor was unwell She was given charge of his imperial seal implying that her perusal and consent were necessary before any document or order received legal validity The Emperor sought her views on most matters before issuing orders The only other Mughal empress to command such devotion from her husband was Nur Jahan s niece Mumtaz Mahal for whom Shah Jahan built the Taj Mahal as a mausoleum However Mumtaz took no interest in affairs of state and Nur Jahan is therefore unique in the annals of the Mughal Empire for the political influence she wielded Ottoman Empire Edit nbsp Mihrimah Sultan daughter of Suleiman the MagnificentMain articles Imperial Harem Sultanate of Women Valide sultan Haseki Sultan and Women in the Ottoman Empire The Imperial Harem of the Ottoman sultan which was also called seraglio in the West was part of Topkapi Palace It also housed the valide sultan as well as the sultan s daughters and other female relatives Eunuchs and servant girls were also part of the harem During the later periods the sons of the sultan lived in the Harem until they were 12 years old 83 It is being more commonly acknowledged today that the purpose of harems during the Ottoman Empire was for the upbringing of the future wives of upper class and royal men These women would be educated so that they were able to appear in public as a wife 84 In general however the separation of men s and women s quarters was never practiced among the urban poor in large cities such as Constantinople and by the 1920s and 1930s it had become a thing of the past in middle and upper class homes 85 Some women of Ottoman harem especially wives mothers and sisters of sultans played very important political roles in Ottoman history and during the period of the Sultanate of Women it was common for foreign visitors and ambassadors to claim that the Empire was de facto ruled by the women in the Imperial Harem 86 Hurrem Sultan wife of Suleiman the Magnificent mother of Selim II was one of the most powerful women in Ottoman history and wielded vast political power The title of Haseki Sultan was created for her and was used by her successors Kosem Sultan was one of the most powerful women in Ottoman history 87 Kosem Sultan achieved power and influenced the politics of the Ottoman Empire when she became Haseki Sultan as favourite consort and later legal wife of Ottoman Sultan Ahmed I r 1603 1617 and valide sultan 88 as mother of Murad IV r 1623 1640 and Ibrahim r 1640 1648 and grandmother of Mehmed IV r 1648 1687 Kosem s son Sultan Ibrahim the Mad Ottoman ruler from 1640 to 1648 is said to have drowned 280 concubines of his harem in the Bosphorus 89 90 At least one of his concubines Turhan Sultan a Rus girl from the area around modern Ukraine who came into the Ottoman Empire as a slave sold by Nogai slavers survived his reign Safavid Empire Edit Main article Safavid imperial harem The royal harem played an important role in the history of Safavid Persia The Safavid harem consisted of mothers wives slave concubines and female relatives and was staffed with female slaves and with eunuchs who acted as their guards and channel to the rest of the world 91 Shah Sultan Hossain s r 1694 1722 court has been estimated to include five thousand slaves male and female black and white of which one hundred were black eunuchs 92 The monarchs of the Safavid dynasty preferred to procreate through slave concubines which would neutralize potential ambitions from relatives and other inlaws and protect patrimony 91 The slave concubines and later mothers of the Shah s mainly consisted of enslaved Circassian Georgian and Armenian women captured as war booty bought at the slave market or received as gifts from local potentates 91 The slave concubines were sometimes forced to convert to shia Islam upon entering the harem and referred to as kaniz 93 94 In contrast to the common custom in Islamic courts to allow only non Muslim women to become harem concubines the Safavid harem also contained Muslim concubines as some free Persian Muslim daughters were gifted by their families or taken by the royal household to the harem as concubines 95 The enslaved harem women could achieve great influence but there are also examples of the opposite Shah Abbas II r 1642 1666 burned three of his slave wives alive because they refused to drink with him 96 as well as another wife for lying about her menstruation period 97 and Shah Safi r 1629 1642 stabbed his wife to death for disobedience 96 Slave eunuchs performed various tasks in many levels of the harem as well as the general court Eunuchs had offices in the general court such as in the royal treasury and as the tutors and adoptive fathers of non castrated slaves selected to be slave soldiers ghilman as well as inside the harem and served as a channel between the secluded harem women and the outside court and world which gave them a potentially powerful role at court 91 In the early Safavid period young princes were placed in the care of a lala high ranking Qizilbash chief who acted as a guardian and eventually given charge of important governorates 98 Although this system had the danger of encouraging regional rebellions against the shah it gave the princes education and training which prepared them for dynastic succession 98 This policy was changed by Shah Abbas I 1571 1629 who largely banished the princes to the harem where their social interactions were limited to the ladies of the harem and eunuchs 99 This deprived them of administrative and military training as well as experience of dealing with the aristocracy of the realm which together with the princes indulgent upbringing made them not only unprepared to carry out royal responsibilities but often also uninterested in doing so 99 The confinement of royal princes