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Selim II

Selim II (Ottoman Turkish: سليم ثانى, romanizedSelīm-i sānī; Turkish: II. Selim; 28 May 1524 – 15 December 1574), also known as Selim the Blond (Turkish: Sarı Selim) or Selim the Drunkard[2] (Sarhoş Selim), was the sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1566 until his death in 1574. He was a son of Suleiman the Magnificent and his wife Hurrem Sultan. Selim had been an unlikely candidate for the throne until his brother Mehmed died of smallpox, his half-brother Mustafa was strangled to death by the order of his father and his brother Bayezid was killed on the order of his father after a rebellion against him and Selim.

Selim II
Ottoman Caliph
Amir al-Mu'minin
Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques
Selim's portrait c. 1570
Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
(Padishah)
Reign7 September 1566 – 15 December 1574
Sword girding29 September 1566
PredecessorSuleiman I
SuccessorMurad III
Governor of Kütahya
Tenure1562 – 1566
Governor of Konya
Tenure1558 – 1562
Governor of Manisa
Tenure1544 – 1558
Governor of Karaman
Tenure1542 – 1544
Born28 May 1524 (1524-05-28)
Old Palace, Istanbul, Ottoman Empire
Died15 December 1574(1574-12-15) (aged 50)
Topkapı Palace, Istanbul, Ottoman Empire
Burial
Hagia Sophia, Istanbul
Spouse
(m. 1571)
Issue
Among others
Şah Sultan
Gevherhan Sultan
Ismihan Sultan
Murad III
Fatma Sultan
Names
Selim Şah bin Süleyman Şah Han[1]
DynastyOttoman
FatherSuleiman I
MotherHürrem Sultan
ReligionSunni Islam
Tughra
Selim's circumcision, 1530

During his reign, his grand vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha exerted significant control over state governance. The conquest of Cyprus and Tunis were notable achievements during his reign but setbacks occurred in the Battle of Lepanto and the failed capture of Astrakhan as part of the war with Russia.

Early years edit

Selim was born on 28 May 1524[3] in Constantinople during the reign of his father, Suleiman the Magnificent.[4] His mother was Hürrem Sultan,[5][6] an Orthodox priest's daughter,[7] who was the current Sultan's concubine at the time. In 1533 or 1534, his mother, Hürrem, was freed and became Suleiman's legal wife.[8][9][10] He had four brothers, Şehzade Mehmed, Şehzade Bayezid, Şehzade Abdullah and Şehzade Cihangir, and a sister Mihrimah Sultan.[5][6] In June–July 1530, a three week celebration was organised in Constantinople that centered around the circumcision of Selim, and his elder brothers Mustafa, and Mehmed.[11] The princes were circumcised on 27 June 1530.[12] The festivities ranged from displays of captured enemy items to simulated battles, featuring performances by jugglers and strongmen, as well as reenactments of recent conflicts. Suleiman played a crucial role, observing everything from a loggia in the Hippodrome, while Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha actively oversaw the proceedings and presented extravagant gifts to the sultan and the princes.[11]

In May 1537, he and his brother Mehmed joined their father on his campaign to Corfu. This marked the inaugural military campaign of his sons. Their presence in a military campaign conveyed a message of dynastic continuity.[13] In 1540, the sultan took him and Mehmed with him to spend the winter in Edirne.[14] In June 1541, he and Mehmed once again accompanied their father on his campaign to Buda.[15] In 1543, he was appointed the district governor of Karaman, after which he went to Konya.[16] Following Mehmed's unexpected demise in November 1543, the role of district governorship of Saruhan was assumed by Selim in the spring of 1544.[17] During the summer of 1544, a gathering of family members occurred in Bursa, uniting Selim, his parents Suleiman and Hürrem, his sister Mihrimah, and Mihrimah's husband Rüstem Pasha.[18] In the 1548–49 military campaign against the Safavids, Selim was dispatched to Edirne, acting as a substitute for the sultan during the campaign.[17] In 1553, he accompanied his father against the Safavids and kept Suleiman's company throughout most of the campaign. During this campaign, his elder half-brother, Mustafa was executed on their father’s orders.[19]

Succession struggle edit

In 1555, a rebellion led by a man erupted in northeastern Bulgaria, claiming to be Şehzade Mustafa. He organised his followers like the Ottoman administration, redistributing taxes and gaining support.[20] Bayezid, aware of the situation, prepared militarily and initiated negotiations.[21] Suleiman sent Sokullu Mehmed Pasha to suppress the uprising. Bayezid's envoy convinced the pretender's chief vizier to defect, leading to the leader's capture and execution in Constantinople[22] on 31 July 1555.[23] Rumors suggested Bayezid orchestrated the revolt, but Suleiman's desire to punish him was hindered by his wife Hürrem.[23] Tensions over succession continued, with Bayezid and Selim in rivalry. Strategic maneuvers, including Bayezid's relocation to Germiyan, maintained equilibrium in their positions, both poised to return to the capital upon news of their father's fate.[24][25]

Suleiman's persistent health concerns prompted efforts to dispel rumors of imminent death. In June 1557, the French ambassador noted Suleiman's strategic display of vitality upon returning to Constantinople, countering speculations about succession plans. The dynamics shifted decisively after Hürrem's death in April 1558, known for mediating between her sons.[26] Suleiman aimed to secure the cooperation of his sons, Selim and Bayezid, in a plan to reassign them to new, distant governorates. The proposal involved moving Selim from Manisa to Konya and relocating Bayezid from Kütahya to the remote town of Amasya. Both brothers' sons were also granted governorships in smaller counties adjacent to their fathers' assignments.[27] In September, Suleiman reassigned his sons, sending Selim to Konya and Bayezid to Amasya.[28][29]

