#şehzade mehmed
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This pyjama was first worn by Şehzade Mehmed in the twelth episode of the third season of Magnificent Century. It appeared again in the thirty-sixth episode of the same season, this time on Rüstem Pasha. The pyjama was worn again by Şehzade Bayezid in the twenty-fourth episode of the fourth season.
#Muhteşem Yüzyıl#Magnificent Century#costume drama#period drama#historical drama#Şehzade Mehmed#Sehzade Mehmed#Şehzade Mehmed (Son of Hürrem)#Rüstem Paşa#Rustem Pasha#Rüstem Pasha#Şehzade Bayezid#Sehzade Bayezid#Şehzade Bayezid (Son of Hürrem)#reused costumes#recycled costumes
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— Şehzade Mehmed icons
#icon#icons#turkish icons#magnificent century#muhteşem yüzyıl#el sultán#şehzade mehmed#şehzade mehmed icons#sehzade mehmed#gürbey ileri#gürbey ileri icons
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How should we name our son?
Any Magnificent Century character: Mehmed. It won't confuse anyone if there is more than one per generation. And it is also not like a very bad omen for that child's future.
#Magnificent Century#Şehzade Mehmed#they all die young#like Mustafa and Bayezid named one of their sons Mehmed each#I guess to honor their brother the OG Mehmed#then there is Nurbanu's grandson#and then it continues in Kösem#first rule of MC: Don't name your son Mehmed
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Hürrem: what's a good response to being stabbed with a knife?
Mehmed: rude
Mihrimah: that's fair
Selim: not again
Bayezid: are you going to need this back?
#the magnificent century#muhteşem yüzyıl#the magnificent century incorrect quotes#incorrect quotes#Şehzade bayezid#şehzade selim#şehzade mehmed#mihrimah sultan#hürrem sultan#prince bayezid#prince selim#prince mehmed#princess mihrimah#queen hürrem
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I repeat one of my comments posted on Youtube
If I had my say on the way Suleiman's children were portrayed, because like a lot of people, I didn't like the way it was written in Magnificent Century, that's what I would do. ( In my eyes, Mustafa was seen as a pure white sehzade, which therefore made him in my eyes more stupid and less interesting than he actually was. Mehmed was practically erased of his personality and seen as a pure Gary Stu like his half brother. Cihangir, who I adore, yet in the series was too naive. Selim is seen as evil, etc...)
I would respect the historical point of view more. I propose an alternative version, I would have added Suleiman's children he had when he was sehzade with his other concubines before he became Sultan and met Hurrem and then had them die of the plague as it was historically.
Sehzade Mustafa - I would keep his childlike personality, except he is not close to his siblings (because of the fratricidal law), and I wouldn't put him close to Ibrahim at least until he becomes an adult and allies himself with him. I would let his mother take care exclusively of his education. A young man who craves recognition and attention from his father, who often neglects him in return over his other children due to the fact that Mahidevran is the Sultan's least beloved concubine. The more he becomes an adult, and especially a father, the more he resents his father because of the way he treats his mother and him. He does not really understand his father and therefore his fears due to the fact that he did not grow up close to him. I would keep his efficient heir personality because he performs very well despite his father never teaching him well because of his mother who is a very good advisor. Instead of doing something for his military glory or showing off his harem too much, I would focus on how he improves the lives of common people exhausted by too much conquest. I would make his guilt very ambiguous, at the start it is clear that he wants to wait for his father to die to have the throne and restore his mother's honor, however, he realizes that his father lets his vizier lead his life impossible to see even encourages him, does not hide that he preferred to have a son of Hurrem on the throne no matter what Mustafa will do. Following this, the sehzade wants to have a second plan like his grandfather in case Suleiman wants to abdicate in favor of another of his sons which would put him in danger (which could explain the Venetian correspondence, others say that it was a plan to prevent his brothers from escaping if one day he became Sultan) but hesitates to actually carry it out, then after some hesitation goes to his father's tent and gets strangled. Instead of doing Atmaca, I would focus on Mustafa's son-in-law, Nergissah's husband who started as Rustem's ally and becomes his most loyal supporter ( it seems that it is more a legend than truth, but I didn't remeber well as I didn't have on me my books of historian like Halil Inalcık) . So I would avoid making a treacherous Sehzade, his mistakes would be understandable, but he wouldn't be a pure white Sehzade.
