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Murad III

Murad III (Ottoman Turkish: مراد ثالث, romanized: Murād-i sālis; Turkish: III. Murad; 4 July 1546 – 16 January 1595) was the sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1574 until his death in 1595. His rule saw battles with the Habsburgs and exhausting wars with the Safavids. The long-independent Morocco was at a time made a vassal of the empire but they would regain independence in 1582. His reign also saw the empire's expanding influence on the eastern coast of Africa. However, the empire would be beset by increasing corruption and inflation from the New World which led to unrest among the Janissary and commoners. Relations with Elizabethan England were cemented during his reign as both had a common enemy in the Spanish. He was a great patron in the arts where he commissioned the Siyer-i-Nebi and other illustrated manuscripts.

Murad III
Ottoman Caliph
Amir al-Mu'minin
Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques
Life-size portrait, attributed to a Spanish artist, 17th century
Sultan of the Ottoman Empire (Padishah)
Reign27 December 1574 – 16 January 1595
PredecessorSelim II
SuccessorMehmed III
Born4 July 1546
Manisa, Ottoman Empire
Died16 January 1595(1595-01-16) (aged 48)
Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
Burial
Hagia Sophia, Istanbul
Consorts
  • Safiye Sultan
  • Şemsiruhsar Hatun
  • Mihriban Hatun
  • Şahihuban Hatun
  • Nazperver Hatun
  • Fakriye Hatun
  • Others
Issue
Among others
Hümaşah Sultan
Ayşe Sultan
Mehmed III
Şehzade Mahmud
Şehzade Selim
Fatma Sultan
Mihrimah Sultan
Fahriye Sultan
Names
Murad bin Selim
DynastyOttoman
FatherSelim II
MotherNurbanu Sultan
ReligionSunni Islam
Tughra

Early life Edit

Born in Manisa on 4 July 1546,[1] Şehzade Murad was the oldest son of Şehzade Selim and his powerful wife Nurbanu Sultan. He received a good education and learned Arabic and Persian language. After his ceremonial circumcision in 1557, Murad's grandfather, the Sultan Suleiman I, appointed him sancakbeyi (governor) of Akşehir in 1558. At the age of 18 he was appointed sancakbeyi of Saruhan. Suleiman died (1566) when Murad was 20, and his father became the new sultan, Selim II. Selim II broke with tradition by sending only his oldest son out of the palace to govern a province, assigning Murad to Manisa.[2]: 21–22 

Reign Edit

Selim died in 1574 and was succeeded by Murad, who began his reign by having his five younger brothers strangled.[3] His authority was undermined by harem influences – more specifically, those of his mother and later of his favorite concubine Safiye Sultan, often to the detriment of Sokollu Mehmed Pasha's influence on the court.[4] Under Selim II power had only been maintained by the effective leadership of the powerful Grand Vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha, who remained in office until his assassination in October 1579. During Murad's reign the northern borders with the Habsburg monarchy were defended by the Bosnian governor Hasan Predojević. The reign of Murad III was marked by exhausting wars on the empire's western and eastern fronts. The Ottomans also suffered defeats in battles such as the Battle of Sisak.

Expedition to Morocco Edit

Abd al-Malik became a trusted member of the Ottoman establishment during his exile. He made the proposition of making Morocco an Ottoman vassal in exchange for the support of Murad III in helping him gain the Saadi throne.[5]

With an army of 10,000 men whom were mostly Turks, Ramazan Pasha and Abd al-Malik left from Algiers to install Abd al-Malik as an Ottoman vassal ruler of Morocco.[6] Ramazan Pasha conquered Fez which caused the Saadi Sultan to flee to Marrakesh which was also conquered, Abd al-Malik then assumed rule over Morocco as a client of the Ottomans.[7][5][8]

Abd al-Malik made a deal with the Ottoman troops by paying them a large amount of gold and sending them back to Algiers, suggesting a looser concept of vassalage than Murad III may have thought.[5] Murad's name was recited in the Friday prayer and stamped on coinage marking the two traditional signs of sovereignty in the Islamic world.[9] The reign of Abd al-Malik is understood to be a period of Moroccan vassalage to the Ottoman Empire.[10][11] Abd al-Malik died in 1578 and was succeeded by his brother Ahmad al-Mansur who formally recognised the suzerainty of the Ottoman Sultan at the start of his reign while remaining de facto independent, however he stopped minting coins in Murad's name, dropped his name from the Khutba and declared his full independence in 1582.[12][13]

War with the Safavids Edit

 
The Ottoman Empire reached its greatest extent in the Middle East under Murad III.

The Ottomans had been at peace with the neighbouring rivaling Safavid Empire since 1555, per the Treaty of Amasya, that for some time had settled border disputes. But in 1577 Murad declared war, starting the Ottoman–Safavid War (1578–1590), seeking to take advantage of the chaos in the Safavid court after the death of Shah Tahmasp I. Murad was influenced by viziers Lala Kara Mustafa Pasha and Sinan Pasha and disregarded the opposing counsel of Grand Vizier Sokollu. Murad also fought the Safavids which would drag on for 12 years, ending with the Treaty of Constantinople (1590), which resulted in temporary significant territorial gains for the Ottomans.[2]: 198–199 

Ottoman activity in the Horn of Africa Edit

During his reign, an Ottoman Admiral by the name of Mir Ali Beg was successful in establishing Ottoman supremacy in numerous cities in the Swahili coast between Mogadishu and Kilwa.[14] Ottoman suzerainty was recognised in Mogadishu in 1585 and Ottoman supremacy was also established in other cities such as Barawa, Mombasa, Kilifi, Pate, Lamu, and Faza.[15][16]

Financial affairs Edit

Murad's reign was a time of financial stress for the Ottoman state. To keep up with changing military techniques, the Ottomans trained infantrymen in the use of firearms, paying them directly from the treasury. By 1580 an influx of silver from the New World had caused high inflation and social unrest, especially among Janissaries and government officials who were paid in debased currency. Deprivation from the resulting rebellions, coupled with the pressure of over-population, was especially felt in Anatolia.[2]: 24  Competition for positions within the government grew fierce, leading to bribery and corruption. Ottoman and Habsburg sources accuse Murad himself of accepting enormous bribes, including 20,000 ducats from a statesman in exchange for the governorship of Tripoli and Tunisia, thus outbidding a rival who had tried bribing the Grand Vizier.[2]: 35 