In mid-April 1559, Bayezid and his army departed Amasya and advanced toward Ankara. Despite conveying to his father his desire to return to Kütahya, it became evident that his true intention was to attack and eliminate Selim, aiming to be the sole heir to the throne before Suleiman sided with Selim. Upon learning of Bayezid's expedition, Suleiman deemed military action necessary, instructing the third vizier Sokullu Mehmed to join Selim with janissaries, accompanied by Rumeli troops.[30] Before Constantinople's forces reached Konya, Bayezid altered course southward from Ankara, arriving near Konya by late May 1559. Selim, anticipating the attack, assumed a defensive stance with augmented forces, ultimately prevailing in the engagement on May 30 and 31.[29][31]

In July 1559, Bayezid embarked on an eastern march from Amasya, accompanied by ten thousand men and four of his sons.[32] By the autumn of the same year, he reached Yerevan, a Safavid town, receiving great respect from its governor.[33] Subsequently, in October, he arrived in Qazvin,[34] where Shah Tahmasp I welcomed him initially with enthusiasm, hosting elaborate parties in his honor.[35][36] However, in April 1560, on Sultan Suleiman's request, Tahmasp imprisoned Bayezid.[34] Both Suleiman and Selim dispatched envoys to Persia to persuade Shah Tahmasp to execute Bayezid. Over the next one and a half years, embassies shuttled between Istanbul and Qazvin. The last Ottoman embassy, arriving on 16 July 1561, had the formal task of attempting to return Bayezid to Istanbul.[37] This delegation included figures like Hüsrev Pasha, Sinan Pasha, Ali Aqa Chavush Bashi, and two hundred officials.[37]

Suleiman's letter accompanying the embassy expressed his willingness to reconfirm the Treaty of Amasya (1555) and foster a new era of Ottoman–Safavid relations.[37] Throughout these diplomatic efforts, Suleiman bestowed numerous gifts on Tahmasp and agreed to pay him for handing over Bayezid—400,000 gold coins were given to Tahmasp.[38][39] Finally, on 25 September 1561,[40][41] Tahmasp handed over Bayezid and his four sons, who were subsequently executed near Qazvin by the Ottoman executioner, Ali Aqa Chavush Bashi, using the garroting method.[42][43][37] In early 1562, Selim had been appointed as the governor of Kütahya,[44] and following Bayezid's death, his last years as a prince were spent peacefully in his court in Kütahya.[45]

Reign edit

Accession edit

 
Selim ascends the throne.

Selim ascended the throne on 29 September 1566,[46] following the death of his father on 6 September. Initially, his enthronement ceremony occurred in Istanbul, despite the presence of viziers and the military in Szigetvár, Hungary. The ceremony went unrecognised, leading to a request for a new ceremony in Belgrade.[47] On 2 October, three days later, the sultan left Istanbul.[46] In order to safeguard the process of enthronement and accession, the astute grand vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha maintained the secrecy of Suleiman's death until Selim arrived at the army in Belgrade.[48] In Belgrade, a throne was positioned between two tuğs (horsehair battle standards) in front of the imperial tent. The allegiance ceremony was then conducted at that location.[49] The new sultan went to Belgrade without offering the accession bonus, the standing army sought assurances of gratuity and promotion, but the sultan dismissed their request. Consequently, upon entering Istanbul, the army revolted, citing the absence of a proper enthronement ceremony.[50][51]

Character of Selim's rule edit

In this new political environment, the grand vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha exerted significant control over governance throughout his entire reign.[52] Mehmed Pasha served continuously as grand vizier under Suleiman, and then Selim. Known for strategically placing family members and associates in key positions across the empire, he established a reliable network of proteges. Contemporary accounts highlight Sokollu's virtual sovereignty during Selim's reign, with the grand vizier effectively managing the empire. Selim's limited involvement in governance can be attributed not only to Sokollu's dominant role but also to a significant shift in the empire's political landscape. The emergence of the court and favourites system, along with the sedentarization of the sultanate, marked Selim's reign and later became defining aspects of power struggles among his successors.[53]

Beginning with Selim, the sultans also abstained from participating in military campaigns, spending most of their time in the palace.[54] Over time during his reign, the janissaries began to increase their power at the expense of the sultan. "Acession money" demanded by the janissaries had increased; they used their power to gain more benefits for their personal lives instead of improving the state. Janissaries were now able to marry and were allowed to enrol their sons in the Corps.[55]

Treaties of Edirne and Speyer edit

In 1568, the treaty of Edirne was concluded, after which the Habsburg Holy Roman Emperor, Maximilian II recognised recent Ottoman conquests in Hungary and continued paying an annual tribute to the sultan. The longstanding Transylvanian issue, a source of conflicts between the Habsburgs and Ottomans, found resolution in the treaty of Speyer during the imperial diet in 1570. In this treaty, John Sigismund Zápolya relinquished his title as the elected king of Hungary, adopting the titles of prince of Transylvania and the adjacent parts of Hungary. Maximilian acknowledged these changes, and John Sigismund accepted Maximilian's suzerainty over his principality, which remained a part of the Holy Crown of Hungary. Despite this, the Transylvanian prince continued to be an Ottoman vassal. In essence, the Principality of Transylvania existed in a dual dependency, with its sovereignty constrained by both the sultan and the Habsburg kings of Hungary.[56]

Astrakhan expedition edit

In 1569, Selim made an unsuccessful attempt to conquer Astrakhan.[57] One of the most ambitious endeavours during his reign, albeit left unfinished, was the construction of a canal connecting the Don and Volga rivers. Championed by Grand Vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha, this extensive project involved excavating around 40 miles of challenging terrain. The canal, if completed, aimed to strategically benefit the Ottomans along the northern frontiers, serving to control Muscovy's advancement and establishing a base for potential attacks on Safavid Persia. Unfortunately, adverse weather conditions and disorder among the soldiers dispatched to the region hindered the canal's completion.[58]