Sehzade Mehmed: it's more complicated for him because he died without having proven himself in a complicated province like Amasya, so it's quite difficult to make a comparison with Mustafa. But I would make sure to give him a real personality: initially close to some of his brothers like Selim and Bayezid, he becomes, despite his mother, more distant towards them because of the fratricide (Mehmed II had therefore legalized it there is not much way to escape from it at the time unlike MCK) although he is very close to Cihangir and his sister. Unlike Mustafa, his father trained him in the regency of the palace and he did very well by dint of advice and practice. When he is sent to the provinces, he often listens to his mother's advice when she visits him. Knowing that he has the support of the statesmen against Mustafa he realizes knowing his father better than his half brother that he will have to play the role of the obedient sehzade not interested in politics although deep down he prepare for it. He has the happiness of being a father but dies immediately afterwards.
Mihrimah Sultan- I would make sure to respect the historical Hurrem who wants her daughter to have a marriage of love and happiness. However Suleiman prefers Rustem, and she accepts him immediately because she will do everything to save her brothers and convince her mother to accept this marriage. I would rather show her as a politician as well as her diplomatic relations. However, I would underline the unjust side of Suleiman, he had Mustafa executed and condemned Mahidevran to poverty but refuses to punish Mihrimah by banishing her because she would have helped Bayezid financially during his rebellion. Their relationship would be cold for a time before reconciling. She will be reconciled with her brother Selim because basically they only remain and will be an ally of Nurbanu.
Sehzade Abdullah- I would have included him even if he died very young.
Sehzade Selim- Initially a cultured young man very focused on charity work like his mother and sister and very sober. Nevertheless it is often sad due to the law of fratricide. When Mustafa dies, he realizes he has a chance to escape it and he will fight in a wicked way especially for his son Murad because he knows that Bayezid's temper will put him in danger besides fratricide. He knew how to recruit powerful and efficient state members. He is on the whole an obedient sehzade but who is disgusted with his father's treatment of Mahidevran (after all she is no longer a threat to him she no longer has a son) and who will take risks to her by helping her financially. As the hardships go on, his depression increases he drinks more and more especially after his sister takes the part of Bayezid, that his brother Bayezid dies, and the fact that he is obliged to make other sons in the case where Murad dies without an heir which means that he knows that his other sons will be condemned to death. He has become a broken leader although he makes sure there is effective governance.
As a Sultan he must face his father's mistakes, including the way he led the Empire, including too many wars and unnecessary conquests in Europe.
Sehzade Bayezid- Him complicated. Due to his explosive temper he is the black sheep of his siblings (Mustafa does not count since he is a half brother, they do not even know each other) and the most incompetent of Suleiman's sons and Suleiman is worried because he has inherited the worst faults of Selim Yavuz like being angry easily (without having had his qualities). Yet deep down he wants affection and that's why he has several children even if it's irresponsible, his mother favors him because she's afraid for him because he has too impulsive nature . Mihrimah comes to his aid only in memory of his mother, because deep down she prefers Selim, Bayezid knows this, which means that he hardly listens to her. She only helps him financially as a last resort because she couldn't convince him to call off the rebellion. Suleiman was more lenient to his mistakes that Mustafa (we could once again underline the unfair side of Suleiman again with this) until the point that he took refuge to the Shah.
Sehzade Cihangir- A cultured young man very close to his parents and very sick. I would make him a supporter of Selim because although he is close to him, he also knows that he is his only chance of survival because he is not close to Bayezid at all. He often sends information from the Palace to Selim to better aid him in managing his province and at times advises him to be more ruthless in his quest for the throne while remaining an obedient sehzade. It would therefore be a good adviser for Selim (and it would give him more personality). He cannot therefore be limited to the role of a simple supporter but also of a valuable advisor.
And that's how I would portray them if I were in the place of the screenwriters. They are all very nuanced (we avoid all white or all black), we can freely pick a favorite without trying to favor another sehzade at all costs, and I try to be consistent with what we know about them and try to explain why they did mistakes or make sucess.
#magnificent century#mihrimah sultan#sehzade bayezid#sehzade selim#Mustafa sehzade#hürrem sultan#suleiman the magnificent#sehzade Mehmed#mahidevran hatun#Şehzade Cihangir#historical interpretation#historical inaccuracies
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Mehmed is confirmed as end game!!!!
