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Ibrahim of the Ottoman Empire

Ibrahim (/ˌɪbrəˈhm/; Ottoman Turkish: ابراهيم; Turkish: İbrahim; 5 November 1615 – 18 August 1648) was the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1640 until 1648. He was born in Constantinople, the son of Sultan Ahmed I by Kösem Sultan, an ethnic Greek originally named Anastasia.[1][2][3]

Ibrahim
Ottoman Caliph
Amir al-Mu'minin
Kayser-i Rûm
Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques
Sultan of the Ottoman Empire (Padishah)
Reign9 February 1640 – 8 August 1648
PredecessorMurad IV
SuccessorMehmed IV
Born5 November 1615
Topkapi Palace, Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
(present-day Istanbul, Turkey)
Died18 August 1648(1648-08-18) (aged 32)
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
Burial
Hagia Sophia, Istanbul
Spouses
Issue
Names
Ibrahim bin Ahmed
DynastyOttoman
FatherAhmed I
MotherKösem Sultan
ReligionSunni Islam
Tughra

He was called Ibrahim the Mad (Turkish: Deli İbrahim) due to his mental condition and behavior.[4] However, historian Scott Rank notes that his opponents spread rumors of the sultan's insanity, and some historians suggest he was more incompetent than mad. [5]

Early life

Ibrahim was born on 5 November 1615, the son of Sultan Ahmed I and his Haseki Sultan and perhaps legal wife, Kösem Sultan. When Ibrahim was 2, his father suddenly died, and Ibrahim's uncle Mustafa I became the new sultan. By that time, Kösem Sultan and her children, including young Ibrahim, had been sent to the Old Palace. After the succession of his brother Murad IV, Ibrahim was confined in the Kafes, which affected his health. Ibrahim's other brothers Şehzade Bayezid, Şehzade Suleiman and Şehzade Kasım had been executed by the order of Sultan Murad IV, and because of that, Ibrahim feared that he was next in the line. However, after his brother's death, Ibrahim became the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire.

Reign

Accession

One of the most notorious Ottoman Sultans, Ibrahim spent all of his early life in the close confinement of the Kafes before succeeding his brother Murad IV (1623–40) in 1640. Two of their brothers had been executed by Murad, and Ibrahim lived in terror of being the next to die. His life was saved only by the intercession of Kösem Sultan, mother of Ibrahim and Murad.[6]

After Murad's death, Ibrahim was left the sole surviving prince of the dynasty. Upon being asked by Grand Vizier Kemankeş Kara Mustafa Pasha to assume the Sultanate, Ibrahim suspected Murad was still alive and plotting to trap him. It took the combined persuasion of Kösem and the Grand Vizier, and personal examination of his brother's dead body, to make Ibrahim accept the throne.

Early years as the sultan

During the early years of Ibrahim's reign, he retreated from politics and turned increasingly to his harem for comfort and pleasure. During his sultanate, the harem achieved new levels of luxury in perfumes, textiles and jewellery. His love of women and furs led him to have a room entirely lined with lynx and sable. Because of his infatuation with furs, the French dubbed him "Le Fou de Fourrures." Kösem Sultan kept her son in check by supplying him with virgins she personally purchased from the slave market, as well as overweight women, for whom he craved.[7][8]

An account of his reign is given by Demetrius Cantemir. He wrote of Ibrahim:

“As Murat was wholly addicted to wine, so was Ibrahim to lust. They say he spent all his time in sensual pleasure and when nature was exhausted with the frequent repetition of venereal delights he endeavoured to restore it with potions or commanded a beautiful virgin richly habited to be brought to him by his mother, the Grand Vezir, or some other great man. He covered the walls of his chamber with looking glasses so that his love battles might seem to be enacted in several places at once. He ordered his pillows to be stuffed with rich furs so that the bed designed for the Imperial pleasure might be the more precious. Nay, he put sable skins under him in a notion that his lust might be flamed if his love toil were rendered more difficult by the glowing of his knees.”[9]

Kara Mustafa Pasha remained as Grand Vizier during the first four years of Ibrahim's reign, keeping the Empire stable. With the treaty of Szön (15 March 1642) he renewed peace with Austria and during the same year recovered Azov from the Cossacks. Kara Mustafa also stabilized the currency with coinage reform, sought to stabilize the economy with a new land-survey, reduced the number of Janissaries, removed non-contributing members from the state payrolls, and curbed the power of disobedient provincial governors. During these years, Ibrahim showed concern with properly ruling the empire, as shown in his handwritten communications with the Grand Vizier.[10] Kara Mustafa in turn wrote a memo on public affairs to coach his inexperienced master. Ibrahim's replies to Kara Mustafa's reports show he had actually received a good education. Ibrahim often traveled in disguise, inspecting the markets of Istanbul and ordering the Grand Vizier to correct any problems he observed.[11]

Decadence and crisis

Ibrahim was often distracted by recurring headaches and attacks of physical weakness, perhaps caused by the trauma of his early years.[12] Since he was the only surviving male member of the Ottoman dynasty, Ibrahim was encouraged by his mother Kösem Sultan to distract himself with harem girls and soon fathered three future sultans: Mehmed IV, Suleiman II and Ahmed II. The distractions of the harem allowed Kösem Sultan to gain power and rule in his name, yet even she fell victim to the Sultan's disfavor and left the Imperial Palace.[13]

Ibrahim came under the influence of various unsuitable people, such as mistress of the imperial harem Şekerpare Hatun and the charlatan Cinci Hoca, who pretended to cure the Sultan's physical ailments. The latter, along with his allies Silahdar Yusuf Agha and Sultanzade Mehmed Pasha, enriched themselves with bribes and eventually usurped enough power to secure the execution of Grand Vizier Ḳara Muṣṭafā. Cinci Hoca became Kadiasker (High Judge) of Anatolia, Yusuf Agha was made Kapudan Pasha (Grand Admiral) and Sultanzade Mehmed became Grand Vizier.[12]

In 1644, Maltese corsairs seized a ship carrying high-status pilgrims to Mecca. Since the pirates had docked in Crete, Kapudan Yusuf Pasha encouraged Ibrahim to invade the island. This began a long war with Venice that lasted 24 years—Crete would not completely fall under Ottoman domination until 1669. In spite of the decline of La Serenissima, Venetian ships won victories throughout the Aegean, capturing Tenedos (1646) and blockading the Dardanelles. Kapudan Yusuf enjoyed temporary success in conquering Canea, starting a jealous rivalry with Nevesinli Salih Pasha the recently-installed Grand Vizier. The rivalry led to Yusuf's execution (January 1646) and the Grand Vizier's deposition (December 1645).