Campaigns in the Mediterranean edit

 
The Battle of Lepanto, Laureys a Castro

During his reign, naval campaigns unfolded in the Mediterranean.[48] In 1571, the Ottomans seized Cyprus from the Venetians,[59] transforming it into a new province alongside neighboring regions in mainland Anatolia. Initially, the island's harsh climate deterred migration, but under state pressure, a considerable number of Turkish settlers eventually established themselves. In the same year, the Holy League, comprising papal, Venetian, and Spanish fleets, retaliated for the capture of Cyprus in the decisive Battle of Lepanto, a significant Christian stronghold. The Ottoman navy suffered a devastating defeat, leading to a year-long reconstruction effort, yet the loss of skilled naval personnel continued to impact the state throughout Selim's reign. Despite this setback, the recovery of the fortress of Tunis from Spain in 1574, shortly before Selim's death, marked a notable naval success.[60]

Architecture edit

 
Equestrian portrait of Sultan Selim II by Lambert de Vos, 1574

Suleiman had left a lasting legacy in Damascus by commissioning the construction of the impressive Takiyya al-Sulaimaniyya mosque along the Barada River, situated outside the city walls. Designed in 1554 by the renowned architect Sinan, it was commonly referred to as the Takiyya, acknowledging the Sufi hostel (tekke or zawiyya) within its courtyard chambers. Selim expanded upon his father's mosque by adding the Madrasa Salimiyya in 1566–67. Subsequently, this complex became the starting point for the annual pilgrimage to Mecca.[61] Selim favoured Edirne over Istanbul, demonstrating his affection for the former Ottoman capital, especially relishing visits and hunting sessions in the city.[58] And so he undertook the construction of a significant mosque here. The mosque which is known as Selimiye Mosque, is the largest of all Ottoman mosques, was erected between 1569 and 1575 under the supervision of Sultan Selim's chief architect, Mimar Sinan.[62] He also undertook a significant renovation of the Hagia Sophia Mosque from 1572 to 1574 under the guidance of Sinan. This restoration included repairing the buttresses, substituting the wooden minaret with a brick one, and introducing two new minarets. Furthermore, adjacent structures were demolished to create the characteristic courtyard of the imperial mosque.[63]

Death edit

Selim slipped and died after falling on a marble floor while inebriated[64] at the age of fifty on 15 December 1574.[65] He was buried in his tomb in Hagia Sophia Mosque, Istanbul.[66]

Character edit

Selim was known for being a generous supporter of poets and had a strong interest in literature,[45] and wrote poems under the pen name Selimi.[67] During his time as the governor of Kütahya, he actively engaged with poetry, surrounding himself with poets, including notable figures like Turak Çelebi. Among his associates, Nigari not only served as a confidante but also played roles as an entertainer and portraitist for the sultan.[45]

He is introduced as a generous monarch who is fond of pleasure and entertainment in the sources of the period, who is fond of drink councils, enjoys the presence of scholars and poets around him, as well as musicians. However, it is stated that he did not appear much in public, and that his father often went to Friday prayer and out among the public; Selim neglected this and spent his time in the palace.[4]

Family edit

Consorts edit

Selim had a Haseki and legal wife, and at least seven concubines.[68]

  • Nurbanu Sultan, his favorite, Haseki Sultan, legal wife and the mother of his son and successor Sultan Murad III. During Selim's reign, her stipend was 1100 aspers a day.[68] Selim legally married her in 1571, and bestowed upon her 110,000 ducats as a dowry, surpassing the 100,000 ducats that his father bestowed upon his mother Hürrem Sultan.[68] She died on 7 December 1583.[68]
  • Other seven concubines, mothers of the other princes. They each received 40 aspers a day.[68] One of these concubines died just after Selim's death in December 1574, maybe after commiting suicide because of her son’s execution.[69] Another concubine died in childbirth in 1572, with her son, and a third died on 19 April 1577.[70]

Sons edit

Selim had at least eight sons:

  • Murad III (Manisa, 4 July 1546 – Constantinople, 15 January 1595. Buried in his mausoleum in the Hagia Sophia Mosque);[71]
  • Şehzade Mehmed (1571 - September 1572, buried in the Hürrem Sultan mausoleum);[71]
  • Şehzade Süleyman (1571 - 22 December 1574, executed by Murad III, buried with his father in Hagia Sophia), his mother died shortly after him;[71]
  • Şehzade Abdullah (1571 - 22 December 1574, executed by Murad III, buried with his father in Hagia Sophia);[71]
  • Şehzade Ali (1572 - 1572, buried with his father in Hagia Sophia). Died with his mother; [71]
  • Şehzade Osman (1573 - 22 December 1574, executed by Murad III, buried with his father in Hagia Sophia);[71]
  • Şehzade Mustafa (Constantinople, 1573 - Constantinople, 22 December 1574, executed by Murad III, buried with his father in Hagia Sophia);[71]
  • Şehzade Cihangir (1574 - 22 December 1574, executed by Murad III, buried with his father in Hagia Sophia);[71]

Daughters edit

Selim had at least four daughters:

  • Şah Sultan (Karaman, c.1543[4] – Constantinople, 3 November 1580, buried in her own mausoleum, Eyüp), with Nurbanu Sultan, married firstly in 1562 to Çakırcıbaşı Hasan Pasha, married secondly in 1574 to Zal Mahmud Pasha;[72]
  • Gevherhan Sultan (Manisa, 1544[4][73] - Constantinople, c.1624, buried with her father in Hagia Sophia), with Nurbanu Sultan, married firstly in 1562 to Piyale Pasha, married secondly in 1579 to Cerrah Mehmed Pasha;[72]
  • Ismihan Sultan (Manisa, 1545[4][73] – Constantinople, 8 August 1585, buried with her father in Hagia Sophia), with Nurbanu Sultan, married firstly in 1562 to Sokollu Mehmed Pasha, married secondly in 1584 to Kalaylıkoz Ali Pasha;[72]
  • Fatma Sultan (Konya, c. 1558 – Constantinople, October 1580, buried with her father in Hagia Sophia), with Nurbanu Sultan (disputed), married in 1573 to Kanijeli Siyavuş Pasha;[72]