🎉🥳🥳🥳🥳
#rc mehmed#rc dracula a love story#romance club#😭❤️😭❤️😭❤️#Thank you Veronica for allowing me to have a happy ending with my Şehzade
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This blue and gray kaftan with gold embellishments was first worn by Umut Nalbantoğlu as Sultan Mehmed IV in the final episode of Muhteşem Yüzyıl: Kösem (Magnificent Century: Kösem) in 2017.
The kaftan appeared again in the twenty-sixth episode of the first season of Tozkoparan İskender on Yağız Kılınç as Sinan Karayaman in 2021.
It was also worn by Miraç Sözer as Şehzade Mehmed (later Sultan Mehmed II) in the second episode of the 2023 first season of Kızılelma: Bir Fetih Öyküsü (Golden Apple: The Grand Conquest).
Costume Credit: Anne81, Wardrobeoftime
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#magnificent century: kosem#tozkoparan iskender#golden apple: the grand conquest#Kızılelma: Bir Fetih Öyküsü#Muhteşem Yüzyıl: Kösem#Umut Nalbantoğlu#Yağız Kılınç#Miraç Sözer
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Gerçek Osmanlı Torunları...
Babası Kato Davut bey, Annesi Ayşe Hanım'dır. 24 Nisan 1911 tarihinde Sultan Vahdettin ile evlendi. 1912 yılında Şehzade Mehmed Ertuğrul Efendi'yi doğurmuştur. San Remo'da Vahdettin'e eşlik etti. 1929 yılında Vahdettin'in vefatından sonra İskenderiye'ye yerleşerek burada bir evlilik daha yaptı. 1948 yılında Türkiye'ye döndü. 1950 yılında Çengelköy'de vefat etti. Zarif ve şık bir hanımefendi olarak biliniyordu
Fotoğraf 1931 yılında Fransa'da çekildi. Son Halife'nin kızının elbisesini din-i İslam'a aykırı bulmadığı gözüküyor. Ayrıca kendisinin şıklığı da çağdaş daireye gösterdiği adaptasyonun ipuçlarını veriyor. Yazdığı 35 sayfalık bir makalede Osmanlı Padişahlarını tahlil etmiş, İkinci Bayezid'in içkiye düşkünlüğü yüzünden sefil, İkinci Selim'in 'sefih bir sarhoş' olduğunu ifade etmiştir. Abdülmecid Üçüncü Murad ve Üçüncü Mehmed'den 'Osmanlı Devleti'nin amansız cellâdı' olarak bahsederken, Dördüncü Murad için ise 'geleceğin en büyük hükümdarı olmaya namzet iken içtiği rakının kurbanı olmuş; devletin talihini ve geleceğini İbrahim gibi akıl noksanı ve anlayıştan mahrum bir şahsa terk ederek dünyadan çekilmişti' demektedir. Üçüncü Ahmed'in sefahat tarafından ele geçirildiğini söyleyen Halife, Sultan Abdülmecid'in 'içki müptelalığı yüzünden hayatını kaybettiğini' belirtecektir.
Sürgün yıllarında çekilen bu fotoğrafta Ömer Faruk Efendi, Sabiha Sultan ile birlikte görülüyor.
1923 yılında doğan Hanzade Sultan, son Osmanlı padişahı Sultan Vahdettin ve son halife Abdülmecit Efendi’nin torunudur. Mısır Hanedanı mensuplarından Mehmet Ali İbrahim ile evlenen Sultan, dünya sosyetesinin en güzel kadınlarından birisi olarak ün yapmıştır. Fotoğrafta kızı Prenses Fazile ile birlikte.
Arkada yer alan portredeki Padişah, 'Tanzimatçı' ve 'Gazi' olarak bilinen Abdülmecid'dir. 1839'dan 1861'e kadar hükmetti. 3 Kasım 1839'da Osmanlı demokratikleşmesinin ilk adımı olan (Gülhane Hatt-ı Şerif-î) Tanzimât Fermânı’nı yayımladı, 18 Şubat 1856'da (Islâhat Hatt-ı Hümâyûn-u) Islâhat Fermânı’nı ilân etti.
Osman Selahaddin Osmanoğlu, Osmanlı şehzadesidir. Ali Vâsıb Osmanoğlu'nun oğludur. İngiltere’de yaşayan Osmanoğlu, İstanbul’da bir ev aldı. TRT için hazırlanan ’Osmanlı Hanedan Ailesi’ belgeseline danışmanlık yaptılar.