During his period, excessive inflation was experienced, the value of silver money was constantly played, food prices increased. 400 dirhams should be cut from 600 dirhams of silver, while 800 was cut, which meant 100 percent inflation. For the same reason, the purchasing power of wage earners was halved, and the consequence was an uprising.[17]

English pact Edit

Numerous envoys and letters were exchanged between Elizabeth I and Sultan Murad III.[18]: 39  In one correspondence, Murad entertained the notion that Islam and Protestantism had "much more in common than either did with Roman Catholicism, as both rejected the worship of idols", and argued for an alliance between England and the Ottoman Empire.[18]: 40  To the dismay of Catholic Europe, England exported tin and lead (for cannon-casting) and ammunition to the Ottoman Empire, and Elizabeth seriously discussed joint military operations with Murad III during the outbreak of war with Spain in 1585, as Francis Walsingham was lobbying for a direct Ottoman military involvement against the common Spanish enemy.[18]: 41  This diplomacy would be continued under Murad's successor Mehmed III, by both the sultan and Safiye Sultan alike.

Personal life Edit

Palace life Edit

Following the example of his father Selim II, Murad was the second Ottoman sultan who never went on campaign during his reign, instead spending it entirely in Constantinople. During the final years of his reign, he did not even leave Topkapı Palace. For two consecutive years, he did not attend the Friday procession to the imperial mosque—an unprecedented breaking of custom. The Ottoman historian Mustafa Selaniki wrote that whenever Murad planned to go out to Friday prayer, he changed his mind after hearing of alleged plots by the Janissaries to dethrone him once he left the palace.[19] Murad withdrew from his subjects and spent the majority of his reign keeping to the company of few people and abiding by a daily routine structured by the five daily Islamic prayers. Murad's personal physician Domenico Hierosolimitano described a typical day in the life of the sultan:

In the morning he rises at dawn to say his prayer for half an hour, then for another half-hour he writes. Then he is given something pleasant as a collation, and afterwards sets himself to read for another hour. Then he begins to give audience to the members of the Divan on the four days of the week that this occurs, as had been said above. Then he goes for a walk through the garden, taking pleasure in the delight of fountains and animals for another hour, taking with him the dwarves, buffoons and others to entertain him. Then he goes back once again to studying until he considers the time for lunch has arrived. He stays at table only half an hour, and rises (to go) once again into the garden for as long as he pleases. Then he goes to say his midday prayer. Then he stops to pass the time and amuse himself with the women, and he will stay one or two hours with them, when it is time to say the evening prayer. Then he returns to his apartments or, if it pleases him more, he stays in the garden reading or passing the time until evening with the dwarfs and buffoons, and then he returns to say his prayers, that is at nightfall. Then he dines and takes more time over dinner than over lunch, making conversation until two hours after dark, until it is time for prayer [...] He never fails to observe this schedule every day.[2]: 29–30 

Murad's sedentary lifestyle and lack of participation in military campaigns earned him the disapproval of Mustafa Âlî and Mustafa Selaniki, the major Ottoman historians who lived during his reign. Their negative portrayals of Murad influenced later historians.[2]: 17–19  Both historians also accused Murad of sexual excess.

Children Edit

Before becoming sultan, Murad had been loyal to Safiye Sultan, his Albanian concubine. His monogamy was disapproved of by his mother Nurbanu Sultan, who worried that Murad needed more sons to succeed him in case Mehmed died young. She also worried about Safiye's influence over her son and the Ottoman dynasty. Five or six years after his accession to the throne, Murad was given a pair of concubines by his sister Ismihan. Upon attempting sexual intercourse with them, he proved impotent. "The arrow [of Murad], [despite] keeping with his created nature, for many times [and] for many days has been unable to reach at the target of union and pleasure," wrote Mustafa Ali. Nurbanu accused Safiyye and her retainers of causing Murad's impotence with witchcraft. Several of Safiye's servants were tortured by eunuchs in order to discover a culprit. Court physicians, working under Nurbanu's orders, eventually prepared a successful cure, but a side effect was a drastic increase in sexual appetite—by the time Murad died, he was said to have fathered over a hundred children.[2]: 31–32  Nineteen of these were executed by Mehmed III when he became sultan.

Women at court Edit

Influential ladies of his court included his mother Nurbanu Sultan, his sister Ismihan Sultan, wife of grand vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha, and musahibes (favourites) mistress of the housekeeper Canfeda Hatun, mistress of financial affairs Raziye Hatun, and the poet Hubbi Hatun, Finally, after the death of his mother and older sister, his wife Safiye Sultan was the only influential woman in the court.[20][21]

Eunuchs at court Edit

Before Murad, the palace eunuchs had been mostly white, especially Circassians or Syrians.[22] This began to change in 1582 when Murad gave an important position to a black eunuch.[23] Before, the eunuchs' roles in the palace were racially determined: black eunuchs guarded the harem and the princesses, and white eunuchs guarded the Sultan and male pages in another part of the palace.[24] The chief black eunuch was known as the Kizlar Agha, and the chief white eunuch was known as the Kapi Agha.

Murad and the arts Edit

 
Miniature painting of a parade of two riding Gazi (veterans from Rumelia) in front of Sultan Murat III (from the Surname-i hümayun, 16th century)

Murad took great interest in the arts, particularly miniatures and books. He actively supported the court of Society of Miniaturists, commissioning several volumes including the Siyer-i Nebi, the most heavily illustrated biographical work on the life of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, the Book of Skills, the Book of Festivities and the Book of Victories.[25] He had two large alabaster urns transported from Pergamon and placed on two sides of the nave in the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople and a large wax candle dressed in tin which was donated by him to the Rila monastery in Bulgaria is on display in the monastery museum.