In popular culture edit

References edit

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  • Fotić, Aleksandar (1994). "Lʹ Eglise chrétienne dans lʹEmpire ottoman: Le monastére Chilandar à lʹépoque de Sélim II". Dialogue: Revue trimestrielle d'arts et de sciences. 12 (3): 53–64.
  • Gülten, Sadullah (2017-09-24). "Kanuni'nin Maktûl Bir Şehzadesi: Bayezid". Ordu Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Araştırmaları Dergisi. 3 (6): 96–104.
  • Mitchell, Collin P. (2009). The Practice of Politics in Safavid Iran: Power, Religion and Rhetoric. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-0857715883.
  • Peirce, Leslie P. (1993). The imperial harem : women and sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-507673-7. OCLC 27811454.
  • Şahin, K. (2023). Peerless Among Princes: The Life and Times of Sultan Süleyman. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-753163-1.
  • Turan, Şerafettin (1961). Kanunînin Oğlu Şehzade Bayezid Vak'ası. Ankara: Turk Tarih Kirumu Basimevi.
  • Yermolenko, Galina (April 2005). Roxolana: "The Greatest Empresse of the East. DeSales University, Center Valley, Pennsylvania.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Selim". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

External links edit

  Media related to Selim II at Wikimedia Commons

Selim II
Born: May 30, 1524 Died: December 15, 1574[aged 50]
Regnal titles
Preceded by Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
Sep 7, 1566 – Dec 15, 1574
Succeeded by
Sunni Islam titles
Preceded by Caliph of the Ottoman Dynasty
Sep 7, 1566 – Dec 15, 1574
Succeeded by