to the harem was an important factor contributing to the decline of the Safavid dynasty 98 100 nbsp Suleiman I and his courtiers 1670 The administration of the royal harem constituted an independent branch of the court staffed mainly by eunuchs 101 These were initially black eunuchs but white eunuchs from Georgia also began to be employed from the time of Abbas I 101 The mothers of rival princes together with eunuchs engaged in palace intrigues in an attempt to place their candidate on the throne 98 From the middle of the sixteenth century rivalries between Georgian and Circassian women in the royal harem gave rise to dynastic struggles of an ethnic nature previously unknown at the court 102 When Shah Abbas II died in 1666 palace eunuchs engineered the succession of Suleiman I and effectively seized control of the state 103 104 Suleiman set up a privy council which included the most important eunuchs in the harem thereby depriving traditional state institutions of their functions 103 The eunuchs influence over military and civil affairs was checked only by their internal rivalries and the religious movement led by Muhammad Baqir Majlisi 104 The royal harem reached such proportions under Sultan Husayn 1668 1726 that it consumed a large part of state revenues 104 After the fall of the Safavid dynasty which occurred soon afterwards eunuchs were never again able to achieve significant political influence as a class in Persia 104 Uzbekistan Edit In the Islamic Khanates of Central Asia harems existed until the introduction of Communism by the Soviets after the Russian Revolution The royal harem of the ruler of the Khanate of Khiva 1511 1920 in Central Asia Uzbekistan was composed of both legal wives and slave concubines The khan had four legal wives who were obliged to be practicing Muslim women Aside from his legal wives enslaved women were acquired from slave markets These were obliged to be non Muslims since Muslims could not be slaves The enslaved girls were initially given as servants to the khan s mother She provided them with an education after some of them were selected to be the concubines to the khan Only the khan s legal wives were allowed to give birth to his children and the slave concubines who conceived were given a forced abortion 105 The women could be sold off if they did not please the khan or given in marriage to his favored subjects The son of the khan were not allowed to inherit his father s concubine so when a khan died his concubines were sold at the slave market 105 Men were normally not allowed to visit the harem but Jewish tradeswomen were allowed in to sell their wares such as clothes to the harem inhabitants The royal harem of the ruler of the Emirate of Bukhara 1785 1920 in Central Asia Uzbekistan was similar to that of the Khanate of Khiva The last Emir of Bukhara was reported to have a harem with 100 women but also a separate harem of nectarine complexioned dancing boys 106 The harem was abolished when the Soviet conquered the area and the khan was forced to flee he reportedly left the harem women behind but did take some of his dancing boys with him 106 Qajar Empire Edit Main article Qajar harem nbsp King wives and eunuchsThe harem of the monarchs of the Qajar dynasty 1785 1925 consisted of several thousand people The harem had a precise internal administration based on the women s rank As was customary in Muslim harems the highest rank of the harem hierarchy was that of the monarchs mother who in Qajar Iran had the title Mahd e ʿOlya Sublime Cradle She had many duties and prerogatives such as safeguarding the harem valuables particularly the jewels which she administered with the help of female secretaries 107 In contrast to what was common in the Ottoman Empire where the sultans normally only had slave consorts the Qajar shah s also had a custom of diplomatic marriages with free Muslim women daughters of Qajar dignitaries and princes 108 Another phenomena of the Qajar harem was that the Shah entered two different kinds of marriages with his harem women ṣiḡa temporary wife which was often done with concubines and ʿaqdi permanent wife which was a promotion 109 The wives and slave concubines of Fath Ali Shah Qajar came from the harems of the vanquished houses of Zand and Afsar from the Georgian and Armenian campaigns as well as from the slave markets and presented as gifts to the shah from the provinces 110 111 Every consort had white and black slave servants women or eunuchs whose number varied according to her status Some wives had their own residence and stables 112 There were different types of female officials within the harem some managed the royal coffeehouse inside the harem a body of female sentinels commanded by women officials protected the king s nightly rest 113 women called ostads masters supervised the group of female dancers and musicians who entertained the harem and were housed with their servants in a separate compound 114 Young slave boys below puberty ḡolam bacca served as servants and playmates in the harem 115 Eunuchs were mainly African slaves 115 The women of the harem were responsible for everything inside the harem quarters but the harem were guarded from the other parts of the palace biruni by the eunuchs who together with the visits from relatives physicians and tailors served as links to the outside world for the women but the women were not allowed to leave the harem themselves The harem women had daily entertainments such as music dance theatrical performances and games They studied the arts calligraphy and poetry and entertained themselves and the shah with music dance and singing and by reciting verses and telling stories which the shah enjoyed at bedtime 116 The harem had its own theatre where passion plays taʿzia were