Murad also furnished the content of Kitabü’l-Menamat (The Book of Dreams), addressed to Murad's spiritual advisor, Şüca Dede. A collection of first person accounts, it tells of Murad's spiritual experiences as a Sufi disciple. Compiled from thousands of letters Murad wrote describing his dream visions, it presents a hagiographic self-portrait. Murad dreams of various activities, including being stripped naked by his father and having to sit on his lap,[2]: 72  single-handedly killing 12,000 infidels in battle,[2]: 99  walking on water, ascending to heaven, and producing milk from his fingers.[2]: 143 

In another letter addressed to Şüca Dede, Murad wrote "I wish that God, may He be glorified and exalted, had not created this poor servant as the descendant of the Ottomans so that I would not hear this and that, and would not worry. I wish I were of unknown pedigree. Then, I would have one single task, and could ignore the whole world."[2]: 171 

The diplomatic edition of these dream letters have been recently published by Ozgen Felek in Turkish.

Death Edit

Murad died from what is assumed to be natural causes in the Topkapı Palace and was buried in a tomb next to the Hagia Sophia. In the mausoleum are 54 sarcophagus of the sultan, his wives and children that are also buried there. He is also responsible for changing the burial customs of the sultans' mothers. Murad had his mother Nurbanu buried next to her husband Selim II, making her the first consort to share a sultan's tomb.[2]: 33–34 

Family Edit

Consorts Edit

Murad is believed to have had Safiye Sultan as his only concubine for twenty years. However, Safiye was opposed by Murad's mother, Nurbanu Sultan, and by his sister, Ismihan Sultan, and in 1580 circa she was exiled to the Old Palace on charges of having rendered the sultan impotent with a spell, after he had not succeeded or had not wanted to had sex with two concubines received by his sister. Furthermore, Nurbanu was concerned about the future of the dynasty, as she believed that Safiye's son alone, Mehmed, (two of three sons that Safiye give to Murad were dead before 1580) were not enough to ensure the succession. After Safiye's exile, revoked only after Nurbanu's death on December 1583, Murad, to deny the rumor about his impotency, took a huge number of concubines, of which only five are known to us, and he had more than fifty known children, although according to sources the total number could exceed hundred.

Murad's named consorts were:

  • Safiye Sultan, an ethnic Albanian. Haseki Sultan of Murad and Valide sultan of Mehmed III;[26]
  • Şemsiruhsar Hatun, mother of Rukiye Sultan. She commissioned Koranic readings of prayers in the Prophet's mosque in Medina. She died before 1623.[27]
  • Mihriban Hatun;[27]
  • Şahıhuban Hatun;[27]
  • Nazperver Hatun;[27]
  • Fakriye Hatun[28]
  • Seven concubines pregnant in 1595 that was drowned because of Mehmed III's order.
  • Concubine seduced and made pregnant by Mehmed III when he was a prince. The act was a violation of the rules of the harem and the girl was drowned by Nurbanu Sultan to protect her grandson.

According to Üluçay, after the death of Murad III many of his concubines who became childless when at his accession Mehmed had his half-brothers killed were remarried, along with those who had never given children to the sultan.

Sons Edit

Murad III had at least 26 known sons.

On Murad's death in 1595 Mehmed III, his eldest son and new sultan, son of Safiye Sultan, executed the 19 half-brothers still alive and drowned seven pregnant concubines, fulfilling the Law of Fraticide.

Known sons of Murad III are:

  • Sultan Mehmed III (26 May 1566, Manisa Palace, Manisa – 22 December 1603, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Mehmed III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque, Constantinople), son with Safiye, became the next sultan;
  • Şehzade Selim (1567?, Manisa Palace, Manisa - before 1580), son with Safiye Sultan, died in infancy.
  • Şehzade Mahmud (1568, Manisa Palace, Manisa – before 1580, buried in Selim II Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque); son with Safiye;
  • Şehzade Fülan (June 1582, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - June 1582, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople. buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque). Stillbirth.
  • Şehzade Cihangir (February 1585, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - August 1585, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque); twin of Şehzade Suleyman.
  • Şehzade Suleyman (February 1585, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - 1585, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque); twin of Şehzade Cihangir.
  • Şehzade Abdullah (1585, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Mustafa (1585, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Abdurrahman (1585, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Bayezid (1586, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Hasan (1586, Topkapi Palace, Consantinople - died 1591, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Cihangir (1587, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Yakub (1587, Topkapi Palace, Consantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Ahmed (?, Topkapi Palace, Consantinople - before 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Alaeddin (?, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Davud (?, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Alemşah (?, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Ali (?, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Hüseyin (?, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Ishak (?, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Murad (?, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Osman (?, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - died 1587, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Yusuf (?, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Korkud (?, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Ömer (?, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);
  • Şehzade Selim (?, Topkapi Palace, Constantinople - murdered 28 January 1595, Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque);

In addition to these, a European braggart, Alexander of Montenegro, claimed to be the lost son of Murad III and Safiye Sultan, presenting himself with the name of Şehzade Yahya and claiming the throne for it. His claims were never proven and appear dubious to say the least.[29]

Daughters Edit

Murad had at least thirty daughters known to be still alive at his death in 1595, of whom seventeen died of plague (or smallpox) in 1598.[30] Many of the daughters' names are unknown.[31] It is not known if and how many daughters may have died before him.

Known daughters of Murad III are:

  • Hümaşah Sultan (Manisa, c. 1564 - Costantinople, after 1606; buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque), daughter with Safiye Sultan. Also called Hüma Sultan. She married Nişar Mustafazade Mehmed Pasha (died 1586). She may have then married Serdar Ferhad Pasha (d.1595) in 1591.[32] She was lastly married in 16095 to Damad Nakkaş Hasan Pasha;[33][34][35][36]
  • Ayşe Sultan (Manisa, c. 1565 - Costantinople, 15 May 1605, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque), daughter with Safiye, married firstly on 20 May 1586, to Damat Ibrahim Pasha,[34] married secondly on 5 April 1602, to Damad Yemişçi Hasan Pasha, married thirdly on 29 June 1604, to Damad Güzelce Mahmud Pasha.[35][37]
  • Fatma Sultan (Manisa, c. 1573 - Costantinople, 1620, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque), daughter with Safiye, married firstly on 6 December 1593, to Damad Halil Pasha,[34][37] married secondly December 1604, to Damad Cafer Pasha;[35] married thirtly 1610 Damat Hizir Pasha, married fourtly Damad Murad Pasha.
  • Mihrimah Sultan (Costantinople, c. 1579 - after 1625; buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque), possibly daughter with Safiye;[35][38]
  • Fahriye Sultan (died in 1656, buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque), called also Fahri Sultan. Possibly daughter with Safiye, perhaps born after her return from exile in Old Palace. She married firstly to Cuhadar Ahmed Pasha, Governor of Mosul, married secondly to Damad Sofu Bayram Pasha, sometime Governor of Bosnia;[37]
  • Rukiye Sultan (buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque), daughter with Şemsiruhsar Hatun,[37] married in 1613 to Damad Nakkaş Hasan Pasha;[34][35][39]
  • Mihriban Sultan (buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque)[37] married in 1613 to Damad Kapıcıbaşı Topal Mehmed Agha;[34]
  • Hatice Sultan (born 1583, buried in Şehzade Mosque), was married in 1598 to Sokolluzade Lala Mehmed Pasha and had three children (a daughter and two sons) who died young.[40] She participated in the reparation of the minarets of Bayezid Veli Mosque inside Kerch Fortress in 1599.[41] After his death, she married Gürşci Mehmed Pasha of Kefe, governor of Bosnia.
  • Fethiye Sultan (buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque).
  • Seventeen daughters died of plague or smallpox in 1598. They are buried in Murad III Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque. At least two of them were married.
  • Four daughters who married before 1595.

In fiction Edit

  • Orhan Pamuk's historical novel Benim Adım Kırmızı (My Name is Red, 1998) takes place at the court of Murad III, during nine snowy winter days of 1591, which the writer uses in order to convey the tension between East and West. Murad is not specifically named in the book, and is referred to only as "Our Sultan".
  • The Harem Midwife by Roberta Rich - a historical fiction set in Constantinople (1578) which follows Hannah, a midwife, who tends to many of the women in Sultan Murad III's harem.
  • In the 2011 TV series Muhteşem Yüzyıl, Murad III is portrayed by Turkish actor Serhan Onat.

References Edit

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  28. ^ Alderson, A.D.; The structure of the Ottoman Dynasty
  29. ^ Tezcan, Baki (2001). Searching For Osman: A Reassessment Of The Deposition Of Ottoman Sultan Osman II (1618-1622). pp. 327–8 n. 17.
  30. ^ Disease and Empire: A History of Plague Epidemics in the Early Modern Ottoman Empire (1453–1600). 2008. p. 145. ISBN 978-0-549-74445-0.
  31. ^ According to M. Çağatay Uluçay, in his Padişahların Kadınları ve Kızları, 30 of his daughters were still alive when Murad III died in 1595
  32. ^ Sakaoğlu, Necdet (2008). Bu mülkün kadın sultanları: Vâlide sultanlar, hâtunlar, hasekiler, kadınefendiler, sultanefendiler. Oğlak Yayıncılık. p. 217.
  33. ^ Miović 2018, p. 168.
  34. ^ a b c d e Peçevi, Ibrahim; Baykal, Bekir Sıtkı (1982). Peçevi Tarih, Volume 2. Başbakanlık Matbaası. p. 3.
  35. ^ a b c d e Tezcan, Baki (2001). Searching For Osman: A Reassessment Of The Deposition Of Ottoman Sultan Osman II (1618-1622). pp. 328 n. 18.
  36. ^ Fleet, Kate; Faroqhi, Suraiya N.; Kasaba, Reşat (2 November 2006). The Cambridge History of Turkey. Cambridge University Press. p. 412. ISBN 978-0-521-62095-6.
  37. ^ a b c d e Uluçay, Mustafa Çağatay (2011). Padişahların kadınları ve kızları. Ankara: Ötüken. ISBN 978-975-437-840-5.
  38. ^ Uçtum, Nejat R. Hürrem ve Mihrümah sultanların Polonya Kralı II. Zigsmund'a Yazdıkları Mektuplar. p. 707.
  39. ^ Fleet, Kate; Faroqhi, Suraiya N.; Kasaba, Reşat (2 November 2006). The Cambridge History of Turkey. Cambridge University Press. p. 412. ISBN 978-0-521-62095-6.
  40. ^ Bayrak, 1998, p. 43.
  41. ^ Öztuna, 1977. Başlangıcından zamanımıza kadar Büyük Türkiye tarihi, p. 125.

External links Edit

  Media related to Murad III at Wikimedia Commons

  • "Murad § Murad III" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 19 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 14–15.
  • Ancestry of Sultana Nur-Banu (Cecilia Venier-Baffo)
Murad III
Born: 4 July 1546 Died: 15 January 1595[aged 48]
Regnal titles
Preceded by Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
12 December 1574 – 15 January 1595
Succeeded by
Sunni Islam titles
Preceded by Caliph of the Ottoman Caliphate
12 December 1574 – 15 January 1595
Succeeded by