Fotoğrafta yer alanlar, Osman Selahattin Osmanoğlu'nun kızı Ayşe Gülnev Osmanoğlu'nın çocukları, son jenerasyon Osmanlılar. Soldan sağa, Prens Lysander Cengiz, Prenses Tatyana Aliye, Prens Maximillian Ali, Prens Ferdinand Ziya ve Prens Cosmo Tarık. Hepsini sevgiyle selamlıyoruz
Ve .. çakma Osmanlı torunları 😂😂😂
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Ok but if Mehmed did kill Laia I want it to be the most heartbreaking, gut wrenching, angst riddled scene to exist you hear me.
I'm talking crime of passion, nose-to-nose, she's coughing up blood as he slowly realizes what he did, her reaching her hand up to his face and calling his name before dying; not Sultan, not şehzade, his name.
I want to be fucking broken do you understand me?
#am I on Vlad's route yes but does that mean I'm immune to the plight of others? nope#I want that shit to HURT#I want to see what made my man make a deal with the devil#I want to be 🎇𝓻𝓾𝓲𝓷𝓮𝓭🎇#do you understand me?#romance club#dracula a love story#dals
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How about a Yandere Mehmed (Suleiman's son) in love/obsessed with his brother Mustafa's favorite concubine.
La trajeron de Grecia y ella sabe mucho de artes, literatura y mitos y llama la atención de ambos hermanos ( sería problemático ya que estaban muy "cerca" en el programa )
It's total chaos. I really like this request. I hope you will like it. Please feel free to write more requests.
~ Most likely Mahidevran Sultan or if still alive, Valide Hafsa Sultan chose you. You are always chosen from other women with your beauty and many skills.
~ You are succeeding in being Prince Mustafa's favorite and favorite concubine. He never ceases to invite you to his side. It takes you wherever possible.
~ Maybe you meet Şehzade Mehmed by coincidence or in a place you went with Şehzade Mustafa. He wants to know why you are so important to his brother Mustafa.
~ Researching you causes him to have obsessive feelings towards you. He wishes that you were presented to him.
~ If you have been with his brother, it is not possible for him to take you anymore. However, he will only want to take you if you are a concubine in the harem.
~ Hürrem Sultan soon realizes that there is something strange about his son. He is surprised when he finds out about your reason. If you weren't with Şehzade Mustafa, he would try to recruit you into his son's harem.
~ Hürrem Sultan will take advantage of this situation. He will use you to increase Mehmed's desire to ascend to the throne and to see Mustafa as an enemy.
~ Mahidevran Sultan does not want you to get too close and chat with Hürrem and her children. It warns you to stay away from them.
~ Mahidevran Sultan wants you to get pregnant as soon as possible. If you have children, it will be impossible for you to go or be taken.
~ Mihrimah Sultan will want to spend time with you. Esmehan Sultan (Sahuban Sultan's daughter and because she is in love with Mehmed) will be jealous of you. The other concubines of Şehzade Mehmed are very jealous of you.
~The other concubines of Şehzade Mustafa will be very jealous of you. The fact that you are the prince's favorite makes many concubines angry.
~ When Şehzade Mehmed sees that you and your brother are together, the gets angry and jealous. He promises himself that when he ascends the throne, he will make you his.
~ Şehzade Mustafa is a smart man. Your brother will soon realize that you have feelings for you. She does not hesitate to make her jealous and angry by having happy moments with you in front of her eyes.
#yandere magnificent century#magnificent century#sehzade mustafa#sehzade mustafa x reader#sehzade mehmed#sehzade mehmed x reader#yandere ottoman empire#ottoman empire#yandere sehzade mustafa#yandere sehzade mehmed#yandere concept#concubine reader#sultans
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I am really glad that you have answered my analysis of Ümmügülsüm Sultan as daughter of Ahmed I.
I have investigated Sultanas for 3 years for now and I want to share my findings about daughters of Bayezid II that are kinda new ones... I want to hear your comments.