performed and one of the shah s wives was the custodian of all the paraphernalia 117 Toward the end of the Qajar dynasty foreign tutors were allowed into the harem Inside the harem women performed religious functions such as rawza ḵᵛani commemoration of the martyrdom of Imam Ḥosayn at Karbala preached from the pulpit on the day of ʿAsura q v the 10th of Moḥarram and direct the ritual of sina zadan beating of the chest 118 The Qajar harem also had the political influence and intrigues common in royal harems Until a regulated succession order to the throne was established by Naṣer al Din Shah r 1848 1896 the harem was a place of intense struggle by mothers of potential heirs to have their own sons elected heir to the throne as well as material benefits for themselves higher ranks for members of their own families or precedence for their own children Naṣer al Din Shah s mother Jahan Ḵanom Mahd e ʿOlya wielved a major influenced with secured his own succession and the dismissal and subsequent assassination in of Prime Minister Mirza Taqi Khan Amir Kabir 119 and Naṣer al Din Shah s favorite wife Anis al Dawla brought about the dismissal of the Premier Mirza Hosein Khan Moshir od Dowleh in 1873 Both Persian policymakers as well as foreign diplomats therefore sought support within the royal harem 120 Modern Era Edit The practice of female seclusion witnessed a sharp decline in the early 20th century as a result of education and increased economic opportunity for women as well as Western influences but it is still practiced in some parts of the world such as rural Afghanistan and conservative states of the Persian Gulf region 4 7 Since the early 1980s a rise in conservative Islamic currents has led to a greater emphasis on traditional notions of modesty and gender segregation with some radical preachers in Saudi Arabia calling for a return to seclusion of women and an end of female employment Many working women in conservative societies have adopted hijab as a way of coping with a social environment where men are uncomfortable interacting with women in the public space Some religious women have tried to emulate seclusion practices abandoned by their grandmothers generation in an effort to affirm traditional religious values in the face of pervasive Westernization 7 Eunuchs and slavery Edit nbsp 19th century depiction of the Chief Black Eunuch left a court dwarf middle and the Chief White Eunuch right Eunuchs were probably introduced into Islamic civilizations despite castration being Islamically forbidden through the influence of Persian and Byzantine imperial courts 121 The Ottomans employed eunuchs as guardians of the harem Istanbul s Topkapi Palace housed several hundred eunuchs in the late sixteenth century The head eunuch who guarded the entrance of the harem was known as kizlar agasi 122 Eunuchs were either Nilotic slaves captured in the Nile vicinity and transported through ports in Upper Egypt the Sudan and Abyssinia 123 or European slaves such as Slavs and Franks 121 According to Encyclopedia of Islam castration was prohibited in Islamic law by a sort of tacit consensus and eunuchs were acquired from Christian and Jewish traders 124 Al Muqaddasi identifies a town in Spain where the operation was performed by Jews and the survivors were then sent overseas 124 Encyclopedia Judaica states that Talmudic law counts castration among mutilations entitling a slave to immediate release so that the ability of Jewish slave traders to supply eunuchs to harems depended on whether they could acquire castrated males 125 The dark eunuch was held as the embodiment of the sensual tyranny that held sway in the fantasized Ottoman palace for he had been clipped or completely sheared to make of him the ultimate slave for the supreme ruler 126 In the Ottoman court white eunuchs who were mostly brought from castration centers in Christian Europe and Circassia were responsible for much of the palace administration while black eunuchs who had undergone a more radical form of castration were the only male slaves employed in the royal harem 127 The chief black eunuch or the Kizlar Agha came to acquire a great deal of power within the Ottoman Empire He not only managed every aspect of the Harem women s lives but was also responsible for the education and social etiquette of the princes and young women in the Harem He arranged for all ceremonial events within the Harem including weddings and circumcision parties and even notified women of death sentences when accused of crimes or implicated in intrigues of jealousy and corruption 128 Nineteenth century travelers accounts tell of being served by black eunuch slaves 129 The trade was suppressed in the Ottoman Empire beginning in the mid 19th century and slavery was legally abolished in 1887 or 1888 130 Late 19th century slaves in Palestine included enslaved Africans and the sold daughters of poor Palestinian peasants Both Arabs and Jews owned slaves 130 Circassians and Abazins from North of the Black Sea may also have been involved in the Ottoman slave trade 131 Non Islamic equivalents EditAfrican royal polygamy Edit In Africa south of the Sahara many non Muslim chieftains have traditionally had harems The Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini had six wives for example and members of the Nigerian chieftaincy system have historically had as many as three hundred of them 132 133 Usually African royal polygamy does not expect for the wives to be secluded from men or to be prevented from moving outside of the harem Where this is not the case and the royal wives do live in the harems in isolation they tend to have a ritual significance in their kingdoms traditions The wives of the Oba of Benin City a Nigerian kingdom lived alone in the women s quarters