With his cronies in power, Ibrahim's extravagant tendencies went unchecked. He raised eight concubines to the favored position of haseki (royal consort), granting each riches and land.[14] After legally marrying the concubine Telli Haseki, he ordered the palace of Ibrahim Pasha to be carpeted in sable furs and given to her.[12]

Deposition and execution

Mass discontent was caused by the Venetian blockade of the Dardanelles—which created scarcities in the capital—and the imposition of heavy taxes during a war economy to pay for Ibrahim's whims. In 1647 the Grand Vizier Salih Pasha, Kösem Sultan, and the şeyhülislam Abdürrahim Efendi unsuccessfully plotted to depose the sultan and replace him with one of his sons. Salih Pasha was executed, and Kösem Sultan was exiled from the harem.[14]

The next year, the Janissaries and members of the ulema revolted. On 8 August 1648, corrupt Grand Vizier Aḥmed Pasha was strangled and torn to shreds by an angry mob, gaining the posthumous nickname "Hezarpare" ("thousand pieces").[12] On the same day, Ibrahim was seized and imprisoned in Topkapı Palace.[13] Kösem gave consent to her son's fall, saying "In the end he will leave neither you nor me alive. We will lose control of the government. The whole society is in ruins. Have him removed from the throne immediately."[15]

Ibrahim's six-year-old son Meḥmed was made sultan. The new grand vizier, Ṣofu Meḥmed Pasha, petitioned the sheikh ul-Islam for a fatwā sanctioning Ibrahim's execution. It was granted, with the message "if there are two caliphs, kill one of them." Kösem also gave her consent. Two executioners were sent for; one being the chief executioner who had served under Ibrahim.[16] As the executioners drew closer, it was reported that Ibrahim's last words were: "Is there no one among those who have eaten my bread who will take pity on me and protect me? These cruel men have come to kill me. Mercy! Mercy!"[17] As his mother, Kösem Sultan, and officials watched from a palace window, Ibrahim was strangled on 18 August 1648. His death was the second regicide in the history of the Ottoman Empire.

Family

In addition to his eight Haseki Sultans (the first and only certain case of the coexistence of several Haseki at the same time and a symptom of the loss of prestige and exclusivity of the title which began under Murad IV) he had a large number of concubines, of which only some are known. However, only Şivekar Sultan and Hümaşah Sultan, who also became his legal wife, had any real political power or influence over the sultan. Ibrahim was particularly famous for his brief but intense love obsessions, often with women who were not part of his harem and that he had his agents commandeer around the city.[citation needed]

Other anecdotes related to his harem are Ibrahim's supposed passion for obese women, which would have led Şivekar, called "the fattest woman at Constantinople", to become his favorite,[18][19] and the story that he drowned 280 concubines in his harem because of a rumor that one of them had had a forbidden relationship with a man, an anecdote however rejected by several historians as invented or exaggerated.[20][21]

Consorts

 
Ibrahim I by Arolsen Klebeband

Ibrahim I had eight Haseki Sultan, the last of whom was also his legal wife, plus a number of know and unknown minor concubines:[22][23][24][25]

All of Ibrahim's Hasekis received 1,000 aspers a day except for Saliha Dilaşub Sultan who received 1,300 aspers a day.[26] Ibrahim gifted the incomes of Bolu, Hamid, Nicopolis Sanjaks, and Syria Eyalet to Saliha Dilaşub, Mahienver, Saçbağlı, and Şivekar Sultans respectively.[27] He also lavished the treasury of Egypt upon Saçbağlı and Hümaşah Sultans,[28] and presented the Ibrahim Pasha Palace to Hümaşah. His know consorts were:

  • Turhan Sultan, BaşHaseki (First Haseki) and mother, Valide Sultan and regent of Mehmed IV. She was of Russian origin and her original name was Nadya. After her son's accession to the throne, she protected Ibrahim's remaining children from execution, resulting in the definitive abandonment of the Law of Fraticide;[29]
  • Saliha Dilaşub Sultan, also called Aşub Sultan or Aşube Sultan. She was the second Haseki and mother and Valide Sultan of Suleiman II, she was Ibrahim's first concubine. She was of Serbian origin and her original name was Katarina;[29]
  • Muazzez Sultan, third Haseki, and the mother of Ahmed II. She premored her son and therefore was never Valide Sultan;[29]
  • Ayşe Sultan, the fourth Haseki, she was entitled such in January 1645. She was of Tatar origins;[29][30]
  • Mahienver Sultan, fifth Haseki, she is mentioned for the first time on May 2, 1646. She was of Circassian origin;[29]
  • Saçbağlı Sultan,[28] sixth Haseki, she was of Circassian origin and the original name was Leyla;
  • Şivekar Sultan,[29] seventh Haseki, she was called "the fattest woman in the capital" and was one of only two politically active spouses of Ibrahim. She was of Armenian descent and her original name was Maria;
  • Hümaşah Sultan, Eighth Haseki and Ibrahim's only legal wife, after the wedding she was nicknamed Telli Haseki. She was of Georgian or Circassian descent. She is one of only two politically active spouses. Years after Ibrahim's death, in 1672 she was remarried with the Kaymakam of Constantinople, Ibrahim Paşah;[29]
  • Zafire Hatun. Called also Zarife Hatun. Ibrahim's Georgian concubine while he still Şehzade, she became pregnant in violation of harem rules. Kösem Sultan, Ibrahim's mother, handed her over to the kızları agasi Sümbül Ağa to drown her, but the man hid her in his house, where she gave birth to her son. Having discovered this, Kösem exiled them to Egypt, but the ship was attacked. Whether the child was saved and was taken to Malta, it is not known what happened to Zafire;
  • Hubyar Hatun. One of the concubines Ibrahim became infatuated with for a while. She was then released and given in marriage to Ibrahim Ağa;
  • Şekerpare Hatun. First concubine and then musahibe (companion), treasurer and hostess of the harem;
  • Sakizula Hatun. Minor concubine;
  • The wife of the Grand Vizier Hezarpare Ahmed Paşah. Falling in love with her, Ibrahim forced her to divorce her husband. In return, both Ahmed Paşah and his son received a daughter of Ibrahim as a wife, respectively the little Beyhan Sultan, at the time one year (according to some sources she was later raised by his ex-wife), and Safiye Sultan, the eldest;
  • The daughter of Şeyhülislam Muid Ahmed Efendi. According to A.L. Castellan, Ibrahim asked her for his harem, but her father objected, so the sultan had her kidnapped from the baths, and then sent her home after some time.