selim, crimean, khan, giray, ottoman, turkish, سليم, ثانى, romanized, selīm, sānī, turkish, selim, 1524, december, 1574, also, known, selim, blond, turkish, sarı, selim, selim, drunkard, sarhoş, selim, sultan, ottoman, empire, from, 1566, until, death, 1574, s. For the Crimean khan see Selim II Giray Selim II Ottoman Turkish سليم ثانى romanized Selim i sani Turkish II Selim 28 May 1524 15 December 1574 also known as Selim the Blond Turkish Sari Selim or Selim the Drunkard 2 Sarhos Selim was the sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1566 until his death in 1574 He was a son of Suleiman the Magnificent and his wife Hurrem Sultan Selim had been an unlikely candidate for the throne until his brother Mehmed died of smallpox his half brother Mustafa was strangled to death by the order of his father and his brother Bayezid was killed on the order of his father after a rebellion against him and Selim Selim IIOttoman CaliphAmir al Mu mininCustodian of the Two Holy MosquesSelim s portrait c 1570Sultan of the Ottoman Empire Padishah Reign7 September 1566 15 December 1574Sword girding29 September 1566PredecessorSuleiman ISuccessorMurad IIIGovernor of KutahyaTenure1562 1566Governor of KonyaTenure1558 1562Governor of ManisaTenure1544 1558Governor of KaramanTenure1542 1544Born28 May 1524 1524 05 28 Old Palace Istanbul Ottoman EmpireDied15 December 1574 1574 12 15 aged 50 Topkapi Palace Istanbul Ottoman EmpireBurialHagia Sophia IstanbulSpouseNurbanu Sultan m 1571 wbr IssueAmong othersSah SultanGevherhan SultanIsmihan SultanMurad IIIFatma SultanNamesSelim Sah bin Suleyman Sah Han 1 DynastyOttomanFatherSuleiman IMotherHurrem SultanReligionSunni IslamTughra Selim s circumcision 1530 During his reign his grand vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha exerted significant control over state governance The conquest of Cyprus and Tunis were notable achievements during his reign but setbacks occurred in the Battle of Lepanto and the failed capture of Astrakhan as part of the war with Russia Contents 1 Early years 2 Succession struggle 3 Reign 3 1 Accession 3 2 Character of Selim s rule 3 3 Treaties of Edirne and Speyer 3 4 Astrakhan expedition 3 5 Campaigns in the Mediterranean 3 6 Architecture 4 Death 5 Character 6 Family 6 1 Consorts 6 2 Sons 6 3 Daughters 7 In popular culture 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksEarly years editSelim was born on 28 May 1524 3 in Constantinople during the reign of his father Suleiman the Magnificent 4 His mother was Hurrem Sultan 5 6 an Orthodox priest s daughter 7 who was the current Sultan s concubine at the time In 1533 or 1534 his mother Hurrem was freed and became Suleiman s legal wife 8 9 10 He had four brothers Sehzade Mehmed Sehzade Bayezid Sehzade Abdullah and Sehzade Cihangir and a sister Mihrimah Sultan 5 6 In June July 1530 a three week celebration was organised in Constantinople that centered around the circumcision of Selim and his elder brothers Mustafa and Mehmed 11 The princes were circumcised on 27 June 1530 12 The festivities ranged from displays of captured enemy items to simulated battles featuring performances by jugglers and strongmen as well as reenactments of recent conflicts Suleiman played a crucial role observing everything from a loggia in the Hippodrome while Pargali Ibrahim Pasha actively oversaw the proceedings and presented extravagant gifts to the sultan and the princes 11 In May 1537 he and his brother Mehmed joined their father on his campaign to Corfu This marked the inaugural military campaign of his sons Their presence in a military campaign conveyed a message of dynastic continuity 13 In 1540 the sultan took him and Mehmed with him to spend the winter in Edirne 14 In June 1541 he and Mehmed once again accompanied their father on his campaign to Buda 15 In 1543 he was appointed the district governor of Karaman after which he went to Konya 16 Following Mehmed s unexpected demise in November 1543 the role of district governorship of Saruhan was assumed by Selim in the spring of 1544 17 During the summer of 1544 a gathering of family members occurred in Bursa uniting Selim his parents Suleiman and Hurrem his sister Mihrimah and Mihrimah s husband Rustem Pasha 18 In the 1548 49 military campaign against the Safavids Selim was dispatched to Edirne acting as a substitute for the sultan during the campaign 17 In 1553 he accompanied his father against the Safavids and kept Suleiman s company throughout most of the campaign During this campaign his elder half brother Mustafa was executed on their father s orders 19 Succession struggle editIn 1555 a rebellion led by a man erupted in northeastern Bulgaria claiming to be Sehzade Mustafa He organised his followers like the Ottoman administration redistributing taxes and gaining support 20 Bayezid aware of the situation prepared militarily and initiated negotiations 21 Suleiman sent Sokullu Mehmed Pasha to suppress the uprising Bayezid s envoy convinced the pretender s chief vizier to defect leading to the leader s capture and execution in Constantinople 22 on 31 July 1555 23 Rumors suggested Bayezid orchestrated the revolt but Suleiman s desire to punish him was hindered by his wife Hurrem 23 Tensions over succession continued with Bayezid and Selim in rivalry Strategic maneuvers including Bayezid s relocation to Germiyan maintained equilibrium in their positions both poised to return to the capital upon news of their father s fate 24 25 Suleiman s persistent health concerns prompted efforts to dispel rumors of imminent death In June 1557 the French ambassador noted Suleiman s strategic display of vitality upon returning to Constantinople countering speculations about succession plans The dynamics shifted decisively after Hurrem s death in April 1558 known for mediating between her sons 26 Suleiman aimed to secure the cooperation of his sons Selim and Bayezid in a plan to reassign them to new distant governorates The proposal involved moving Selim from Manisa to Konya and relocating Bayezid from Kutahya to the remote town of Amasya Both brothers sons were also granted governorships in smaller counties adjacent to their fathers assignments 27 In September Suleiman reassigned his sons sending Selim to Konya and Bayezid to Amasya 28 29 In mid April 1559 Bayezid and his army departed Amasya and advanced toward Ankara Despite conveying to his father his desire to return to Kutahya it became evident that his true intention was to attack and eliminate Selim aiming to be the sole heir to the throne before Suleiman sided with Selim Upon learning of Bayezid s expedition Suleiman deemed military action necessary instructing the third vizier Sokullu Mehmed to join Selim with janissaries accompanied by Rumeli troops 30 Before Constantinople s forces reached Konya Bayezid altered course southward from Ankara arriving near Konya by late May 1559 Selim anticipating the attack