of the Royal Palace they were allowed to receive female visitors but no male ones were allowed to enter the harem and they themselves normally did not leave it and thus were never seen in public 134 As stated above their seclusion was tied to the religion of Benin City which held them to be sacred due to their position as wives of the Oba Aztec Empire Edit In Mesoamerica Aztec ruler Montezuma II who met Hernan Cortes kept 4 000 concubines every member of the Aztec nobility was supposed to have had as many consorts as he could afford 135 Cambodia Edit There were no support for a harem in Buddhist writings However harems have nevertheless been common for Buddhist royal rulers Normally the royal Buddhist harems of South East Asia were not as strict as Muslim harems and did allow the women some limited freedom outside of the harem but the royal harem of Cambodia was particularly severe and secluded women for fear that they would be unfaithful 136 The king of Cambodia had a royal harem consisting of hundreds of women In a custom common for royal rulers in South East Asia girls were sent to the king s harem by powerful local families all over the country as tributes and living acknowledgements of their submission and the king s right to rule 137 The girls sent to the harem became court ladies and given a number of different tasks After every coronation the new king and his main wife and queen would appoint the palace women to different ranks and tasks after the queen came the four wives called preah moneang or preah snang rank then the preah neang wives the neak moneang wives and the neak neang wives 138 Other palace women became servants singers or dancers 138 The harem women could be seen in public only on a few ceremonial occasions but were otherwise not allowed contact with the outside world and communicated with it through go betweens in the shape of female old palace women servants called ak yeay chastum 138 When Cambodia became a French colony the French colonial officials viewed an abolition of the royal harem and an emancipation of the harem women as a part of modernization as well as a way of cutting the costs of the royal court 137 After the death of king Norodom in April 1904 the French officials took control of the royal finances reviewed the allowances of each person in the royal palace and reduced the number of the number of women that the king could support effectively dissolving the harem 137 King Sisowath r 1904 1927 did keep some of the No kang chao concubines he had prior to his accession but no more were added and the custom of giving daughters as tribute to the royal harem had waned by 1913 after this the palace women at least officially were servants and staffed the royal ballet corps 137 India Edit The harem likely existed in Hindu India before the Islamic conquest It is for example mentioned in the Ancient stories of Buddha However it appears to have become more common and strict after the Islamic conquests After the Islamic conquest of India and the loss of Hindu rulership the gender segregation and seclusion of women practiced by the Muslim conquerors were adopted also by Hindus in India where it became known as purdah 139 It is noted that the whole society became more gender segregated after the Muslim conquests onward and men and women more separated in Bengal for example where men and women had previously worked together reaping men started to do the reaping alone and women referred to the more domestic task of husking 139 Male Hindu rulers commonly had harems as well as Muslim rulers in India from the Middle ages until the 20th century One of the factors why upper class Hindu men started to seclude women in harems after the Muslim conquest was the practice of the Muslim conquerors to place the wives of defeated Hindus in their harems and the disruption of the Hindu social system that followed from the mixing of Hindus and Muslims 139 The seclusion of Hindu women was thus a way to preserve the cast 139 Imperial China Edit Main article Imperial Chinese harem system Harem is also the usual English translation of the Chinese language term hougong hou kung Chinese 後宮 lit the palace s behind in reference to the Imperial Chinese Harem Hougong refers to the large palaces for the Chinese emperor s consorts concubines female attendants and eunuchs The women who lived in an emperor s hougong sometimes numbered in the thousands Muscovite Terem Edit In Muscovite Russia the area of aristocratic houses where women were secluded was known as terem 22 However aristocratic Muscovite women were not entirely secluded from mixing with men it was a common custom for the lady of the house to greet a male guest with a welcoming drink ritual when he arrived She was also waited upon male staff as well as female upon retiring to her chamber 140 Western representations EditA distinct imaginary vision of the harem emerged in the West starting from the 17th century when Europeans became aware of Muslim harems housing numerous women In contrast to the medieval European views which conceived Muslim women as victimized but powerful through their charms and deceit during the era of European colonialism the imaginary harem came to represent what Orientalist scholars saw as an abased and subjugated status of women in the Islamic civilization These notions served to cast the West as culturally superior and justify colonial enterprises 4 Under the influence of One Thousand and One Nights the harem was often conceived as a personal brothel where numerous women lounged in suggestive poses directing their strong but oppressed sexuality toward a single man in a form of competitive lust 3 4 A centuries old theme in Western culture is the depiction of European women forcibly taken into Oriental harems