murad, ottoman, turkish, مراد, ثالث, romanized, murād, sālis, turkish, murad, july, 1546, january, 1595, sultan, ottoman, empire, from, 1574, until, death, 1595, rule, battles, with, habsburgs, exhausting, wars, with, safavids, long, independent, morocco, time. Murad III Ottoman Turkish مراد ثالث romanized Murad i salis Turkish III Murad 4 July 1546 16 January 1595 was the sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1574 until his death in 1595 His rule saw battles with the Habsburgs and exhausting wars with the Safavids The long independent Morocco was at a time made a vassal of the empire but they would regain independence in 1582 His reign also saw the empire s expanding influence on the eastern coast of Africa However the empire would be beset by increasing corruption and inflation from the New World which led to unrest among the Janissary and commoners Relations with Elizabethan England were cemented during his reign as both had a common enemy in the Spanish He was a great patron in the arts where he commissioned the Siyer i Nebi and other illustrated manuscripts Murad IIIOttoman CaliphAmir al Mu mininCustodian of the Two Holy MosquesLife size portrait attributed to a Spanish artist 17th centurySultan of the Ottoman Empire Padishah Reign27 December 1574 16 January 1595PredecessorSelim IISuccessorMehmed IIIBorn4 July 1546Manisa Ottoman EmpireDied16 January 1595 1595 01 16 aged 48 Topkapi Palace Constantinople Ottoman EmpireBurialHagia Sophia IstanbulConsortsSafiye Sultan Semsiruhsar Hatun Mihriban Hatun Sahihuban Hatun Nazperver Hatun Fakriye Hatun OthersIssueAmong othersHumasah SultanAyse SultanMehmed IIISehzade MahmudSehzade SelimFatma SultanMihrimah SultanFahriye SultanNamesMurad bin SelimDynastyOttomanFatherSelim IIMotherNurbanu SultanReligionSunni IslamTughra Contents 1 Early life 2 Reign 2 1 Expedition to Morocco 2 2 War with the Safavids 2 3 Ottoman activity in the Horn of Africa 2 4 Financial affairs 2 5 English pact 3 Personal life 3 1 Palace life 3 2 Children 3 3 Women at court 3 4 Eunuchs at court 4 Murad and the arts 5 Death 6 Family 6 1 Consorts 6 2 Sons 6 3 Daughters 7 In fiction 8 References 9 External linksEarly life EditBorn in Manisa on 4 July 1546 1 Sehzade Murad was the oldest son of Sehzade Selim and his powerful wife Nurbanu Sultan He received a good education and learned Arabic and Persian language After his ceremonial circumcision in 1557 Murad s grandfather the Sultan Suleiman I appointed him sancakbeyi governor of Aksehir in 1558 At the age of 18 he was appointed sancakbeyi of Saruhan Suleiman died 1566 when Murad was 20 and his father became the new sultan Selim II Selim II broke with tradition by sending only his oldest son out of the palace to govern a province assigning Murad to Manisa 2 21 22 Reign EditSelim died in 1574 and was succeeded by Murad who began his reign by having his five younger brothers strangled 3 His authority was undermined by harem influences more specifically those of his mother and later of his favorite concubine Safiye Sultan often to the detriment of Sokollu Mehmed Pasha s influence on the court 4 Under Selim II power had only been maintained by the effective leadership of the powerful Grand Vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha who remained in office until his assassination in October 1579 During Murad s reign the northern borders with the Habsburg monarchy were defended by the Bosnian governor Hasan Predojevic The reign of Murad III was marked by exhausting wars on the empire s western and eastern fronts The Ottomans also suffered defeats in battles such as the Battle of Sisak Expedition to Morocco Edit See also Capture of Fez 1576 See also Ottoman expeditions to Morocco Abd al Malik became a trusted member of the Ottoman establishment during his exile He made the proposition of making Morocco an Ottoman vassal in exchange for the support of Murad III in helping him gain the Saadi throne 5 With an army of 10 000 men whom were mostly Turks Ramazan Pasha and Abd al Malik left from Algiers to install Abd al Malik as an Ottoman vassal ruler of Morocco 6 Ramazan Pasha conquered Fez which caused the Saadi Sultan to flee to Marrakesh which was also conquered Abd al Malik then assumed rule over Morocco as a client of the Ottomans 7 5 8 Abd al Malik made a deal with the Ottoman troops by paying them a large amount of gold and sending them back to Algiers suggesting a looser concept of vassalage than Murad III may have thought 5 Murad s name was recited in the Friday prayer and stamped on coinage marking the two traditional signs of sovereignty in the Islamic world 9 The reign of Abd al Malik is understood to be a period of Moroccan vassalage to the Ottoman Empire 10 11 Abd al Malik died in 1578 and was succeeded by his brother Ahmad al Mansur who formally recognised the suzerainty of the Ottoman Sultan at the start of his reign while remaining de facto independent however he stopped minting coins in Murad s name dropped his name from the Khutba and declared his full independence in 1582 12 13 War with the Safavids Edit nbsp The Ottoman Empire reached its greatest extent in the Middle East under Murad III The Ottomans had been at peace with the neighbouring rivaling Safavid Empire since 1555 per the Treaty of Amasya that for some time had settled border disputes But in 1577 Murad declared war starting the Ottoman Safavid War 1578 1590 seeking to take advantage of the chaos in the Safavid court after the death of Shah Tahmasp I Murad was influenced by viziers Lala Kara Mustafa Pasha and Sinan Pasha and disregarded the opposing counsel of Grand Vizier Sokollu Murad also fought the Safavids which would drag on for 12 years ending with the Treaty of Constantinople 1590 which resulted in temporary significant territorial gains for the Ottomans 2 198 199 Ottoman activity in the Horn of Africa Edit During his reign an Ottoman Admiral by the name of Mir Ali Beg was successful in establishing Ottoman supremacy in numerous cities in the Swahili coast between Mogadishu and Kilwa 14 Ottoman suzerainty was recognised in Mogadishu in 1585 and Ottoman supremacy was also established in other cities such as Barawa Mombasa Kilifi Pate Lamu and Faza 15 16 Financial affairs Edit Murad s reign was a time of financial stress for the Ottoman state To keep up with changing military techniques the Ottomans trained infantrymen in the use of firearms paying them directly from the treasury By 1580 an influx of silver from the New World had caused high inflation and social unrest especially among Janissaries and government officials who were paid in debased currency Deprivation from the resulting rebellions coupled with the pressure of over population was especially felt in Anatolia 2 24 Competition for positions within the government grew fierce leading to bribery and corruption Ottoman and Habsburg sources accuse Murad himself of accepting enormous bribes including 20 000 ducats from a statesman in exchange for the governorship of Tripoli and Tunisia thus outbidding a rival who had tried bribing the Grand Vizier 2 35 During his period excessive inflation was