assumed a defensive stance with augmented forces ultimately prevailing in the engagement on May 30 and 31 29 31 In July 1559 Bayezid embarked on an eastern march from Amasya accompanied by ten thousand men and four of his sons 32 By the autumn of the same year he reached Yerevan a Safavid town receiving great respect from its governor 33 Subsequently in October he arrived in Qazvin 34 where Shah Tahmasp I welcomed him initially with enthusiasm hosting elaborate parties in his honor 35 36 However in April 1560 on Sultan Suleiman s request Tahmasp imprisoned Bayezid 34 Both Suleiman and Selim dispatched envoys to Persia to persuade Shah Tahmasp to execute Bayezid Over the next one and a half years embassies shuttled between Istanbul and Qazvin The last Ottoman embassy arriving on 16 July 1561 had the formal task of attempting to return Bayezid to Istanbul 37 This delegation included figures like Husrev Pasha Sinan Pasha Ali Aqa Chavush Bashi and two hundred officials 37 Suleiman s letter accompanying the embassy expressed his willingness to reconfirm the Treaty of Amasya 1555 and foster a new era of Ottoman Safavid relations 37 Throughout these diplomatic efforts Suleiman bestowed numerous gifts on Tahmasp and agreed to pay him for handing over Bayezid 400 000 gold coins were given to Tahmasp 38 39 Finally on 25 September 1561 40 41 Tahmasp handed over Bayezid and his four sons who were subsequently executed near Qazvin by the Ottoman executioner Ali Aqa Chavush Bashi using the garroting method 42 43 37 In early 1562 Selim had been appointed as the governor of Kutahya 44 and following Bayezid s death his last years as a prince were spent peacefully in his court in Kutahya 45 Reign editAccession edit nbsp Selim ascends the throne Selim ascended the throne on 29 September 1566 46 following the death of his father on 6 September Initially his enthronement ceremony occurred in Istanbul despite the presence of viziers and the military in Szigetvar Hungary The ceremony went unrecognised leading to a request for a new ceremony in Belgrade 47 On 2 October three days later the sultan left Istanbul 46 In order to safeguard the process of enthronement and accession the astute grand vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha maintained the secrecy of Suleiman s death until Selim arrived at the army in Belgrade 48 In Belgrade a throne was positioned between two tugs horsehair battle standards in front of the imperial tent The allegiance ceremony was then conducted at that location 49 The new sultan went to Belgrade without offering the accession bonus the standing army sought assurances of gratuity and promotion but the sultan dismissed their request Consequently upon entering Istanbul the army revolted citing the absence of a proper enthronement ceremony 50 51 Character of Selim s rule edit In this new political environment the grand vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha exerted significant control over governance throughout his entire reign 52 Mehmed Pasha served continuously as grand vizier under Suleiman and then Selim Known for strategically placing family members and associates in key positions across the empire he established a reliable network of proteges Contemporary accounts highlight Sokollu s virtual sovereignty during Selim s reign with the grand vizier effectively managing the empire Selim s limited involvement in governance can be attributed not only to Sokollu s dominant role but also to a significant shift in the empire s political landscape The emergence of the court and favourites system along with the sedentarization of the sultanate marked Selim s reign and later became defining aspects of power struggles among his successors 53 Beginning with Selim the sultans also abstained from participating in military campaigns spending most of their time in the palace 54 Over time during his reign the janissaries began to increase their power at the expense of the sultan Acession money demanded by the janissaries had increased they used their power to gain more benefits for their personal lives instead of improving the state Janissaries were now able to marry and were allowed to enrol their sons in the Corps 55 Treaties of Edirne and Speyer edit In 1568 the treaty of Edirne was concluded after which the Habsburg Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian II recognised recent Ottoman conquests in Hungary and continued paying an annual tribute to the sultan The longstanding Transylvanian issue a source of conflicts between the Habsburgs and Ottomans found resolution in the treaty of Speyer during the imperial diet in 1570 In this treaty John Sigismund Zapolya relinquished his title as the elected king of Hungary adopting the titles of prince of Transylvania and the adjacent parts of Hungary Maximilian acknowledged these changes and John Sigismund accepted Maximilian s suzerainty over his principality which remained a part of the Holy Crown of Hungary Despite this the Transylvanian prince continued to be an Ottoman vassal In essence the Principality of Transylvania existed in a dual dependency with its sovereignty constrained by both the sultan and the Habsburg kings of Hungary 56 Astrakhan expedition edit In 1569 Selim made an unsuccessful attempt to conquer Astrakhan 57 One of the most ambitious endeavours during his reign albeit left unfinished was the construction of a canal connecting the Don and Volga rivers Championed by Grand Vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha this extensive project involved excavating around 40 miles of challenging terrain The canal if completed aimed to strategically benefit the Ottomans along the northern frontiers serving to control Muscovy s advancement and establishing a base for potential attacks on Safavid Persia Unfortunately adverse weather conditions and disorder among the soldiers dispatched to the region hindered the canal s completion 58 Campaigns in the Mediterranean edit nbsp The Battle of Lepanto Laureys a Castro During his reign naval campaigns unfolded in the Mediterranean 48 In 1571 the Ottomans seized Cyprus from the Venetians 59 transforming it into a new province alongside neighboring regions in mainland Anatolia Initially the island s harsh climate deterred migration but under state pressure a considerable number of Turkish settlers eventually established themselves In the same year the Holy League comprising papal Venetian and Spanish fleets retaliated for the capture of Cyprus in the decisive Battle of Lepanto a significant Christian stronghold The Ottoman navy suffered a devastating defeat leading to a year long reconstruction effort yet the loss of skilled naval personnel continued to impact the state throughout Selim s reign Despite this setback the recovery of the fortress of Tunis from Spain in 1574 shortly before Selim s death marked a notable naval success 60 Architecture edit nbsp