as evident for example in the Mozart opera Die Entfuhrung aus dem Serail The Abduction from the Seraglio concerning the attempt of the hero Belmonte to rescue his beloved Konstanze from the seraglio harem of the Pasha Selim or in Voltaire s Candide in chapter 12 of which the old woman relates her experiences of being sold into harems across the Ottoman Empire Much of Verdi s opera Il corsaro takes place in the harem of the Pasha Seid where Gulnara the Pasha s favorite chafes at life in the harem and longs for freedom and true love Eventually she falls in love with the dashing invading corsair Corrado kills the Pasha and escapes with the corsair only to discover that he loves another woman The Lustful Turk was a Victorian novel published in 1828 The novel focuses on a Western woman who is forced into sexual slavery in the harem of the Dey of Algiers Similar themes were expressed in A Night in a Moorish Harem an erotic novel of 1896 when a shipwrecked Western sailor is invited into a harem and engages in illicit sex with nine concubines 141 142 The 1919 novel The Sheik by E M Hull and the 1921 film of the same name are probably the most famous novels from the desert romance genre which flourished after the conclusion of the First World War involving relationships between Western women and Arab sheiks The novel has received strong criticisms for its central plot element the idea that rape leads to love i e forced seduction 143 Other criticisms have been directed at ideas closely related to the central rape plot that for women sexual submission is a necessary and natural condition and that rape is excused by marriage Historians have also criticized the orientalist portrayal of the Arabs in the novel and the film 144 143 145 146 147 148 Angelique and the Sultan part of the Angelique historical novel series by Anne and Serge Golon and later made into a film has the theme of a 17th Century French noblewoman captured by pirates and taken into the harem of the King of Morocco Thereupon she stabs the King with his own dagger when he tries to have sex with her and stages a daring escape The Russian writer Leonid Solovyov adapting the Middle Eastern and Central Asian folktales of Nasreddin into his book Vozmutitel spokojstviya English translations under the varying titles The Beggar in the Harem Impudent Adventures in Old Bukhara 1956 and The Tale of Hodja Nasreddin Disturber of the Peace 2009 149 added prominently the theme of Nasreddin s beloved being taken into the harem of the Emir of Bukhara and the protagonist s efforts to extract her from there a theme completely absent from the original folktales A Study in Scarlet the first of Conan Doyle s Sherlock Holmes mysteries applies many of the above conventions to the historically different phenomenon of Mormon polygamous marriage In the wild days of the early Mormon settlement of Utah the protagonist s beloved is kidnapped and placed against her will in the harem of a Mormon elder where she dies Having failed to rescue her the protagonist is bent on deadly revenge on the kidnappers which is the background to the mystery solved by Holmes In H G Wells The War in the Air civilization breaks down due to global war With the world reverting to barbarism a strongman takes over a town and among other things starts forcing young women into a harem which he is building up The protagonist must fight and kill him in order to save his girlfriend from being included Science Fiction writer Poul Anderson included among the adventures of his Galactic Secret Agent Dominic Flandry an episode where one of Flandry s love interests is forcibly taken into the harem of the corrupt planetary governor Harald and must be rescued The far future harem described follows the well established literary depictions of a harem except that the place of the traditional eunuchs is taken by extraterrestrials Image gallery Edit Many Western artists have depicted their imaginary conceptions of the harem Depictions of Harems nbsp The Pasha in His Harem by Francois Boucher c 1735 1739 nbsp Scene from the Harem Jean Baptiste van Mour 1st half of the 18th century nbsp Scene in a Harem by Guardi nbsp The Harem as imagined by European artist The Dormitory of the Concubines by Ignace Melling 1811 nbsp Harem scene by Dominique Ingres nbsp The Reception John Frederick Lewis 1805 1875 English nbsp Scene from the Harem by Fernand Cormon c 1877 nbsp Harem Scene Quintana Olleras 1851 1919 Spanish nbsp Belle of Nelson whiskey poster 1878 based on a harem scene by Jean Leon Gerome nbsp In the harem Lehnert amp Landrock postcard 1900s 1910s nbsp The Virgin of Stamboul 1920 film posterSee also EditPeople Edit Concubine Eunuch Odalisque PilegeshPlaces Edit Arcadia utopia Gynaeceum Turkish bath hammam Ōoku Seraglio ZenanaOther Edit Culture of the Ottoman Empire Harem genre Hypergamy Imperial Chinese harem system Ottoman Imperial Harem Islamic views on concubinage Kippumjo Mughal Harem History of concubinage in the Muslim world Women only spaceBibliography EditCitations Edit a b Wehr amp Cowan 1976 pp 171 172 Harem at WordReference com a b c d Cartwright Jones 2013 Harem a b c d e f g Anwar 2004 Harem Harem in Merriam Webster Dictionary Haslauer 2005 Harem a b c d e f g h i j Doumato 2009 Seclusion Madar 2011 a b c Britannica 2002 Quataert 2005 p 152 a b c d e f g Patel 2013 Seclusion harem Dictionary com Unabridged Online n d Retrieved 2017 04 04 Betzig 1994 Ahmed 1992 p 103 a b Ahmed 1992 pp 26 28 Ahmed 1992 p 27 a b Schi ck Irvi n Cemi l 2009 Space Harem Overview In Suad Joseph ed Encyclopedia of Women amp Islamic Cultures Brill doi 10 1163 1872 5309 ewic EWICCOM 0283 Mitchell John Malcolm 1911 Harem Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed pp 950 952 a b c d e f g h i j k l m A Shapur