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In work Şehzade Korkud (ca. 1468-1513) and the Articulation of Early 16th Century Ottoman Religious Identity on page 60 (note 43), it is said that İlaldı Sultan was said to be own sister of Selim I. Additionally, in work The marriage of Ibrahim Pasha on page 25, it is said that Ferhad Pasha and Ahmed Pasha were pashas from Selim’s household; one married his daughter and another his sister. Ahmed Pasha was on strong positions even through reign of Selim I, so... But, I think that he was not the first husband of İlaldı; as she was Selim’s sister, she must had been older than him and probably she got married when he was sent to province (1487) if not earlier.
There are multiple suggestions and claims of Sofu Fatma Sultan’s marriages. Öztuna claims that her first marriage was in 1482 to Mirza Mehmed Pasha (d. August 1517, who was remarried in 1513 to Şahnisa Sultan); Alderson in his tables claim that she was married in 1489 to son of Koca Davud Pasha, Mustafa Pasha (d. 1524), which J. Dumas also confirmed at the end of the 2013 book at page 477. She was married to Güzelce Hasan Bey at sometime, but in work Şehzade Korkud (ca. 1468-1513) and the Articulation of Early 16th Century Ottoman Religious Identity on page 55 (note 23) it is stongly claimed that in late 1504 she was still married to Hasan Bey, but in June she was reffered as former wife of Hasan Bey. In Dumas’s 2013 book, somewhere I have found that she says that she remarried after Hasan Bey to certain Ahmed Pasha, but I couldn’t find it now. If all these four marriages happened, if you ask me, at least in two cases marriage ended with a divorce.
In work Wolf on the Border: Yahyapaşaoğlu Bali Bey (?-1527) by Fodor, it is strongly claimed that gift records show Yahya Pasha was married in 1501/02 to Aynışah Sultan, and that Bali Pasha was her stepson who married her daughter in 1508. I strongly consider suggestion of historians that Aynışah was Şirin Hatun’s daughter FALSE. They consider her being buried beside her grandmother and father, although it is Şirin Hatun’s granddaughter Aynışah Sultan (who was buried there when she died in 1540). Aynışah Sultan was married in 1489 to her first cousin Ahmed Bey, who was 13 years old at the time. I consider Aynışah to be similar in age of her husband (thus being born in 1475/76), because if she was Abdullah’s own sister, she was born before 1464, which would mean she was twice as old as her husband, which is unimaginable to me.
Serbian historian Gliša Elezović claimed that Bayezid II’s daughter Hümaşah Sultan was remarried after death of her husband Bali Pasha to governor of Skopje Mustafa Pasha. Later, one of the historians made work about Çoban Mustafa Pasha, who was governor of Skopje during reign of Bayezid II and claims that he was Hümaşah’s second husband, and that after her death he remarried Selim I’s daughter Hafsa Sultan in 1517. With Hümaşah Sultan he had four daughters, see on second page: https://acikerisim.fsm.edu.tr/xmlui/bitstream/handle/11352/1785/%C4%B0brahimgil.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
Additionally, beside four daughters with Mustafa Pasha, Hümaşah Sultan had a son Hüseyinşah Bey, who died in 1566 and was from Karlizade family. Elezović also confirmed this, but also in work Journal of Turkish Studies 39 (2013), on page 248 this information is confirmed. But his father must have been from Karlizade family, and there was one of Bayezid II’s damads named Karlizade Mehmed Bey who was governor and still alive in 1511. In this document about provincial governors and damads of Bayezid II, he is reffered as II. Bayezid'in damatlarından Mehmed Bey bin Karlı'dır. Obviously, she divorced one of them…
In Fisher’s book The foreign relations of Turkey 1481-1512 we have two interesting informations; in 1481 there were recorded four sons-in-law of prince Bayezid (p. 17; note 33):
Hersekli Ahmed Pasha (Hundi Sultan lol); Sinan Pasha (Ayşe Sultan lol), Kasim aga-aga of the jannisaries and Rüstem pasha-janissary pasha. Are you able to find out what were names of wifes of other two pashas?
On page 93 of the same book:
It was not usual custom in Turkey to give daughters of the sultan to foreign princes, but Bayezid disregarded this usage and married two daughters outside the empire. One he had given to Amed Mirza of Persia, and now he cemented the friendship between Turkey and Egypt by sending a daughter to Cairo. This was in 1501, and the next year ambassadors were exchanged to discuss the affairs of Persia and the Syrian frontier.