Sons

Ibrahim I had at least ten sons:[31][32][33][34][35][36]

  • Şehzade (Fülan) (Before 1640, Constantinople - ?) - with Zafire Hatun. Conceived while Ibrahim was still Şehzade in violation of the rules of the harem, Kösem Sultan, mother of Ibrahim, ordered that the pregnant mother be drowned. She was saved from the kızları agasi and gave birth to a son, who became known as "the bastard of the black eunuch". Having discovered this, Kösem exiled the three to Egypt, but the ship was attacked. The child was taken to Malta, where he was proclaimed "Ottoman prince". He later converted to Christianity and preached under the name of "Ottoman Father". According to the Venetian ambassador, history was among the factors that tended the relations between the Ottoman Empire and the Most Serene Republic of Venice in 1645.
  • Mehmed IV (2 January 1642, Constantinople – 6 January 1693, Edirne) – with Turhan Sultan. He became sultan at six, after his father was deposed and killed.
  • Suleiman II (15 April 1642, Constantinople – 22 June 1691, Edirne) – with Aşub Sultan. Three months younger than Mehmed, he was therefore locked up in Kafes for most of his life when his half-brother ascended the throne. He eventually became sultan after Mehmed IV.
  • Ahmed II (25 February 1643, Constantinople – 6 February 1695, Edirne) – with Muazzez Sultan. He spent most of his life locked up in the Kafes. He became sultan after Suleiman II.
  • Şehzade Murad (April 1643, Constantinople – 16 January 1644, Constantinople).
  • Şehzade Selim (19 March 1644, Constantinople – September 1669, Constantinople or Edirne).
  • Şehzade Osman (August 1644, Constantinople – 1646, Constantinople).
  • Şehzade Bayezid (1 May 1646, Constantinople – August 1647, Constantinople).
  • Şehzade Cihangir (14 December 1646, Constantinople – 1 December 1648, Constantinople) - with Şivekar Sultan;
  • Şehzade Orhan (October 1648, Constantinople – January 1650, Constantinople) – with Hümaşah Sultan.

At one point, Ibrahim took a great liking to the infant son of a slave woman, to the extent of preferring the unrelated child to his son Mehmed. Turhan, Mehmed's mother, grew extremely jealous and vented her anger to Ibrahim, who flew into a rage and grabbed Mehmed from Turhan's arms and threw him into a pool. Mehmed would have drowned if a servant had not rescued him. He was left with a permanent scar on his forehead.[37]

Daughters

Ibrahim I had at least nine daughters:[38]

  • Safiye Sultan (1640, Constantinople - ?) - perhaps with Saliha Dilaşub Sultan. She married Baki Bey, son of the Grand Vizier Hezarpare Ahmed Paşah by his first wife.
  • Fatma Sultan (between September and December 1642, Constantinople –1657)[39] - perhaps with Turhan Sultan.[40] In 1645 she married Musahip Silahdar Yusuf Paşah, who was executed on January 22, 1646. A month later, her father married her to Musahib Fazlı Paşa, who exiled a couple of months after her while causing her to divorce her. She was buried in the Yeni Valide mosque. Turhan Sultan took care of her grave. [38][41]
  • Gevherhan Sultan (1642, Constantinople – 27 October 1694, Edirne) - perhaps with Muazzez Sultan.[42] She married firstly on 23 November 1646 to Cafer Pasha, married secondly to Admiral of the Fleet and vizier Çavușzade Mehmed Pasha (died 1681), married thirdly on 13 January 1692 to Helvacı Yusuf Pasha (died 1714).[38][41][42]
  • Beyhan Sultan (1645, Constantinople – 15 September 1700, buried in Süleyman I Mausoleum, Süleymaniye Mosque) - perhaps with Turhan Sultan.[43] She married firstly in 1646 to Kücük Hasan Pasha, married secondly in 1647 to Grand Vizier Hezarpare Ahmed Pasha (murdered 1648), married thirdly to Uzun Ibrahim Pasha (executed 1683), married forthly in 1689 to Bıyıklı Mustafa Pasha (died 1699).[38][41][44]
  • Ayşe Sultan (1646, Constantinople – 1675, Cairo). She married three times. She married İbşir Mustafa Paşa in 1655 but her husband was executed in the same year. She then married Defterdar Ibrahim Paşah, governator of Cairo, and was widowed in 1664. She finally she married her cousin, the governor of Buda and Cairo Sultanzade Canbuladzade Hüseyn Pasha, son of Fatma Sultan.
  • Atike Sultan (?, Constantinople - 1665) - perhaps with Turhan Sultan.[45] Married firstly in 1648 to Sarı Kenan Pasha (executed 1659); married secondly in 1659 to Boşnak İsmail Pasha (killed 1664), married thidrly in 1665 to Hadim Mehmed Pasha and she died short after.
  • Kaya Sultan (?, Constantinople - ?). She married Haydarağazade Mehmed Paşa in 1649, who was executed in 1661.
  • Ümmügülsüm Sultan (?, Constantinople - 1654), she was called also Ümmi Sultan. She married in 1653 Abaza Ahmed Pasha (died 1656). She died soon after the wedding.
  • Bican Sultan (?, Constantinople - ?). She was proposed in marriage to Kuloğlu Musahip Mustafa Paşah, but he refused her (she would later marry Mehmed IV's daughter, Hatice Sultan, in 1675). She was then married to Cerrah Kasım Paşah, in January 1666.

In popular culture

The tragic play Ibrahim, the Thirteenth Emperor of the Turks, written by Mary Pix and first performed in 1699, purported to describe incidents in Ibrahim's life. The numbering is correct only if Mehmed the Conqueror is regarded as the First Emperor, and the disputed reign of his son Cem is counted as well.