Shahbazi 2012 HAREM i IN ANCIENT IRAN Encyclopaedia Iranica a b c Silke Roth Johannes Gutenberg Universitat Mainz UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology 2012 escholarship org a b c A K Grayson Assyrian and Babylonian Chronicles Locust Valley New York 1975 a b c Fay 2012 pp 38 39 Edmund Burke Nejde Yaghoubian 2006 Struggle and Survival in the Modern Middle East University of California Press p 48 ISBN 9780520246614 Pomeroy Sarah B Goddesses whores wives and slaves women in classical antiquity Schocken Books New York 1995 Lynda Garland Byzantine Women Varieties of Experience 800 1200 Herodotus 3 69 Herodotus 1 136 Herodotus 3 134 Diodorus Siclulus 17 38 1 Brosius 1996 pp 70 82 Plutarch Artoxerxes 27 Diodorus 17 77 6 Esther 2 3 Herodotus 8 105 Plutarch Themistocles 26 4 Xenophon Cyropaedia 4 6 11 5 1 1 5 2 9 39 Herodotus 3 97 Herodotus 4 19 32 a b Brosius Maria 2000 WOMEN i In Pre Islamic Persia Encyclopaedia Iranica Ctesias frg 16 56 in Jacoby Fragmente III C p 471 Brosius 1996 pp 83 93 Heracleides of Cyme apud Athenaeus 514b Brosius 1996 pp 94 97 Plutarch Moralia 140B Justin 41 3 Lerouge Ch 2007 L image des Parthes dans le monde greco romain Stuttgart Plutarch Crassus 21 6 Christensen L Iran p 233 Kumkum Chatterjee Purdah In Colin Blakemore Sheila Jennett eds The Oxford Companion to the Body p 570 Purdah refers to the various modes of shielding women from the sight primarily of men other than their husbands or men of their natal family in the South Asian subcontinent The purdah as veiling was possibly influenced by Islamic custom But in the sense of seclusion and the segregation of men and women purdah predates the Islamic invasions of India Upinder Singh 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th century Pearson Education p 332 ISBN 978 81 317 1677 9 Ahmed 1992 pp 112 115 Keddie Nikki Spring 1990 The Past and Present of Women in the Muslim World Journal of World History 1 1 77 108 Siddiqui Mona 2006 Veil In Jane Dammen McAuliffe ed Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan Brill Quran 33 53 Translated by Yusuf Ali a b Mernissi Fatima Mary Jo Lakeland 2003 The forgotten queens of Islam Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 579868 5 a b Morony Michael G Iraq after the Muslim conquest Gorgias Press LLC 2005 a b Abbott Nabia Two queens of Baghdad mother and wife of Harun al Rashid University of Chicago Press 1946 Ahmed 1992 p 85 Ahmed 1992 p 87 Qutbuddin Tahera 2006 Women Poets PDF In Josef W Meri ed Medieval Islamic Civilization An Encyclopedia Vol II New York NY Routledge pp 865 867 ISBN 978 0 415 96690 0 Archived from the original PDF on 7 February 2014 Retrieved 29 March 2015 Ali Samer M 2013 Medieval Court Poetry In Natana J Delong Bas ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Islam and Women Vol I Oxford Oxford University Press pp 651 654 652 Scales Peter C 1993 The Fall of the Caliphate of Cordoba Berbers and Andalusis in Conflict Brill p 66 ISBN 9789004098688 Man John 1999 Atlas of the Year 1000 Harvard University Press p 72 ISBN 9780674541870 a b Ruiz Ana 2007 Vibrant Andalusia The Spice of Life in Southern Spain Algora Publishing p 35 ISBN 9780875865416 a b c Barton Simon 2015 Conquerors Brides and Concubines Interfaith Relations and Social Power in Medieval Iberia University of Pennsylvania Press p 1 ISBN 9780812292114 Ismati Masoma 1987 The position and role of Afghan women in Afghan society from the late 18th to the 19th century Kabul a b Emadi Hafizullah Repression resistance and women in Afghanistan Praeger Westport Conn 2002 a b c Maryna Kravets Blacks beyond the Black Sea Eunuchs in the Crimean Khanate a b c d e f g h i j k Krolikowska Jedlinska Natalia 2018 Law and Division of Power in the Crimean Khanate 1532 1774 With Special Reference to the Reign of Murad Giray 1678 1683 Brill ISBN 9789004384323 a b c d Maryna Kravets From Nomads Tent to Garden Palace Evolution of a Chinggisid House in the Crimea a b c d e f g h i Kenneth M Cuno Modernizing Marriage Family Ideology and Law in Nineteenth and Early Morocco poll choice or facade BBC News September 1 2007 Some magical Moroccan records Guinness World Records Guinness World Records Limited March 3 2008 Archived from the original on March 13 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 a b Bekkaoui Khalid White women captives in North Africa Narratives of enslavement 1735 1830 Palgrave Macmillan Basingstoke 2010 Braithwaite John The history of the revolutions in the Empire of Morocco upon the death of the late Emperor Muley Ishmael being a most exact journal of what happen d in those parts in the last and part of the present year Written by Captain Braithwaite With a map of the country engraven by Mr Senex printed by J Darby and T Browne London 1729 Zeydana زيدانة ضعف أمامها مولاي إسماعيل قاطع الرؤوس ودفعته إلى قتل ضرتها وابنهما فبراير كوم موقع مغربي إخباري شامل يتجدد على مدار الساعة 2014 01 01 Retrieved 2021 12 12 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link All my 888 children Psychology Today Retrieved 10 April 2018 Is it physically possible for a man to sire over 800 children Seriously Science discovermagazine com 18 February 2014 Retrieved 10 April 2018 Some magical Moroccan records Guinness World Records Guinness World Records Limited 3 March 2008 Archived from the original on 13 March 2010 Retrieved 20 March 2010 Elisabeth Oberzaucher Karl Grammer 2014 The Case of Moulay Ismael Fact or Fancy PLOS ONE 9 2 e85292 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 985292O doi 10 1371 journal pone 0085292 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 3925083 PMID 24551034 Sharma Anjali 28 November 2013 Inside the harem of the mughals The New Indian Express Lal K S 1988 The Mughal Harem New Delhi Aditya Prakashan