In book Struggle for Domination in the Middle East by Shai Har-El (p. 215):
In 1501 Bayezid sent his daughter to marry the newly-enthroned Mamluk Sultan Kansu al-Gawri, thus confirming a peaceful relation between the two states. The following year, in the late 1502 Bayezid agreed to peace with Venice in order to free himself to deal with new problems emerging the East.
But, if you read Alderson’s tables (last note in tables of Bayezid II), he cites some source I couldn’t understand from Ulucay and says that this Sultana who married Kansuh was later accused of adultery. Nothing shocking to me as Kansuh al-Gawri was 60 years old at the time, and this Sultana was young. But I am dying to know what was her name. Could you be able to find out?
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You’re welcome, it was a very interesting read :D
I have to tell you in advance that it’s been a long time since I studied anything different from the Sultanate of Women so I may make mistakes or I may not know well what we’re talking about. Please, bear with me.
It's going to be very long, I'm sorry
If you don’t mind, I’m going to summarise what you said:
According to Nabil Al-Tikriti in Şehzade Korkud (ca. 1468-1513) and the Articulation of Early 16th Century Ottoman Religious Identity (p. 60, n. 43), İlaldı Sultan was “said to have been Selim’s full sister”
She married Ahmed Ağa (> Hâin Ahmed Paşa), who came from Selim I’s household and was one of his favourites (According to Öztuna, he was executed in Cairo)
According to Uluçay she must have died around 1518 because she doesn’t figure among the princesses who received a stipend from Selim I on that date
Sofu Fatma Sultan: she married Güzelce Hasan Bey (m. before late february 1504-june or before june 1506) and had a daughter with him. She married Ahmed Bey bin Ali Bey bin Mesih Paşa (Uluçay, p. 49). Her son Mehmed Çelebi later married Ayse Sultan daughter of Şehzade Alemşah.
According to Uluçay (via Sakaoglu), it’s not true that she had married Mustafa Bey, son of Grand Vizier Davud PashaYou may be right that she had a previous husband before Güzelce Hasan Bey because according to Uluçay she only had a daughter with him. He didn’t know her son Mehmed Çelebi’s father but that seems to mean she had another husband. Still, according to Uluçay, Sofu Fatma Sultan was also the wife of Ahmed Bey bin Ali Bey bin Mesih Paşa but both Sakaoglu and Oztuna maintain that he was the husband of her daughter instead.
Yes, so, about Dumas’ dissertation… Her family trees were not made by her, she simply reported what Alderson or Uluçay said in their books, so they’re not exactly sources. It can be seen in the fact that she never attempts to identify the princesses she finds in harem registers. For example, in her dissertation she says that “Gevherhan” was a daughter of Murad III with a concubine of non-haseki status (in reality that Gevherhan is Gevherhan binti Selim II, who had a long life) but she didn’t put her in the family trees at the end.
Aynışah Sultan: she first married Akkoyunlu Damad Göde Ahmed Bey in 1490, the marriage lasted until 1497 (when Ahmed Bey was killed during an uprising in Azerbaijan, where he had gone earlier that year to reclaim the throne of his grandfather, Akkoyunlu ruler Uzun Hasan). With Ahmed Bey, Aynışah had two daughters, Hanzade and an unnamed daughter who married her cousin Şehzade Alaeddin, son of Şehzade Ahmed. According to Öztuna, she also had a son: Sultân-zâde Zeynel Mîrzâ Bey. She secondly married Malkoçoğlu Dâmâd Yahyâ Pasha at the turn of the century (or 1501/1502). At the time, Yahya Pasha already had seven sons: Bali, Mahmud, Mehmed, Sinan, Ahmed, İskender, and Mustafa, who were all adults when their father married into the imperial family. In 1508, Yahya Pasha’s eldest son Bali Bey married one of Aynışah’s daughters from her previous marriage. The marriage was unhappy because the princess had several affairs, and did not produce any legitimate issue.
Akkoyunlu Damad Göde Ahmed Bey was the son of Gevherhan Sultan binti Mehmed II and Dâmâd Uğurlu Mehmed Mirza/Pasha. He was born in 1476 and was therefore 14 yo when he married Aynışah.