In the Turkish series, Muhteşem Yüzyıl: Kösem he is portrayed by actor Ridvan Aybars Duzey as a prince and by Tugay Mercan as a Sultan.[46]

In the film Three Thousand Years of Longing (2022), Ibrahim is portrayed by Jack Braddy, with Hugo Vella as him as a child.[47]

References

  1. ^ Singh, Nagendra Kr (2000). International encyclopaedia of Islamic dynasties. Anmol Publications PVT. pp. 423–424. ISBN 81-261-0403-1. Kosem Walide or Kosem Sultan, called Mahpaykar (ca. 1589-1651), wife of the Ottoman Sultan Ahmad I and mother of the sultans Murad IV and Ibrahim [q.vv.]. She was Greek by birth, and achieved power in the first place through the harem, exercising a decisive influence in the state
  2. ^ Sonyel, Salâhi Ramadan (1993). Minorities and the destruction of the Ottoman Empire. Turkish Historical Society Printing House. p. 61. ISBN 975-16-0544-X. Many of these ladies of the harem were non-Muslim, for example Sultana Kosem (Anastasia), of Greek origin, who was the wife of Ahmet I (1603-17), and the mother of Murat IV (1623-40), and of Ibrahim (1640-8)
  3. ^ al-Ayvansarayî, Hafiz Hüseyin; Crane, Howard (2000). The garden of the mosques : Hafiz Hüseyin al-Ayvansarayî's guide to the Muslim monuments of Ottoman Istanbul. Brill. p. 21. ISBN 90-04-11242-1. Kosem Valide Mahpeyker, known also simply as Kosem Sultan (c. 1589-1651), consort of Sultan Ahmed I and mother of Murad IV and Ibrahim. Greek by birth, she exercised a decisive influence in the Ottoman state
  4. ^ John Freely, Inside the Seraglio: private lives of the sultans in Istanbul (2000) p. 145. online
  5. ^ Rank, 2020 ch 4. online
  6. ^ Baysun, M. Cavid (2012). Kösem Wālide or Kösem Sulṭān. Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Brill Online. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  7. ^ Mansel, Philip (1995). Constantinople: City of the World's Desire, 1453–1924. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 200. ISBN 0719550769.
  8. ^ Janda, Setareh (10 January 2020). "Facts About Ibrahim I, The Man Who Lived In A Cage". Ranker.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ Freely, John (2001). Inside the Seraglio: Private Lives of the Sultans in Istanbul. Tauris Parke Paperbacks. p. 151. ISBN 978-1784535353.
  10. ^ Gökbilgin, M. Tayyib (2012). Ibrāhīm. Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Brill Online. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  11. ^ Börekçi, Günhan. "Ibrahim I." Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire. Ed. Gábor Ágoston and Bruce Masters. New York: Facts on File, 2009. p.263.
  12. ^ a b c d Gökbilgin, "Ibrāhīm."
  13. ^ a b Baysun, "Kösem Wālide or Kösem Sulṭān"
  14. ^ a b Börekçi, p.263.
  15. ^ Quioted in Thys-Senocak, p.26.
  16. ^ Kohen, p. 142.
  17. ^ Mansel 1995, p. 201.
  18. ^ Rutherford, Tristan; Tomasetti, Kathryn (2011). National Geographic Traveler: Istanbul and Western Turkey. National Geographic Books. pp. 60. ISBN 978-1-4262-0708-2.
  19. ^ Crofton, Ian (3 September 2013). "The 17th Century". History Without the Boring Bits. Quercus. ISBN 978-1-62365-244-9.
  20. ^ "Old World Empires: Cultures of Power and Governance in Eurasia". Ilhan Niaz (2014). p.296. ISBN 1317913787
  21. ^ Dash, Mike (22 March 2012). "The Ottoman Empire's Life-or-Death Race". Smithsonian.com.
  22. ^ Resimli tarih mecmuasi. Iskit Yayinevi. 1956. p. 229.
  23. ^ Çelebi, Evliya; Erkılıç, Süleyman Cafer (1954). Turk Klasikleri, Issue 34. p. 62.
  24. ^ Mustafa Çağatay. Uluçay (2011). Padişahların kadınları ve kızları. Ankara, Ötüken. pp. 56–61.
  25. ^ Kal'a, Ahmet (1997). Vakıf on defterleri: Hatt-ı Hümâyûn, 1577-1804. İstanbul Araştırmaları Merkezi. p. 57. ISBN 978-9-758-21504-1.
  26. ^ Thys-Şenocak, Lucienne (2006). Ottoman Women Builders: The Architectural Patronage of Hadice Turhan Sultan. Ashgate. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-754-63310-5.
  27. ^ Resimli tarih mecmuasi. Iskit Yayinevi. 1956. p. 229.
  28. ^ a b Çelebi, Evliya; Erkılıç, Süleyman Cafer (1954). Turk Klasikleri, Issue 34. p. 62.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g Mustafa Çağatay. Uluçay (2011). Padişahların kadınları ve kızları. Ankara, Ötüken. pp. 56–61.
  30. ^ Kal'a, Ahmet (1997). Vakıf su defterleri: Hatt-ı Hümâyûn, 1577-1804. İstanbul Araştırmaları Merkezi. p. 57. ISBN 978-9-758-21504-1.
  31. ^ Mustafa Çağatay Uluçay (2011). Padişahların kadınları ve kızları. Ankara, Ötüken. pp. 63–65.
  32. ^ Uluçay 1992, p. 101
  33. ^ Sakaoğlu, Necdet (2008). Bu mülkün kadın sultanları: Vâlide sultanlar, hâtunlar, hasekiler, kadınefendiler, sultanefendiler. Oğlak Yayıncılık. pp. 260–262.
  34. ^ Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Agha (2012). ZEYL-İ FEZLEKE (1065-22 Ca.1106 / 1654-7 Şubat 1695). pp. 1290, 1400, 1580.
  35. ^ Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Agha (2001). Nusretnâme: Tahlil ve Metin (1106-1133/1695-1721). p. 461.
  36. ^ Pierce, Leslie P. The Imperial Harem
  37. ^ Thys-Senocak, p. 25.
  38. ^ a b c d Mustafa Çağatay Uluçay (2011). Padişahların kadınları ve kızları. Ankara, Ötüken. pp. 63–65.
  39. ^ Uluçay 1992, p. 101.
  40. ^ Leslie P. Peirce - The Imperial Harem
  41. ^ a b c Sakaoğlu, Necdet (2008). Bu mülkün kadın sultanları: Vâlide sultanlar, hâtunlar, hasekiler, kadınefendiler, sultanefendiler. Oğlak Yayıncılık. pp. 260–262.
  42. ^ a b Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Agha (2012). ZEYL-İ FEZLEKE (1065-22 Ca.1106 / 1654-7 Şubat 1695). pp. 1290, 1400, 1580.
  43. ^ Çağatay Uluçay - Padişahların kadınları ve kızları, pp.63-65
  44. ^ Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Agha (2001). Nusretnâme: Tahlil ve Metin (1106-1133/1695-1721). p. 461.
  45. ^ Necdet Sakaoğlu - Bu Mülkün Kadın Sultanları
  46. ^ Muhtesem Yüzyil: Kösem (TV Series 2015– ), retrieved 13 October 2017
  47. ^ Marcus, Dan (26 August 2022). "'Three Thousand Years of Longing' Cast and Character Guide: Meet the Djinn and All Who Knew Him". Collider. Retrieved 27 August 2022.