experienced the value of silver money was constantly played food prices increased 400 dirhams should be cut from 600 dirhams of silver while 800 was cut which meant 100 percent inflation For the same reason the purchasing power of wage earners was halved and the consequence was an uprising 17 English pact Edit Numerous envoys and letters were exchanged between Elizabeth I and Sultan Murad III 18 39 In one correspondence Murad entertained the notion that Islam and Protestantism had much more in common than either did with Roman Catholicism as both rejected the worship of idols and argued for an alliance between England and the Ottoman Empire 18 40 To the dismay of Catholic Europe England exported tin and lead for cannon casting and ammunition to the Ottoman Empire and Elizabeth seriously discussed joint military operations with Murad III during the outbreak of war with Spain in 1585 as Francis Walsingham was lobbying for a direct Ottoman military involvement against the common Spanish enemy 18 41 This diplomacy would be continued under Murad s successor Mehmed III by both the sultan and Safiye Sultan alike Personal life EditPalace life Edit Following the example of his father Selim II Murad was the second Ottoman sultan who never went on campaign during his reign instead spending it entirely in Constantinople During the final years of his reign he did not even leave Topkapi Palace For two consecutive years he did not attend the Friday procession to the imperial mosque an unprecedented breaking of custom The Ottoman historian Mustafa Selaniki wrote that whenever Murad planned to go out to Friday prayer he changed his mind after hearing of alleged plots by the Janissaries to dethrone him once he left the palace 19 Murad withdrew from his subjects and spent the majority of his reign keeping to the company of few people and abiding by a daily routine structured by the five daily Islamic prayers Murad s personal physician Domenico Hierosolimitano described a typical day in the life of the sultan In the morning he rises at dawn to say his prayer for half an hour then for another half hour he writes Then he is given something pleasant as a collation and afterwards sets himself to read for another hour Then he begins to give audience to the members of the Divan on the four days of the week that this occurs as had been said above Then he goes for a walk through the garden taking pleasure in the delight of fountains and animals for another hour taking with him the dwarves buffoons and others to entertain him Then he goes back once again to studying until he considers the time for lunch has arrived He stays at table only half an hour and rises to go once again into the garden for as long as he pleases Then he goes to say his midday prayer Then he stops to pass the time and amuse himself with the women and he will stay one or two hours with them when it is time to say the evening prayer Then he returns to his apartments or if it pleases him more he stays in the garden reading or passing the time until evening with the dwarfs and buffoons and then he returns to say his prayers that is at nightfall Then he dines and takes more time over dinner than over lunch making conversation until two hours after dark until it is time for prayer He never fails to observe this schedule every day 2 29 30 Murad s sedentary lifestyle and lack of participation in military campaigns earned him the disapproval of Mustafa Ali and Mustafa Selaniki the major Ottoman historians who lived during his reign Their negative portrayals of Murad influenced later historians 2 17 19 Both historians also accused Murad of sexual excess Children Edit Before becoming sultan Murad had been loyal to Safiye Sultan his Albanian concubine His monogamy was disapproved of by his mother Nurbanu Sultan who worried that Murad needed more sons to succeed him in case Mehmed died young She also worried about Safiye s influence over her son and the Ottoman dynasty Five or six years after his accession to the throne Murad was given a pair of concubines by his sister Ismihan Upon attempting sexual intercourse with them he proved impotent The arrow of Murad despite keeping with his created nature for many times and for many days has been unable to reach at the target of union and pleasure wrote Mustafa Ali Nurbanu accused Safiyye and her retainers of causing Murad s impotence with witchcraft Several of Safiye s servants were tortured by eunuchs in order to discover a culprit Court physicians working under Nurbanu s orders eventually prepared a successful cure but a side effect was a drastic increase in sexual appetite by the time Murad died he was said to have fathered over a hundred children 2 31 32 Nineteen of these were executed by Mehmed III when he became sultan Women at court Edit Influential ladies of his court included his mother Nurbanu Sultan his sister Ismihan Sultan wife of grand vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha and musahibes favourites mistress of the housekeeper Canfeda Hatun mistress of financial affairs Raziye Hatun and the poet Hubbi Hatun Finally after the death of his mother and older sister his wife Safiye Sultan was the only influential woman in the court 20 21 Eunuchs at court Edit Before Murad the palace eunuchs had been mostly white especially Circassians or Syrians 22 This began to change in 1582 when Murad gave an important position to a black eunuch 23 Before the eunuchs roles in the palace were racially determined black eunuchs guarded the harem and the princesses and white eunuchs guarded the Sultan and male pages in another part of the palace 24 The chief black eunuch was known as the Kizlar Agha and the chief white eunuch was known as the Kapi Agha Murad and the arts Edit nbsp Miniature painting of a parade of two riding Gazi veterans from Rumelia in front of Sultan Murat III from the Surname i humayun 16th century Murad took great interest in the arts particularly miniatures and books He actively supported the court of Society of Miniaturists commissioning several volumes including the Siyer i Nebi the most heavily illustrated biographical work on the life of the Islamic prophet Muhammad the Book of Skills the Book of Festivities and the Book of Victories 25 He had two large alabaster urns transported from Pergamon and placed on two sides of the nave in the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople and a large wax candle dressed in tin which was donated by him to the Rila monastery in Bulgaria is on display in the monastery museum Murad also furnished the content of Kitabu l Menamat The Book of Dreams addressed to Murad s spiritual advisor Suca Dede A collection of first person accounts it tells of Murad s spiritual experiences as a Sufi disciple Compiled from thousands of letters Murad wrote describing his dream visions it presents a hagiographic self portrait Murad dreams of various activities including being stripped naked by his father and having to sit on his lap 2 72 single handedly killing 12 000 infidels in battle 2 99 walking on water ascending to heaven and producing milk from his fingers 2 143 In another