Hüma/Hümaşah Sultan: she firstly married Dâmâd Antalyalı Balı Paşa around 1482. After his death in 1494, she married Çoban Mustafa Paşa with whom she had four daughters: Huma, Hani, Şahzeman, and Ümmi Hatun (according to Mehmet Z. İbrahimgil in Makedonya'da Gazi Mustafa Paşa'nın Vakıf Malları). After Hümaşah Sultan’s death (1504??), Çoban Mustafa Pasha married Selim I’s daughter Hafsa.
The marriages of Selim I’s daughters are a mess, to say the least, so I won’t get into it. Turan says “In 1517 Mustafa Pasha married the widow of Bostancıbaşı Iskender Pasha, whom Selim had executed in 1515”. Öztuna gives these husbands to Hafsa, though he didn’t identify the bostancıbaşı: “=1. Dâmâd Fülân Ağa, bostâncıbaşı, executed by Yavuz. =2. Dâmâd Gaazî Çoban Mustafa Paşa (executed 20.8.1523) b. İskender Paşa (ölm. 1506)” I could not find any of Elezović’s works so I don’t know which his sources were. Grygor Boykov in Karlizâde ‘Ali Bey: an Ottoman Dignitary’s Pious Endowment and the Emergence of the Town of Karlova in Central Bulgaria (which is the essay in the Journal of Turkish Studies you mentioned) gives this information:
Another relative, one Hüseyin Şah Bey, who is known to have been an offspring of the Ottoman princess Huma Şah Sultan and of a member of the Karlizâde family, built in 1553/1554 in the village of Saray (near Skopje) a mosque, medrese, and a bridge over the river Vardar. He was buried there in 1566/1567 in a highly monumental mausoleum that almost rivals in size the mosque.
without sources, unfortunately.
The essay you mentioned is İlhan Gök’s İnamat Defteri’ndeki Verilere Göre 16. Yüzyılın İlk Çeyreğinde Osmanlı Eyalet ve Sancak Yöneticileri, where he repeatedly says that Mehmed Bey bin Karlı was a damad of Bayezid II.
Do you think she married Mehmed Bey bin Karlı before Çoban Mustafa Pasha? This Mehmed Bey was governor of İlbasan from 23 July 1505 to 21 March 1507, governor of Alaiye from 9 March 1509 to 15 October 1509, and governor of Vulçıtrın from 6 July 1510 to 7 December 1511. If Hümaşah had only a son with him, Hüseyin Şah Bey, this marriage could have been a short one. On the other hand, the marriage with Çoban Mustafa Pasha must have been longer since they had 4 daughters.
About Fisher’s book:
Kasim, aga of the janissaries (DaLezze*,* p. 164*);* Rustem, janissary pasha (DaLezze, p. 179); Hersekoglu Ahmed, beylerbey of Rumelia (Spanduguino, p. 170; P. Giovio, "Informatione di Paulo Giovio vescovo di Nocera, a Carlo Quinto Imperatore Auguisto” in Dell’historia universale dell’origine et imperio de Turchi [Sansovino, ed], p. 218r); and Sinan, beylerbey of Anatolia (Hammer, III, 339) were all related to Bayezid by marriage.
“DaLezze” is the Historia Turchesca whose paternity is disputed, but Italian historians say it was not written by Donato Da Lezze. In any case, I don’t have it so I can’t read what he said about these men.
So, Mehmed II died in 1481, and this note refers to when Bayezid was trying to reach Istanbul before Cem so he could claim the throne for himself.
Oztuna, in Devletler ve Hanedanlar , lists the Janissaries commanders. Between 1451 and 1515 Mehmed II had abolished the commander of the Janissaries, leaving only the segbânbaşı, that is his deputy.
Hasan Ağa (1451-), 'Abdurrahmân Ağa, Balaban Ağa, Trabzonlu Mehmed Bey, Yâ'qûb Ağa (-1462), Ramazân Ağa, Karagöz Mehmed Ağa, Ibrâhîm Ağa (1485), a different Karagöz Ağa (1497), Yûnus Ağa (1502), Balyemez 'Osmân Ağa (-1515).
It’s Selim I (in 1515) who restored the commander of the Janissaries and gave him a seat in the Divan.
Anyway, if we believe Oztuna to be accurate, there are no Kasim or Rustem during these years. The first Rustem I encountered was “Güzelce Rüstem Ağa 1531-1533”, who was a damad according to Alderson (but his source is Fisher...).
I don’t know anything about a marriage between an Ottoman princess and Qansuh II al-Ghawri, but I’ve found that Cem’s daughter Gevhermelik married An-Nasir Muhammad ibn Qaitbay in 1495.