Further reading

  • Rank, Scott. History's 9 Most Insane Rulers (2020) ch 4.

External links

  •   Media related to Ibrahim of the Ottoman Empire at Wikimedia Commons
Ibrahim
Born: 5 November 1615 Died: 18 August 1648
Regnal titles
Preceded by Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
9 February 1640 – 8 August 1648
Succeeded by

ibrahim, ottoman, empire, ibrahim, ottoman, turkish, ابراهيم, turkish, ibrahim, november, 1615, august, 1648, sultan, ottoman, empire, from, 1640, until, 1648, born, constantinople, sultan, ahmed, kösem, sultan, ethnic, greek, originally, named, anastasia, ibr. Ibrahim ˌ ɪ b r e ˈ h iː m Ottoman Turkish ابراهيم Turkish Ibrahim 5 November 1615 18 August 1648 was the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1640 until 1648 He was born in Constantinople the son of Sultan Ahmed I by Kosem Sultan an ethnic Greek originally named Anastasia 1 2 3 IbrahimOttoman CaliphAmir al Mu mininKayser i RumCustodian of the Two Holy MosquesSultan of the Ottoman Empire Padishah Reign9 February 1640 8 August 1648PredecessorMurad IVSuccessorMehmed IVBorn5 November 1615Topkapi Palace Constantinople Ottoman Empire present day Istanbul Turkey Died18 August 1648 1648 08 18 aged 32 Constantinople Ottoman EmpireBurialHagia Sophia IstanbulSpousesTurhan Sultan Saliha Dilasub Sultan Muazzez Sultan Ayse Sultan Mahienver Sultan Sacbagi Sultan Sivekar Sultan Humasah SultanIssueMehmed IV Suleiman II Ahmed II among othersNamesIbrahim bin AhmedDynastyOttomanFatherAhmed IMotherKosem SultanReligionSunni IslamTughraHe was called Ibrahim the Mad Turkish Deli Ibrahim due to his mental condition and behavior 4 However historian Scott Rank notes that his opponents spread rumors of the sultan s insanity and some historians suggest he was more incompetent than mad 5 Contents 1 Early life 2 Reign 2 1 Accession 2 2 Early years as the sultan 2 3 Decadence and crisis 3 Deposition and execution 4 Family 4 1 Consorts 4 2 Sons 4 3 Daughters 5 In popular culture 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life EditIbrahim was born on 5 November 1615 the son of Sultan Ahmed I and his Haseki Sultan and perhaps legal wife Kosem Sultan When Ibrahim was 2 his father suddenly died and Ibrahim s uncle Mustafa I became the new sultan By that time Kosem Sultan and her children including young Ibrahim had been sent to the Old Palace After the succession of his brother Murad IV Ibrahim was confined in the Kafes which affected his health Ibrahim s other brothers Sehzade Bayezid Sehzade Suleiman and Sehzade Kasim had been executed by the order of Sultan Murad IV and because of that Ibrahim feared that he was next in the line However after his brother s death Ibrahim became the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire Reign EditAccession Edit One of the most notorious Ottoman Sultans Ibrahim spent all of his early life in the close confinement of the Kafes before succeeding his brother Murad IV 1623 40 in 1640 Two of their brothers had been executed by Murad and Ibrahim lived in terror of being the next to die His life was saved only by the intercession of Kosem Sultan mother of Ibrahim and Murad 6 After Murad s death Ibrahim was left the sole surviving prince of the dynasty Upon being asked by Grand Vizier Kemankes Kara Mustafa Pasha to assume the Sultanate Ibrahim suspected Murad was still alive and plotting to trap him It took the combined persuasion of Kosem and the Grand Vizier and personal examination of his brother s dead body to make Ibrahim accept the throne Early years as the sultan Edit During the early years of Ibrahim s reign he retreated from politics and turned increasingly to his harem for comfort and pleasure During his sultanate the harem achieved new levels of luxury in perfumes textiles and jewellery His love of women and furs led him to have a room entirely lined with lynx and sable Because of his infatuation with furs the French dubbed him Le Fou de Fourrures Kosem Sultan kept her son in check by supplying him with virgins she personally purchased from the slave market as well as overweight women for whom he craved 7 8 An account of his reign is given by Demetrius Cantemir He wrote of Ibrahim As Murat was wholly addicted to wine so was Ibrahim to lust They say he spent all his time in sensual pleasure and when nature was exhausted with the frequent repetition of venereal delights he endeavoured to restore it with potions or commanded a beautiful virgin richly habited to be brought to him by his mother the Grand Vezir or some other great man He covered the walls of his chamber with looking glasses so that his love battles might seem to be enacted in several places at once He ordered his pillows to be stuffed with rich furs so that the bed designed for the Imperial pleasure might be the more precious Nay he put sable skins under him in a notion that his lust might be flamed if his love toil were rendered more difficult by the glowing of his knees 9 Kara Mustafa Pasha remained as Grand Vizier during the first four years of Ibrahim s reign keeping the Empire stable With the treaty of Szon 15 March 1642 he renewed peace with Austria and during the same year recovered Azov from the Cossacks Kara Mustafa also stabilized the currency with coinage reform sought to stabilize the economy with a new land survey reduced the number of Janissaries removed non contributing members from the state payrolls and curbed the power of disobedient provincial governors During these years Ibrahim showed concern with properly ruling the empire as shown in his handwritten communications with the Grand Vizier 10 Kara Mustafa in turn wrote a memo on public affairs to coach his inexperienced master Ibrahim s replies to Kara Mustafa s reports show he had actually received a good education Ibrahim often traveled in disguise inspecting the markets of Istanbul and ordering the Grand Vizier to correct any problems he observed 11 Decadence and crisis Edit See also Action of 28 September 1644 Repercussions Ibrahim was often distracted by recurring headaches and attacks of physical weakness perhaps caused by the trauma of his early years 12 Since he was the only surviving male member of