letter addressed to Suca Dede Murad wrote I wish that God may He be glorified and exalted had not created this poor servant as the descendant of the Ottomans so that I would not hear this and that and would not worry I wish I were of unknown pedigree Then I would have one single task and could ignore the whole world 2 171 The diplomatic edition of these dream letters have been recently published by Ozgen Felek in Turkish Death EditMurad died from what is assumed to be natural causes in the Topkapi Palace and was buried in a tomb next to the Hagia Sophia In the mausoleum are 54 sarcophagus of the sultan his wives and children that are also buried there He is also responsible for changing the burial customs of the sultans mothers Murad had his mother Nurbanu buried next to her husband Selim II making her the first consort to share a sultan s tomb 2 33 34 Family EditConsorts Edit Murad is believed to have had Safiye Sultan as his only concubine for twenty years However Safiye was opposed by Murad s mother Nurbanu Sultan and by his sister Ismihan Sultan and in 1580 circa she was exiled to the Old Palace on charges of having rendered the sultan impotent with a spell after he had not succeeded or had not wanted to had sex with two concubines received by his sister Furthermore Nurbanu was concerned about the future of the dynasty as she believed that Safiye s son alone Mehmed two of three sons that Safiye give to Murad were dead before 1580 were not enough to ensure the succession After Safiye s exile revoked only after Nurbanu s death on December 1583 Murad to deny the rumor about his impotency took a huge number of concubines of which only five are known to us and he had more than fifty known children although according to sources the total number could exceed hundred Murad s named consorts were Safiye Sultan an ethnic Albanian Haseki Sultan of Murad and Valide sultan of Mehmed III 26 Semsiruhsar Hatun mother of Rukiye Sultan She commissioned Koranic readings of prayers in the Prophet s mosque in Medina She died before 1623 27 Mihriban Hatun 27 Sahihuban Hatun 27 Nazperver Hatun 27 Fakriye Hatun 28 Seven concubines pregnant in 1595 that was drowned because of Mehmed III s order Concubine seduced and made pregnant by Mehmed III when he was a prince The act was a violation of the rules of the harem and the girl was drowned by Nurbanu Sultan to protect her grandson According to Ulucay after the death of Murad III many of his concubines who became childless when at his accession Mehmed had his half brothers killed were remarried along with those who had never given children to the sultan Sons Edit Murad III had at least 26 known sons On Murad s death in 1595 Mehmed III his eldest son and new sultan son of Safiye Sultan executed the 19 half brothers still alive and drowned seven pregnant concubines fulfilling the Law of Fraticide Known sons of Murad III are Sultan Mehmed III 26 May 1566 Manisa Palace Manisa 22 December 1603 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Mehmed III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Constantinople son with Safiye became the next sultan Sehzade Selim 1567 Manisa Palace Manisa before 1580 son with Safiye Sultan died in infancy Sehzade Mahmud 1568 Manisa Palace Manisa before 1580 buried in Selim II Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque son with Safiye Sehzade Fulan June 1582 Topkapi Palace Constantinople June 1582 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Stillbirth Sehzade Cihangir February 1585 Topkapi Palace Constantinople August 1585 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque twin of Sehzade Suleyman Sehzade Suleyman February 1585 Topkapi Palace Constantinople 1585 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque twin of Sehzade Cihangir Sehzade Abdullah 1585 Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Mustafa 1585 Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Abdurrahman 1585 Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Bayezid 1586 Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Hasan 1586 Topkapi Palace Consantinople died 1591 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Cihangir 1587 Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Yakub 1587 Topkapi Palace Consantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Ahmed Topkapi Palace Consantinople before 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Alaeddin Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Davud Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Alemsah Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Ali Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Huseyin Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Ishak Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Murad Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Osman Topkapi Palace Constantinople died 1587 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Yusuf Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Korkud Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Omer Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Sehzade Selim Topkapi Palace Constantinople murdered 28 January 1595 Topkapi Palace Constantinople buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque In addition to these a European braggart Alexander of Montenegro claimed to be the lost son of Murad III and Safiye Sultan presenting himself with the name of Sehzade Yahya and claiming the throne for it His claims were never proven and appear dubious to say the least 29 Daughters Edit Murad had at least thirty daughters known to be still alive at his death in 1595 of whom seventeen died of plague or smallpox in 1598 30 Many of the daughters names are unknown 31 It is not known if and how many daughters may have died before him Known daughters of Murad III are Humasah Sultan Manisa c 1564 Costantinople after 1606 buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque daughter with Safiye Sultan Also called Huma Sultan She married Nisar Mustafazade Mehmed Pasha died 1586 She may have then married Serdar Ferhad Pasha d 1595 in 1591 32 She was lastly married in 16095 to Damad Nakkas Hasan Pasha 33 34 35 36 Ayse Sultan Manisa c 1565 Costantinople 15 May 1605 buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque daughter with Safiye married firstly on 20 May 1586 to Damat Ibrahim Pasha 34 married secondly on 5 April 1602 to Damad Yemisci Hasan Pasha married thirdly on 29 June 1604 to Damad Guzelce Mahmud Pasha 35 37 Fatma Sultan Manisa c 1573 Costantinople 1620 buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque daughter with Safiye married firstly on 6 December 1593 to Damad Halil Pasha 34 37 married secondly December 1604 to Damad Cafer Pasha 35 married thirtly 1610 Damat Hizir Pasha married fourtly Damad Murad Pasha Mihrimah Sultan Costantinople c 1579 after 1625 buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque possibly daughter with Safiye 35 38 Fahriye Sultan died in 1656 buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque called also Fahri Sultan Possibly daughter with Safiye perhaps born after her return from