pp 14 52 55 ISBN 8185179034 Abu l Fazl Allami 1977 Phillot Lieut Colonel D C ed The Ain i Akbari Trans H Blochman Delhi Munishram Manoharlal pp 45 47 ISBN 9788186142240 Hambly Gavin 1998 Armed Women Retainers in the Zenanas of Indo Muslim Rulers The case of Bibi Fatima Women in the medieval Islamic world Power patronage and piety New York St Martin s Press pp 431 433 ISBN 0312210574 Nath 1990 p 64 Ansary 2009 p 228 Goodwin 1997 p 127 Duben amp Behar 2002 p 223 Peirce Leslie 1988 Shifting Boundaries Images of Ottoman Royal Women in the 16th and 17th Centuries Critical Matrix Princeton Working Papers in Women s Studies Peirce Leslie 1993 The Imperial Harem Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire Oxford University Press pp 105 ISBN 0 19 508677 5 While Hurrem was the woman of the Ottoman dynasty best known in Europe it is Kosem who is remembered by the Turks as the most powerful Douglas Arthur Howard The official History of Turkey Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 30708 3 p 195 Ilhan Niaz 2014 Old World Empires Cultures of Power and Governance in Eurasia Routledge p 296 ISBN 978 1317913788 Dash Mike 22 March 2012 The Ottoman Empire s Life or Death Race Smithsonian Magazine a b c d Sussan Babaie Kathryn Babayan Ina Baghdiantz MacCabe Mussumeh Farhad Slaves of the Shah New Elites of Safavid Iran Bloomsbury Academic 2004 Ricks Thomas 2001 Slaves and slave trading in Shi i Iran AD 1500 1900 Journal of Asian and African Studies 36 407 18 Foran John 1992 The Long Fall of the Safavid Dynasty Moving beyond the Standard Views International Journal of Middle East Studies 24 2 281 304 doi 10 1017 S0020743800021577 JSTOR 164299 S2CID 154912398 Taheri Abolghasem 1970 Political and Social History of Iran from Teymur s Death until the Death of Shah Abbas II Tehran Habibi in Persian Hamid Usman 2017 Slaves in the name Only Free Women as Royal Concubines in Late Timurid Iran In Concubines and Courtesans Women and Slavery in Islamic History Edited by Matthew S Gordon and Kathryn A Hain New York Oxford University Press a b Sherley Anthony Robert Sherley and Thomas Sherley 1983 The Travelogue of the Sherley Brothers Translated by Avans Tehran Negah in Persian Chardin John 1993 Chardin s Travels in Persia Translated by Eghbal Yaghmayi Tehran Toos Publication in Persian a b c d Savory 1977 p 424 a b Roemer 1986 pp 277 278 Roemer 1986 p 330 a b Savory 1986 p 355 Savory 1986 p 363 a b Roemer 1986 p 307 a b c d Lambton A K S K h aṣi II In Persia In Bearman et al 1978 p 1092 a b Sophie Ibbotson Max Lovell Hoare Uzbekistan a b Khan Urf The Diary of a Slave London 1936 41 ʿAzod al Dawla 1997 p 30 Dust ʿAli Khan Moʿayyer al Mamalek Yaddastha i az zen dagani e ḵoṣuṣi e Naṣer al Din Sah Tehran 1361 S 1982 Nashat G ANiS AL DAWLA Encyclopaedia Iranica II 1 pp 74 76 Retrieved 30 December 2012 ʿAzod al Dawla 1997 p 336 FATḤ ʿALi SHAH QAJAR Encyclopaedia Iranica 2012 ʿAzod al Dawla 1997 p 24 ʿAzod al Dawla 1997 pp 43 44 ʿAzod al Dawla 1997 pp 43 49 a b BARDA and BARDA DARI iv From the Mongols to the abolition of slavery Encyclopedia Iranica ʿAzod al Dawla 1997 p 44 ʿAzod al Dawla 1997 p 46 ʿAzod al Dawla 1997 p page needed Abbas Amanat Pivot of the Universe Nasir al Din Shah Qajar and the Iranian Monarchy 1831 1896 Berkeley and Los Angeles 1997 HAREM ii IN THE QAJAR PERIOD Encyclopedia Iranica a b Marzolph 2004 Rodriguez 1997 Abir Mordechai 1968 Ethiopia the era of the princes the challenge of Islam and re unification of the Christian Empire 1769 1855 Praeger pp 57 60 ISBN 9780582645172 a b Pellat Ch Lambton A K S Orhonlu Cengiz K h aṣi In Bearman et al 1978 Arcadius Kahan Economic History Encyclopaedia Judaica Vol 6 Lad Jateen 2010 Panoptic Bodies Black Eunuchs as Guardians of the Topkapi Harem In Booth Marilyn Harem Histories Envisioning Places and Living Spaces Duke University Press pp 136 137 ISBN 978 0822348696 Ronald Segal 2002 Islam s Black Slaves The Other Black Diaspora Macmillan p 109 ISBN 9780374527976 Penzer N M 2005 The harem inside the Grand Seraglio of the Turkish sultans Mineola NY Dover ISBN 978 0486440040 OCLC 57211338 Porter Josias 2005 1889 Through Samaria to Galilee and the Jordan Scenes of the Early Life and Labors of Our Lord Kessinger Publishing p 242 a b Joseph Glass Ruth Kark Sarah La Preta A Slave in Jerusalem Jerusalem Quarterly 34 41 50 Faroqhi 2006 p page needed Toyin Falola and Matt D Childs 2005 The Yoruba Diaspora in the Atlantic World pp 64 67 Zulu King s Sixth Wife Needs Palace BBC September 5 2012 Retrieved May 4 2020 Ogungbile David O African Indigenous Religious Traditions in Local and Global Contexts p 317 322 Sex in History Archived 2009 02 21 at the Wayback Machine March 1994 Michigan Today The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History p 58 a b c d Jacobsen Trudy Lost goddesses the denial of female power in Cambodian history NIAS Press Copenhagen 2008 p 152 56 a b c Jacobsen Trudy Lost goddesses the denial of female power in Cambodian history NIAS Press Copenhagen 2008 p 92 94 a b c d Helen Tierney Women s Studies Encyclopedia p 709 Von Herberstein Sigismund 1969 Description of Moscow and Muscovy 1557 New York Barnes and Noble pp 40 41 Patrick J Kearney A history of erotic literature Parragon 1982 ISBN 1 85813 198 7 p 107 Gaetan Brulotte John Phillips Encyclopedia of Erotic Literature CRC Press 2006 ISBN 1 57958 441 1 p 441 a b Michelakis Pantelis and Maria Wyke eds The Ancient World in Silent Cinema The Sheik University of Pennsylvania Press website Accessed Oct 20 2015 Sheiks amp Terrorists Reclaiming Identity Dismantling Arab Stereotypes www arabstereotypes org Retrieved 8 September 2016 Dajani Najat Z J 2000 Arabs in Hollywood Orientalism in film Thesis University of British Columbia doi 10 14288 1 0099552 Retrieved 8 September 