the Ottoman dynasty Ibrahim was encouraged by his mother Kosem Sultan to distract himself with harem girls and soon fathered three future sultans Mehmed IV Suleiman II and Ahmed II The distractions of the harem allowed Kosem Sultan to gain power and rule in his name yet even she fell victim to the Sultan s disfavor and left the Imperial Palace 13 Ibrahim came under the influence of various unsuitable people such as mistress of the imperial harem Sekerpare Hatun and the charlatan Cinci Hoca who pretended to cure the Sultan s physical ailments The latter along with his allies Silahdar Yusuf Agha and Sultanzade Mehmed Pasha enriched themselves with bribes and eventually usurped enough power to secure the execution of Grand Vizier Ḳara Muṣṭafa Cinci Hoca became Kadiasker High Judge of Anatolia Yusuf Agha was made Kapudan Pasha Grand Admiral and Sultanzade Mehmed became Grand Vizier 12 In 1644 Maltese corsairs seized a ship carrying high status pilgrims to Mecca Since the pirates had docked in Crete Kapudan Yusuf Pasha encouraged Ibrahim to invade the island This began a long war with Venice that lasted 24 years Crete would not completely fall under Ottoman domination until 1669 In spite of the decline of La Serenissima Venetian ships won victories throughout the Aegean capturing Tenedos 1646 and blockading the Dardanelles Kapudan Yusuf enjoyed temporary success in conquering Canea starting a jealous rivalry with Nevesinli Salih Pasha the recently installed Grand Vizier The rivalry led to Yusuf s execution January 1646 and the Grand Vizier s deposition December 1645 With his cronies in power Ibrahim s extravagant tendencies went unchecked He raised eight concubines to the favored position of haseki royal consort granting each riches and land 14 After legally marrying the concubine Telli Haseki he ordered the palace of Ibrahim Pasha to be carpeted in sable furs and given to her 12 Deposition and execution EditMass discontent was caused by the Venetian blockade of the Dardanelles which created scarcities in the capital and the imposition of heavy taxes during a war economy to pay for Ibrahim s whims In 1647 the Grand Vizier Salih Pasha Kosem Sultan and the seyhulislam Abdurrahim Efendi unsuccessfully plotted to depose the sultan and replace him with one of his sons Salih Pasha was executed and Kosem Sultan was exiled from the harem 14 The next year the Janissaries and members of the ulema revolted On 8 August 1648 corrupt Grand Vizier Aḥmed Pasha was strangled and torn to shreds by an angry mob gaining the posthumous nickname Hezarpare thousand pieces 12 On the same day Ibrahim was seized and imprisoned in Topkapi Palace 13 Kosem gave consent to her son s fall saying In the end he will leave neither you nor me alive We will lose control of the government The whole society is in ruins Have him removed from the throne immediately 15 Ibrahim s six year old son Meḥmed was made sultan The new grand vizier Ṣofu Meḥmed Pasha petitioned the sheikh ul Islam for a fatwa sanctioning Ibrahim s execution It was granted with the message if there are two caliphs kill one of them Kosem also gave her consent Two executioners were sent for one being the chief executioner who had served under Ibrahim 16 As the executioners drew closer it was reported that Ibrahim s last words were Is there no one among those who have eaten my bread who will take pity on me and protect me These cruel men have come to kill me Mercy Mercy 17 As his mother Kosem Sultan and officials watched from a palace window Ibrahim was strangled on 18 August 1648 His death was the second regicide in the history of the Ottoman Empire Family EditIn addition to his eight Haseki Sultans the first and only certain case of the coexistence of several Haseki at the same time and a symptom of the loss of prestige and exclusivity of the title which began under Murad IV he had a large number of concubines of which only some are known However only Sivekar Sultan and Humasah Sultan who also became his legal wife had any real political power or influence over the sultan Ibrahim was particularly famous for his brief but intense love obsessions often with women who were not part of his harem and that he had his agents commandeer around the city citation needed Other anecdotes related to his harem are Ibrahim s supposed passion for obese women which would have led Sivekar called the fattest woman at Constantinople to become his favorite 18 19 and the story that he drowned 280 concubines in his harem because of a rumor that one of them had had a forbidden relationship with a man an anecdote however rejected by several historians as invented or exaggerated 20 21 Consorts Edit Ibrahim I by Arolsen Klebeband Ibrahim I had eight Haseki Sultan the last of whom was also his legal wife plus a number of know and unknown minor concubines 22 23 24 25 All of Ibrahim s Hasekis received 1 000 aspers a day except for Saliha Dilasub Sultan who received 1 300 aspers a day 26 Ibrahim gifted the incomes of Bolu Hamid Nicopolis Sanjaks and Syria Eyalet to Saliha Dilasub Mahienver Sacbagli and Sivekar Sultans respectively 27 He also lavished the treasury of Egypt upon Sacbagli and Humasah Sultans 28 and presented the Ibrahim Pasha Palace to Humasah His know consorts were Turhan Sultan BasHaseki First Haseki and mother Valide Sultan and regent of Mehmed IV She was of Russian origin and her original name was Nadya After her son s accession to the throne she protected Ibrahim s remaining children from execution resulting in the definitive abandonment of the Law of Fraticide 29 Saliha Dilasub Sultan also called Asub Sultan or Asube Sultan She was the second Haseki and mother and Valide Sultan of Suleiman II she was Ibrahim s first concubine She was of Serbian origin and her original name was Katarina 29 Muazzez Sultan third Haseki and the mother of Ahmed II She premored her son and therefore was never Valide Sultan 29 Ayse Sultan the fourth Haseki she was entitled such in January 1645 She was of Tatar origins 29 30 Mahienver Sultan fifth Haseki she is mentioned for the first time on May 2 1646 She was of Circassian origin 29 Sacbagli Sultan 28 sixth Haseki she was of Circassian