exile in Old Palace She married firstly to Cuhadar Ahmed Pasha Governor of Mosul married secondly to Damad Sofu Bayram Pasha sometime Governor of Bosnia 37 Rukiye Sultan buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque daughter with Semsiruhsar Hatun 37 married in 1613 to Damad Nakkas Hasan Pasha 34 35 39 Mihriban Sultan buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque 37 married in 1613 to Damad Kapicibasi Topal Mehmed Agha 34 Hatice Sultan born 1583 buried in Sehzade Mosque was married in 1598 to Sokolluzade Lala Mehmed Pasha and had three children a daughter and two sons who died young 40 She participated in the reparation of the minarets of Bayezid Veli Mosque inside Kerch Fortress in 1599 41 After his death she married Gursci Mehmed Pasha of Kefe governor of Bosnia Fethiye Sultan buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque Seventeen daughters died of plague or smallpox in 1598 They are buried in Murad III Mausoleum Hagia Sophia Mosque At least two of them were married Four daughters who married before 1595 In fiction EditMurad is portrayed by the Romanian actor Colea Rautu in the historic epic film Michael the Brave Orhan Pamuk s historical novel Benim Adim Kirmizi My Name is Red 1998 takes place at the court of Murad III during nine snowy winter days of 1591 which the writer uses in order to convey the tension between East and West Murad is not specifically named in the book and is referred to only as Our Sultan The Harem Midwife by Roberta Rich a historical fiction set in Constantinople 1578 which follows Hannah a midwife who tends to many of the women in Sultan Murad III s harem In the 2011 TV series Muhtesem Yuzyil Murad III is portrayed by Turkish actor Serhan Onat References Edit Murad III Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 10 July 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l Felek Ozgen 2010 Re creating image and identity Dreams and visions as a means of Murad III s self fashioning PhD Thesis University of Michigan Ann Arbor ProQuest UMI Publication No 3441203 Marriott John Arthur The Eastern Question Clarendon Press 1917 96 Murad III Ottoman sultan Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 13 November 2018 a b c Akyeampong Emmanuel Kwaku Gates Jr Henry Louis 2 February 2012 Dictionary of African Biography OUP USA ISBN 978 0 19 538207 5 via Google Books The Cambridge History of Africa Volume 3 J D Fage Pg 408 هيسبريس تمودا Volume 29 Issue 1 Editions techniques nord africaines 1991 Hess Andrew 1978 The Forgotten Frontier A History of the Sixteenth Century Ibero African Frontier University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 33031 0 Itzkowitz Norman 15 March 1980 Ottoman Empire and Islamic Tradition University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226388069 via Google Books Barletta Vincent 15 May 2010 Death in Babylon Alexander the Great and Iberian Empire in the Muslim Orient Pages 82 and 104 University of Chicago Press p 82 ISBN 978 0 226 03739 4 Langues et litteratures Faculte des lettres et des sciences humaines 9 September 1981 via Google Books Rivet Daniel 2012 Histoire du Maroc de Moulay Idris a Mohammed VI Fayard A Struggle for the Sahara Idris ibn Ali s Embassy toAḥmad al Manṣur in the Context ofBorno Morocco Ottoman Relations 1577 1583 Remi Dewiere Universite de Paris Pantheon Sorbonne Subrahmanyam Sanjay 9 September 1993 The Portuguese Empire in Asia 1500 1700 A Political and Economic History Longman ISBN 9780582050693 via Google Books Loimeier Roman 17 July 2013 Muslim Societies in Africa A Historical Anthropology Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253027320 via Google Books Bosworth C Edmund 31 August 2007 Historic Cities of the Islamic World BRILL ISBN 9789047423836 via Google Books Sakaoglu 2008 p 172 a b c Karen Ordahl Kupperman 2007 The Jamestown project Harvard University Press p 39 ISBN 9780674024748 Karateke Hakan T On the Tranquility and Repose of the Sultan The Ottoman World Ed Christine Woodhead Milton Park Abingdon Oxon New York Routledge 2011 p 118 Maria Pia Pedani Fabris Alessio Bombaci 2010 Inventory of the Lettere E Scritture Turchesche in the Venetian State Archives BRILL p 26 ISBN 978 90 04 17918 9 Petruccioli Attilio 1997 Gardens in the Time of the Great Muslim Empires Theory and Design E J Brill p 50 ISBN 978 90 04 10723 6 Von Schierbrand Wolf 28 March 1886 Salve Sold to the Turk PDF New York Times Retrieved 19 January 2011 Gamm Niki 25 May 2013 The black eunuchs and the Ottoman dynasty Hurriyet Daily News Retrieved 19 March 2020 Booth Marilyn 2010 Harem Histories Envisioning Places and Living Spaces Duke University Press p 143 ISBN 978 0 8223 4869 6 Pamuk Orhan My Name is Red Alfred A Knopf 2010 ISBN 978 0 307 59392 4 Mustafa Cagatay Ulucay Padisahlarin kadinlari ve kizlari Turk Tarih Kurumu Basimevi 1980 pp 42 6 a b c d Altun Mustafa 2019 Yuzyil Donumunde Bir Valide Sultan Safiye Sultan in Hayati ve Eserleri pp 20 21 Alderson A D The structure of the Ottoman Dynasty Tezcan Baki 2001 Searching For Osman A Reassessment Of The Deposition Of Ottoman Sultan Osman II 1618 1622 pp 327 8 n 17 Disease and Empire A History of Plague Epidemics in the Early Modern Ottoman Empire 1453 1600 2008 p 145 ISBN 978 0 549 74445 0 According to M Cagatay Ulucay in his Padisahlarin Kadinlari ve Kizlari 30 of his daughters were still alive when Murad III died in 1595 Sakaoglu Necdet 2008 Bu mulkun kadin sultanlari Valide sultanlar hatunlar hasekiler kadinefendiler sultanefendiler Oglak Yayincilik p 217 Miovic 2018 p 168 sfn error no target CITEREFMiovic2018 help a b c d e Pecevi Ibrahim Baykal Bekir Sitki 1982 Pecevi Tarih Volume 2 Basbakanlik Matbaasi p 3 a b c d e Tezcan Baki 2001 Searching For Osman A Reassessment Of The Deposition Of Ottoman Sultan Osman II 1618 1622 pp 328 n 18 Fleet Kate Faroqhi Suraiya N Kasaba Resat 2 November 2006 The Cambridge History of Turkey Cambridge University Press p 412 ISBN 978 0 521 62095 6 a b c d e Ulucay Mustafa Cagatay 2011 Padisahlarin kadinlari ve kizlari Ankara Otuken ISBN 978 975 437 840 5 Uctum Nejat R Hurrem ve Mihrumah sultanlarin Polonya Krali II Zigsmund a Yazdiklari Mektuplar p 707 Fleet Kate Faroqhi Suraiya N Kasaba Resat 2 November 2006 The Cambridge History of Turkey Cambridge University Press p 412 ISBN 978 0 521 62095 6 Bayrak 1998 p 43 Oztuna 1977 Baslangicindan zamanimiza kadar Buyuk Turkiye tarihi p 125 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Murad III at Wikimedia Commons Murad Murad III Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 19 11th ed 1911 pp 14 15 Ancestry of Sultana Nur Banu Cecilia Venier Baffo Murad IIIHouse of OsmanBorn 4 July 1546 Died 15 January 1595 aged 48 Regnal titlesPreceded bySelim II Sultan of the Ottoman Empire12 December 1574 15 January 1595 Succeeded byMehmed IIISunni Islam titlesPreceded bySelim II Caliph of the Ottoman Caliphate12 December 1574 15 January 1595 Succeeded byMehmed III Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Murad III amp oldid 1174433838, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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