Equestrian portrait of Sultan Selim II by Lambert de Vos 1574 Suleiman had left a lasting legacy in Damascus by commissioning the construction of the impressive Takiyya al Sulaimaniyya mosque along the Barada River situated outside the city walls Designed in 1554 by the renowned architect Sinan it was commonly referred to as the Takiyya acknowledging the Sufi hostel tekke or zawiyya within its courtyard chambers Selim expanded upon his father s mosque by adding the Madrasa Salimiyya in 1566 67 Subsequently this complex became the starting point for the annual pilgrimage to Mecca 61 Selim favoured Edirne over Istanbul demonstrating his affection for the former Ottoman capital especially relishing visits and hunting sessions in the city 58 And so he undertook the construction of a significant mosque here The mosque which is known as Selimiye Mosque is the largest of all Ottoman mosques was erected between 1569 and 1575 under the supervision of Sultan Selim s chief architect Mimar Sinan 62 He also undertook a significant renovation of the Hagia Sophia Mosque from 1572 to 1574 under the guidance of Sinan This restoration included repairing the buttresses substituting the wooden minaret with a brick one and introducing two new minarets Furthermore adjacent structures were demolished to create the characteristic courtyard of the imperial mosque 63 Death editSelim slipped and died after falling on a marble floor while inebriated 64 at the age of fifty on 15 December 1574 65 He was buried in his tomb in Hagia Sophia Mosque Istanbul 66 Character editSelim was known for being a generous supporter of poets and had a strong interest in literature 45 and wrote poems under the pen name Selimi 67 During his time as the governor of Kutahya he actively engaged with poetry surrounding himself with poets including notable figures like Turak Celebi Among his associates Nigari not only served as a confidante but also played roles as an entertainer and portraitist for the sultan 45 He is introduced as a generous monarch who is fond of pleasure and entertainment in the sources of the period who is fond of drink councils enjoys the presence of scholars and poets around him as well as musicians However it is stated that he did not appear much in public and that his father often went to Friday prayer and out among the public Selim neglected this and spent his time in the palace 4 Family editConsorts edit Selim had a Haseki and legal wife and at least seven concubines 68 Nurbanu Sultan his favorite Haseki Sultan legal wife and the mother of his son and successor Sultan Murad III During Selim s reign her stipend was 1100 aspers a day 68 Selim legally married her in 1571 and bestowed upon her 110 000 ducats as a dowry surpassing the 100 000 ducats that his father bestowed upon his mother Hurrem Sultan 68 She died on 7 December 1583 68 Other seven concubines mothers of the other princes They each received 40 aspers a day 68 One of these concubines died just after Selim s death in December 1574 maybe after commiting suicide because of her son s execution 69 Another concubine died in childbirth in 1572 with her son and a third died on 19 April 1577 70 Sons edit Selim had at least eight sons Murad III Manisa 4 July 1546 Constantinople 15 January 1595 Buried in his mausoleum in the Hagia Sophia Mosque 71 Sehzade Mehmed 1571 September 1572 buried in the Hurrem Sultan mausoleum 71 Sehzade Suleyman 1571 22 December 1574 executed by Murad III buried with his father in Hagia Sophia his mother died shortly after him 71 Sehzade Abdullah 1571 22 December 1574 executed by Murad III buried with his father in Hagia Sophia 71 Sehzade Ali 1572 1572 buried with his father in Hagia Sophia Died with his mother 71 Sehzade Osman 1573 22 December 1574 executed by Murad III buried with his father in Hagia Sophia 71 Sehzade Mustafa Constantinople 1573 Constantinople 22 December 1574 executed by Murad III buried with his father in Hagia Sophia 71 Sehzade Cihangir 1574 22 December 1574 executed by Murad III buried with his father in Hagia Sophia 71 Daughters edit Selim had at least four daughters Sah Sultan Karaman c 1543 4 Constantinople 3 November 1580 buried in her own mausoleum Eyup with Nurbanu Sultan married firstly in 1562 to Cakircibasi Hasan Pasha married secondly in 1574 to Zal Mahmud Pasha 72 Gevherhan Sultan Manisa 1544 4 73 Constantinople c 1624 buried with her father in Hagia Sophia with Nurbanu Sultan married firstly in 1562 to Piyale Pasha married secondly in 1579 to Cerrah Mehmed Pasha 72 Ismihan Sultan Manisa 1545 4 73 Constantinople 8 August 1585 buried with her father in Hagia Sophia with Nurbanu Sultan married firstly in 1562 to Sokollu Mehmed Pasha married secondly in 1584 to Kalaylikoz Ali Pasha 72 Fatma Sultan Konya c 1558 Constantinople October 1580 buried with her father in Hagia Sophia with Nurbanu Sultan disputed married in 1573 to Kanijeli Siyavus Pasha 72 In popular culture editHe is played by Atilay Uluisik in the 2003 Turkish TV series Hurrem Sultan 74 He is portrayed by Engin Ozturk in the 2011 2014 series Muhtesem Yuzyil lit Magnificent Century 75 References edit Garo Kurkman 1996 Ottoman Silver Marks p 41 Somel Selcuk Aksin 2003 Historical Dictionary of the Ottoman Empire Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press p 263 ISBN 0810843323 Sahin 2023 pp 121 302 a b c d e Emecen Feridun 2009 Selim II TDV Encyclopedia of Islam Vol 36 Sakal Sevm in Turkish Istanbul Turkiye Diyanet Foundation Centre for Islamic Studies pp 414 418 ISBN 978 975 389 566 8 a b Peirce 1993 p 60 a b Yermolenko 2005 p 233 Yermolenko 2005 p 234 Yermolenko 2005 p 235 Kinross Patrick 1979 The Ottoman centuries The Rise and Fall of the Turkish Empire New York Morrow ISBN 978 0 688 08093 8 p 236 The Speech of Ibrahim at the Coronation of Maximilian II Thomas Conley Rhetorica A Journal of the History of Rhetoric Vol 20 No 3 Summer 2002 266 a b Sahin 2023 p 154 Akbar M J May 3 2002 The Shade of Swords Jihad and the Conflict between Islam and Christianity Routledge pp 88 ISBN 978 1 134 45258 3 Sahin 2023 p 195 Peirce 1993 p 234 Sahin 2023 pp 200 201 Sahin 2023 pp 204 229 a b Sahin 2023 p 230 Sahin 2023 p 229 Sahin 2023 pp 237 238 Sahin 2023 p 250 Sahin 2013 p 137 sfn error no target CITEREFSahin2013 help Sahin 2023 p 251 a b Sahin 2013 p 138 sfn error no target CITEREFSahin2013 help Sahin 2023 p 252 de Busbecq O G Forster C T Daniell F H B 1881 The Life and Letters of Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq The Life and Letters of Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq C K Paul pp 178 189 Sahin 2013 p 146 sfn error no target CITEREFSahin2013 help Murphy 2008 p 113 114 sfn error no target CITEREFMurphy2008 help Sahin 2023 p 253 a b Cicekler 2011 p 212 Sahin 2023 p 255 Gulten 2012 p 199 sfn error no target CITEREFGulten2012 help Sahin 2023 p 256 Clot Andre 2012 Suleiman the Magnificent Saqi pp 1 399 ISBN 978 0863568039 In