origin and the original name was Leyla Sivekar Sultan 29 seventh Haseki she was called the fattest woman in the capital and was one of only two politically active spouses of Ibrahim She was of Armenian descent and her original name was Maria Humasah Sultan Eighth Haseki and Ibrahim s only legal wife after the wedding she was nicknamed Telli Haseki She was of Georgian or Circassian descent She is one of only two politically active spouses Years after Ibrahim s death in 1672 she was remarried with the Kaymakam of Constantinople Ibrahim Pasah 29 Zafire Hatun Called also Zarife Hatun Ibrahim s Georgian concubine while he still Sehzade she became pregnant in violation of harem rules Kosem Sultan Ibrahim s mother handed her over to the kizlari agasi Sumbul Aga to drown her but the man hid her in his house where she gave birth to her son Having discovered this Kosem exiled them to Egypt but the ship was attacked Whether the child was saved and was taken to Malta it is not known what happened to Zafire Hubyar Hatun One of the concubines Ibrahim became infatuated with for a while She was then released and given in marriage to Ibrahim Aga Sekerpare Hatun First concubine and then musahibe companion treasurer and hostess of the harem Sakizula Hatun Minor concubine The wife of the Grand Vizier Hezarpare Ahmed Pasah Falling in love with her Ibrahim forced her to divorce her husband In return both Ahmed Pasah and his son received a daughter of Ibrahim as a wife respectively the little Beyhan Sultan at the time one year according to some sources she was later raised by his ex wife and Safiye Sultan the eldest The daughter of Seyhulislam Muid Ahmed Efendi According to A L Castellan Ibrahim asked her for his harem but her father objected so the sultan had her kidnapped from the baths and then sent her home after some time Sons Edit Ibrahim I had at least ten sons 31 32 33 34 35 36 Sehzade Fulan Before 1640 Constantinople with Zafire Hatun Conceived while Ibrahim was still Sehzade in violation of the rules of the harem Kosem Sultan mother of Ibrahim ordered that the pregnant mother be drowned She was saved from the kizlari agasi and gave birth to a son who became known as the bastard of the black eunuch Having discovered this Kosem exiled the three to Egypt but the ship was attacked The child was taken to Malta where he was proclaimed Ottoman prince He later converted to Christianity and preached under the name of Ottoman Father According to the Venetian ambassador history was among the factors that tended the relations between the Ottoman Empire and the Most Serene Republic of Venice in 1645 Mehmed IV 2 January 1642 Constantinople 6 January 1693 Edirne with Turhan Sultan He became sultan at six after his father was deposed and killed Suleiman II 15 April 1642 Constantinople 22 June 1691 Edirne with Asub Sultan Three months younger than Mehmed he was therefore locked up in Kafes for most of his life when his half brother ascended the throne He eventually became sultan after Mehmed IV Ahmed II 25 February 1643 Constantinople 6 February 1695 Edirne with Muazzez Sultan He spent most of his life locked up in the Kafes He became sultan after Suleiman II Sehzade Murad April 1643 Constantinople 16 January 1644 Constantinople Sehzade Selim 19 March 1644 Constantinople September 1669 Constantinople or Edirne Sehzade Osman August 1644 Constantinople 1646 Constantinople Sehzade Bayezid 1 May 1646 Constantinople August 1647 Constantinople Sehzade Cihangir 14 December 1646 Constantinople 1 December 1648 Constantinople with Sivekar Sultan Sehzade Orhan October 1648 Constantinople January 1650 Constantinople with Humasah Sultan At one point Ibrahim took a great liking to the infant son of a slave woman to the extent of preferring the unrelated child to his son Mehmed Turhan Mehmed s mother grew extremely jealous and vented her anger to Ibrahim who flew into a rage and grabbed Mehmed from Turhan s arms and threw him into a pool Mehmed would have drowned if a servant had not rescued him He was left with a permanent scar on his forehead 37 Daughters Edit Ibrahim I had at least nine daughters 38 Safiye Sultan 1640 Constantinople perhaps with Saliha Dilasub Sultan She married Baki Bey son of the Grand Vizier Hezarpare Ahmed Pasah by his first wife Fatma Sultan between September and December 1642 Constantinople 1657 39 perhaps with Turhan Sultan 40 In 1645 she married Musahip Silahdar Yusuf Pasah who was executed on January 22 1646 A month later her father married her to Musahib Fazli Pasa who exiled a couple of months after her while causing her to divorce her She was buried in the Yeni Valide mosque Turhan Sultan took care of her grave 38 41 Gevherhan Sultan 1642 Constantinople 27 October 1694 Edirne perhaps with Muazzez Sultan 42 She married firstly on 23 November 1646 to Cafer Pasha married secondly to Admiral of the Fleet and vizier Cavușzade Mehmed Pasha died 1681 married thirdly on 13 January 1692 to Helvaci Yusuf Pasha died 1714 38 41 42 Beyhan Sultan 1645 Constantinople 15 September 1700 buried in Suleyman I Mausoleum Suleymaniye Mosque perhaps with Turhan Sultan 43 She married firstly in 1646 to Kucuk Hasan Pasha married secondly in 1647 to Grand Vizier Hezarpare Ahmed Pasha murdered 1648 married thirdly to Uzun Ibrahim Pasha executed 1683 married forthly in 1689 to Biyikli Mustafa Pasha died 1699 38 41 44 Ayse Sultan 1646 Constantinople 1675 Cairo She married three times She married Ibsir Mustafa Pasa in 1655 but her husband was executed in the same year She then married Defterdar Ibrahim Pasah governator of Cairo and was widowed in 1664 She finally she married her cousin the governor of Buda and Cairo Sultanzade Canbuladzade Huseyn Pasha son of Fatma Sultan Atike Sultan Constantinople 1665 perhaps with Turhan Sultan 45 Married firstly in 1648 to Sari Kenan Pasha executed 1659 married secondly in 1659 to Bosnak Ismail Pasha killed 1664 married thidrly in 1665 to Hadim Mehmed Pasha and she died short after Kaya Sultan Constantinople She married Haydaragazade Mehmed Pasa in 1649 who was executed in 1661 Ummugulsum Sultan Constantinople 1654 she was called also Ummi Sultan She married in 1653 Abaza Ahmed Pasha