2016 Hsu Ming Teo 4 August 2010 Historicizing The Sheik Comparisons of the British Novel and the American Film Journal of Popular Romance Studies Retrieved 8 September 2016 Hsu Ming Teo 2012 Desert Passions Orientalism and Romance Novels University of Texas Press ISBN 9780292739390 Solovyov Leonid 2009 The Tale of Hodja Nasreddin Disturber of the Peace Toronto Canada Translit Publishing ISBN 978 0 9812695 0 4 Sources Edit ʿAzod al Dawla Solṭan Aḥmad Mirza 1997 1376 S ʿAbd al Ḥosayn Navaʾi ed Tariḵ e ʿazodi Tehran a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ahmed Leila 1992 Women and Gender in Islam New Haven Yale University Press Ansary Tamim 2009 Destiny disrupted a history of the world through Islamic eyes New York PublicAffairs p 228 ISBN 9781586486068 Anwar Etin 2004 Harem In Richard C Martin ed Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World MacMillan Reference USA Bearman P Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P eds 1978 Encyclopaedia of Islam 2nd ed Brill Betzig Laura March 1994 Sex in History Michigan Today University of Michigan Archived from the original on 11 September 2013 Britannica 2002 Harem Encyclopaedia Britannica Brosius Maria 1996 Women in ancient Persia 559 331 BC Oxford a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Cartwright Jones Catherine 2013 Harem The Oxford Encyclopedia of Islam and Women Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref oiso 9780199764464 001 0001 ISBN 9780199764464 Doumato Eleanor Abdella 2009 Seclusion In John L Esposito ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World Oxford Oxford University Press Duben Alan Behar Cem 2002 Istanbul Households Marriage Family and Fertility 1880 1940 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521523035 Fay Mary Ann 2012 Unveiling the Harem Elite Women and the Paradox of Seclusion in Eighteenth Century Cairo Syracuse University Press ISBN 9780815651703 Fisher William Bayne Jackson Peter Lockhart Lawrence eds 1986 The Cambridge History of Iran Vol 6 Cambridge University Press Goodwin Godfrey 1997 The Private World of Ottoman Women London Saqi Books ISBN 9780863567513 Haslauer Elfriede 2005 Harem The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780195102345 001 0001 ISBN 9780195102345 Faroqhi Suraiya 2006 The Ottoman Empire and the World Around It Madar Heather 2011 Before the Odalisque Renaissance Representations of Elite Ottoman Women Early Modern Women 6 1 41 doi 10 1086 EMW23617325 S2CID 164805076 Marzolph Ulrich 2004 Eunuchs The Arabian Nights Encyclopedia ABC CLIO Nath Renuka 1990 Notable Mughal and Hindu women in the 16th and 17th centuries A D New Delhi Inter India Publ ISBN 9788121002417 Patel Youshaa 2013 Seclusion The Oxford Encyclopedia of Islam and Women Oxford Oxford University Press Quataert Donald 2005 The Ottoman Empire 1700 1922 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521839105 Rodriguez J P 1997 Ottoman Empire The Historical Encyclopedia of World Slavery ABC CLIO Roemer H R The Safavid Period In Fisher Jackson amp Lockhart 1986 Savory R M 1977 Safavid Persia In P M Holt Ann K S Lambton Bernard Lewis eds The Cambridge History of Islam The Central Islamic Lands from Pre Islamic Times to the First World War Vol 1A Cambridge University Press Savory R M The Safavid Administrative System In Fisher Jackson amp Lockhart 1986 Wehr Hans Cowan J Milton 1976 A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic 3rd ed Spoken Language Services Further reading Edit Ilhan Aksit The Mystery of the Ottoman Harem Aksit Kultur Turizm Yayinlari ISBN 975 7039 26 8 Alev Lytle Croutier Harem The World Behind the Veil reprint ed Abbeville Publishing Group Abbeville Press Inc 1998 ISBN 1 55859 159 1 first published by Abbeville Press in 1989 Alev Lytle Croutier Harem The World Behind the Veil 25th anniversary edition New York Abbeville Press 2014 ISBN 978 0 7892 1206 1 Alan Duben Cem Behar Richard Smith Series editor Jan De Vries Series editor Paul Johnson Series editor Keith Wrightson Series editor Istanbul Households Marriage Family and Fertility 1880 1940 new ed Cambridge University Press 2002 ISBN 0 521 52303 6 John Freely Inside the Seraglio Private Lives of the Sultans in Istanbul The Sultan s Harem new ed Penguin Non Classics 2001 ISBN 0 14 027056 6 Shapi Kaziev Concubines The secret life of the eastern harem ISBN 978 5 906842 39 8 Kishori Saran Lal 1988 The Mughal Harem New Delhi Aditya Prakashan ISBN 978 81 85179 03 2 Reina Lewis Rethinking Orientalism Women Travel And The Ottoman Harem Rutgers University Press 2004 ISBN 9780813535432 Fatima Mernissi Dreams of Trespass Tales of a Harem Girlhood Perseus 1994 Leslie P Peirce 1993 The Imperial Harem Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 508677 5 N M Penzer The Harem Inside the Grand Seraglio of the Turkish Sultans Dover Publications 2005 ISBN 0 486 44004 4 reissue of The Harem An Account of the Institution as it Existed in the Palace of the Turkish Sultans with a History of the Grand Seraglio from its Foundation to the Present Time 1936 M Saalih Harem Girl A Harem Girl s Journal reprint ed Delta 2002 ISBN 0 595 31300 0 erotic novel Royal French Women in the Ottoman Sultans Harem The Political Uses of Fabricated Accounts from the Sixteenth to the Twenty first CenturyExternal links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Harems nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Harem Harem in the Ottoman Empire English Some paintings of harems Popular culture depictions of harems Harem Novel From Asli Sancar Godwin Parke 1879 Harem The American Cyclopaedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harem amp oldid 1172927519, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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