the autumn of 1559 the prince reached Yerevan where the governor received him with the greatest respect A little later Shah Tahmasp delighted to have such a hostage in his hands went to Tabriz to welcome him The shah held magnificent parties in his honour Thirty heaped plates of gold of silver of pearls and precious stones were poured on the prince s head a b Sahin 2023 p 257 Faroqhi Suraiya N Fleet Kate 2012 The Cambridge History of Turkey Volume 2 The Ottoman Empire as a World Power 1453 1603 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1316175545 Tahmasp thus presented with the opportunity to take revenge for the reverse flight of his own brother some years before received Bayezid with great honour as Suleyman had Alkas Mirza Clot Andre 2012 Suleiman the Magnificent Saqi pp 1 399 ISBN 978 0863568039 In the autumn of 1559 the prince reached Yerevan where the governor received him with the greatest respect A little later Shah Tahmasp delighted to have such a hostage in his hands went to Tabriz to welcome him The shah held magnificent parties in his honour Thirty heaped plates of gold of silver of pearls and precious stones were poured on the prince s head a b c d Mitchell 2009 p 126 Van Donzel E J 1994 Islamic Desk Reference BRILL p 438 ISBN 978 9004097384 Lamb Harold 2013 Suleiman the Magnificent Sultan of the East Read Books Ltd pp 1 384 ISBN 978 1447488088 Four hundred thousand gold coins were sent to Tahmasp by the hand of an executioner Sahin 2023 p 258 Turan 1961 p 154 Clot Andre 2012 Suleiman the Magnificent Saqi pp 1 399 ISBN 978 0863568039 Then since he had promised never to hand him over to Suleiman he delivered Bayezid to Selim s envoy The unlucky man was strangled with his four sons A little later his fifth son 3 years old was also put to death in Bursa by a eunuch that Suleiman had sent with a janissary Joseph von Hammer Osmanli Tarihi Vol II condensation Abdulkadir Karahan Milliyet yayinlari Istanbul p 36 37 Sahin 2023 p 265 a b c Fetvaci E 2013 Picturing History at the Ottoman Court Indiana University Press p 41 ISBN 978 0 253 00678 3 a b Necipoglu G 2010 Muqarnas Volume 27 Muqarnas Brill pp 261 262 ISBN 978 90 04 19110 5 A goston amp Masters 2010 pp 208 209 a b A goston amp Masters 2010 p 513 A goston amp Masters 2010 p 208 A goston amp Masters 2010 p 209 McCarthy Justin 1997 The Ottoman Turks An Introductory History to 1923 London New York Longman pp 163 164 ISBN 978 0 582 25656 9 A goston amp Masters 2010 pp 152 153 A goston amp Masters 2010 pp 513 536 A goston amp Masters 2010 p 369 McCarthy Justin 1997 The Ottoman Turks An Introductory History to 1923 London New York Longman pp 163 164 ISBN 978 0 582 25656 9 Agoston G 2023 The Last Muslim Conquest The Ottoman Empire and Its Wars in Europe Princeton University Press p 247 ISBN 978 0 691 20539 7 A goston amp Masters 2010 p 491 a b A goston amp Masters 2010 p 514 Kia Mehrdad 2017 The Ottoman Empire a historical encyclopedia Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO p 39 ISBN 978 1 61069 389 9 OCLC 971893268 A goston amp Masters 2010 pp 513 514 A goston amp Masters 2010 pp 136 169 170 A goston amp Masters 2010 p 196 A goston amp Masters 2010 pp 243 244 Darke Diana 2022 The Ottomans A Cultural Legacy Thames amp Hudson p 145 ISBN 978 0 500 77753 4 Tezcan B 2010 The Second Ottoman Empire Political and Social Transformation in the Early Modern World Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization Cambridge University Press p 97 ISBN 978 0 521 51949 6 Guzel H C Oguz C Karatay O Ocak M 2002 The Turks The Turks Yeni Turkiye p 321 ISBN 978 975 6782 58 3 Bozkuyu A Osmanli Imparatorlugu Tarihi OSYM nin Tum Sinavlari Icin Uygundur KPSS TYT AYT Aybars Bozkuyu p 95 a b c d e Peirce 1993 pp 93 94 129 238 309 Gerlach S Beydilli K Noyan T 2007 Turkiye gunlugu cilt 1573 1576 Sahaftan secmeler dizisi Kitap Yayinevi pp 30 31 Gerlach S Beydilli K Noyan S T 2010 Turkiye gunlugu cilt 1577 1578 Sahaftan secmeler dizisi Kitap Yayinevi pp 561 562 a b c d e f g h Pazan Ibrahim 2023 06 06 A Comparison of Seyyid Lokman s Records of the Birth Death and Wedding Dates of Members of Ottoman Dynasty 1566 1595 with the Records in Ottoman Chronicles Marmara Turkiyat Arastirmalari Dergisi 10 1 Marmara University 245 271 doi 10 16985 mtad 1120498 ISSN 2148 6743 a b c d Tezcan Baki 2001 Searching For Osman A Reassessment Of The Deposition Of Ottoman Sultan Osman II 1618 1622 unpublished Ph D thesis pp 327 n 16 a b Power to kill a discourse of the royal hunt during the reigns of Suleyman the magnificent and Ahmed I Sabanci University Research Database August 2 2011 p 41 Hurrem Sultan TV Series 2003 IMDb Retrieved 2024 02 24 Muhtesem Yuzyil in Sehzade Selim i Dirilis Ertugrul da NTV Haber in Turkish March 7 2018 Retrieved February 14 2024 Bibliography editA goston Ga bor Masters Bruce Alan May 21 2010 Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 1025 7 Cicekler Mustafa 2011 12 19 Sehzade Bayezid Ve Farsca Divancesi Sarkiyat Mecmuasi in Turkish 8 Istanbul Universitesi ISSN 1307 5020 Finkel C 2007 Osman s Dream The History of the Ottoman Empire Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 00850 6 Fotic Aleksandar 1994 The Official Explanations for the Confiscation and Sale of Monasteries Churches and their Estates at the Time of Selim II Turcica Revue d etudes turques 26 34 54 Fotic Aleksandar 1994 Lʹ Eglise chretienne dans lʹEmpire ottoman Le monastere Chilandar a lʹepoque de Selim II Dialogue Revue trimestrielle d arts et de sciences 12 3 53 64 Gulten Sadullah 2017 09 24 Kanuni nin Maktul Bir Sehzadesi Bayezid Ordu Universitesi Sosyal Bilimler Arastirmalari Dergisi 3 6 96 104 Mitchell Collin P 2009 The Practice of Politics in Safavid Iran Power Religion and Rhetoric I B Tauris ISBN 978 0857715883 Peirce Leslie P 1993 The imperial harem women and sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 507673 7 OCLC 27811454 Sahin K 2023 Peerless Among Princes The Life and Times of Sultan Suleyman Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 753163 1 Turan Serafettin 1961 Kanuninin Oglu Sehzade Bayezid Vak asi Ankara Turk Tarih Kirumu Basimevi Yermolenko Galina April 2005 Roxolana The Greatest Empresse of the East DeSales University Center Valley Pennsylvania nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Selim Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press External links edit nbsp Media related to Selim II at Wikimedia Commons Selim IIHouse of OsmanBorn May 30 1524 Died December 15 1574 aged 50 Regnal titles Preceded bySuleiman I Sultan of the Ottoman EmpireSep 7 1566 Dec 15 1574 Succeeded byMurad III Sunni Islam titles Preceded bySuleiman I Caliph of the Ottoman DynastySep 7 1566 Dec 15 1574 Succeeded byMurad III Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Selim II amp oldid 1218566175, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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