died 1656 She died soon after the wedding Bican Sultan Constantinople She was proposed in marriage to Kuloglu Musahip Mustafa Pasah but he refused her she would later marry Mehmed IV s daughter Hatice Sultan in 1675 She was then married to Cerrah Kasim Pasah in January 1666 In popular culture EditThe tragic play Ibrahim the Thirteenth Emperor of the Turks written by Mary Pix and first performed in 1699 purported to describe incidents in Ibrahim s life The numbering is correct only if Mehmed the Conqueror is regarded as the First Emperor and the disputed reign of his son Cem is counted as well In the Turkish series Muhtesem Yuzyil Kosem he is portrayed by actor Ridvan Aybars Duzey as a prince and by Tugay Mercan as a Sultan 46 In the film Three Thousand Years of Longing 2022 Ibrahim is portrayed by Jack Braddy with Hugo Vella as him as a child 47 References Edit Singh Nagendra Kr 2000 International encyclopaedia of Islamic dynasties Anmol Publications PVT pp 423 424 ISBN 81 261 0403 1 Kosem Walide or Kosem Sultan called Mahpaykar ca 1589 1651 wife of the Ottoman Sultan Ahmad I and mother of the sultans Murad IV and Ibrahim q vv She was Greek by birth and achieved power in the first place through the harem exercising a decisive influence in the state Sonyel Salahi Ramadan 1993 Minorities and the destruction of the Ottoman Empire Turkish Historical Society Printing House p 61 ISBN 975 16 0544 X Many of these ladies of the harem were non Muslim for example Sultana Kosem Anastasia of Greek origin who was the wife of Ahmet I 1603 17 and the mother of Murat IV 1623 40 and of Ibrahim 1640 8 al Ayvansarayi Hafiz Huseyin Crane Howard 2000 The garden of the mosques Hafiz Huseyin al Ayvansarayi s guide to the Muslim monuments of Ottoman Istanbul Brill p 21 ISBN 90 04 11242 1 Kosem Valide Mahpeyker known also simply as Kosem Sultan c 1589 1651 consort of Sultan Ahmed I and mother of Murad IV and Ibrahim Greek by birth she exercised a decisive influence in the Ottoman state John Freely Inside the Seraglio private lives of the sultans in Istanbul 2000 p 145 online Rank 2020 ch 4 online Baysun M Cavid 2012 Kosem Walide or Kosem Sulṭan Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Brill Online Retrieved 10 July 2012 Mansel Philip 1995 Constantinople City of the World s Desire 1453 1924 New York St Martin s Press p 200 ISBN 0719550769 Janda Setareh 10 January 2020 Facts About Ibrahim I The Man Who Lived In A Cage Ranker a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Freely John 2001 Inside the Seraglio Private Lives of the Sultans in Istanbul Tauris Parke Paperbacks p 151 ISBN 978 1784535353 Gokbilgin M Tayyib 2012 Ibrahim Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Brill Online Retrieved 10 July 2012 Borekci Gunhan Ibrahim I Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Ed Gabor Agoston and Bruce Masters New York Facts on File 2009 p 263 a b c d Gokbilgin Ibrahim a b Baysun Kosem Walide or Kosem Sulṭan a b Borekci p 263 Quioted in Thys Senocak p 26 Kohen p 142 Mansel 1995 p 201 Rutherford Tristan Tomasetti Kathryn 2011 National Geographic Traveler Istanbul and Western Turkey National Geographic Books pp 60 ISBN 978 1 4262 0708 2 Crofton Ian 3 September 2013 The 17th Century History Without the Boring Bits Quercus ISBN 978 1 62365 244 9 Old World Empires Cultures of Power and Governance in Eurasia Ilhan Niaz 2014 p 296 ISBN 1317913787 Dash Mike 22 March 2012 The Ottoman Empire s Life or Death Race Smithsonian com Resimli tarih mecmuasi Iskit Yayinevi 1956 p 229 Celebi Evliya Erkilic Suleyman Cafer 1954 Turk Klasikleri Issue 34 p 62 Mustafa Cagatay Ulucay 2011 Padisahlarin kadinlari ve kizlari Ankara Otuken pp 56 61 Kal a Ahmet 1997 Vakif on defterleri Hatt i Humayun 1577 1804 Istanbul Arastirmalari Merkezi p 57 ISBN 978 9 758 21504 1 Thys Senocak Lucienne 2006 Ottoman Women Builders The Architectural Patronage of Hadice Turhan Sultan Ashgate p 89 ISBN 978 0 754 63310 5 Resimli tarih mecmuasi Iskit Yayinevi 1956 p 229 a b Celebi Evliya Erkilic Suleyman Cafer 1954 Turk Klasikleri Issue 34 p 62 a b c d e f g Mustafa Cagatay Ulucay 2011 Padisahlarin kadinlari ve kizlari Ankara Otuken pp 56 61 Kal a Ahmet 1997 Vakif su defterleri Hatt i Humayun 1577 1804 Istanbul Arastirmalari Merkezi p 57 ISBN 978 9 758 21504 1 Mustafa Cagatay Ulucay 2011 Padisahlarin kadinlari ve kizlari Ankara Otuken pp 63 65 Ulucay 1992 p 101 Sakaoglu Necdet 2008 Bu mulkun kadin sultanlari Valide sultanlar hatunlar hasekiler kadinefendiler sultanefendiler Oglak Yayincilik pp 260 262 Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Agha 2012 ZEYL I FEZLEKE 1065 22 Ca 1106 1654 7 Subat 1695 pp 1290 1400 1580 Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Agha 2001 Nusretname Tahlil ve Metin 1106 1133 1695 1721 p 461 Pierce Leslie P The Imperial Harem Thys Senocak p 25 a b c d Mustafa Cagatay Ulucay 2011 Padisahlarin kadinlari ve kizlari Ankara Otuken pp 63 65 Ulucay 1992 p 101 sfn error no target CITEREFUlucay1992 help Leslie P Peirce The Imperial Harem a b c Sakaoglu Necdet 2008 Bu mulkun kadin sultanlari Valide sultanlar hatunlar hasekiler kadinefendiler sultanefendiler Oglak Yayincilik pp 260 262 a b Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Agha 2012 ZEYL I FEZLEKE 1065 22 Ca 1106 1654 7 Subat 1695 pp 1290 1400 1580 Cagatay Ulucay Padisahlarin kadinlari ve kizlari pp 63 65 Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Agha 2001 Nusretname Tahlil ve Metin 1106 1133 1695 1721 p 461 Necdet Sakaoglu Bu Mulkun Kadin Sultanlari Muhtesem Yuzyil Kosem TV Series 2015 retrieved 13 October 2017 Marcus Dan 26 August 2022 Three Thousand Years of Longing Cast and Character Guide Meet the Djinn and All Who Knew Him Collider Retrieved 27 August 2022 Further reading EditRank Scott History s 9 Most Insane Rulers 2020 ch 4 External links Edit Media related to Ibrahim of the Ottoman Empire at Wikimedia CommonsIbrahimHouse of OsmanBorn 5 November 1615 Died 18 August 1648Regnal titlesPreceded byMurad IV Sultan of the Ottoman Empire9 February 1640 8 August 1648 Succeeded byMehmed IV Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ibrahim 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