So, the sources Alderson mentions are articles Uluçay published in Yeni Tarih Dünyası, which is a magazine and not really a scientific journal but that’s how Ottoman history was first spread in the 1950s:
Popular history journals had been a part of a widespread genre in Turkey whose growing population of readers was committed to historical knowledge rooted in nationalist Kemalist ideology and it’s advancement of a particular version of historical discourse. Such journals were published from the beginning of the twentieth century both by political parties and private owners. However they began to proliferate in the 1950s, partly as a result of the relaxation of the political system that had an effect on intellectual life in Turkey. […] Unlike strictly academic historical research, reaching a much more limited readership, popular historical texts can serve the purpose of spreading nationalist ideology to wider populations, and fulfill the need for a “history of the people”. In Turkey during the 1950s and 60s, popular historical literature was produced in the framework of the new Ottoman-centered historical discourse, and managed to reach populations of Turkish readers less exposed to academic historical discourse and less influenced by Kemalist reforms, i.e. non-elite classes. — Ruth Barzilai-Lumbroso, Turkish Men and the History of Ottoman Women: Studying the History of the Ottoman Dynasty’s Private Sphere Through Women’s Writings.
As for your last question, I think the woman accused of adultery is not the same princess who married the Mamluk sultan:
they’re two different notes referring to two different women:
Even without this inter-dynastic marriage between an Ottoman princess and a Mamluk Sultan (which I couldn’t confirm, not even by reading Marino Sanuto’s Diarii), there is so much information about Bayezid II’s daughters.
It was very interesting to read and research, thank you :D
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This green and gold kaftan was first worn by Şehzade Mehmed in the twentieth episode of the third season of Magnificent Century. It is worn again by Şehzade Mustafa in the first episode of the fourth season.
The kaftan also appears on Musa Çelebi in the twenty-sixth episode of the second season of Magnificent Century: Kösem.
#Muhteşem Yüzyıl#Muhteşem Yüzyıl: Kösem#Magnificent Century#Magnificent Century Kösem#Magnificent Century Kosem#period drama#costume drama#historical drama#Şehzade Mehmed#Sehzade Mehmed#Şehzade Mehmed (Son of Hürrem)#Şehzade Mustafa#Sehzade Mustafa#Şehzade Mustafa (Son of Mahidevran)#Musa Çelebi#Musa Celebi#reused costumes#recycled costumes
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𝐓𝐀𝐘𝐋𝐎𝐑 𝐒𝐖𝐈𝐅𝐓 𝐄𝐑𝐀'𝐒 𝐁𝐘 𝐌𝐔𝐇𝐓𝐄𝐒𝐄𝐌 𝐘𝐔̈𝐙𝐘𝐈̇𝐋 𝐏𝐀𝐑𝐓 𝐎𝐍𝐄
Hürrem Sultan as Fearless
Rustem Ağa as Speak Now
Mihrimah Sultan as Red
Şehzade Mehmed as 1989
Şehzade Mustafa as Reputation
#taylor swift#taylor eras#the eras tour#the eras taylor swift#hurrem sultan#fearless#rustem ağa#speak now#mihrimah sultan#red era#şehzade mehmed#1989 taylor's version#1989 tv#taylor swift 1989#şehzade mustafa#reputation
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A “şehzade” was the title given to the sons of an Ottoman sovereign. Roughly translates to “prince” in English. It descends from the Persian word shahzad.
“Çelebi” was another significant title, similar to the word “gentleman” in English.
“Pasha” was a title similar to “lord” usually following behind a person’s name as exemplified with “Mehmed Pasha”.
A “bey” was a turkic equivalent to a chieftain and the territory that they ruled was a “beylik”.
Then there’s “ghazi” a word used to describe holy warriors.
#ottoman sultan#ottoman empire#ottoman#turkic#middle eastern history#early modern period#early modern history#medieval#medieval history#culture#history#royalty
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Mehmed: Why can’t dinosaurs clap?
Cihangir: Because their arms are too shor-
Bayezid: Because they’re all dead.
#the magnificent century#muhteşem yüzyıl#the magnificent century incorrect quotes#incorrect quotes#şehzade bayezid#şehzade mehmed#şehzade cihangir#prince Bayezid#prince Mehmed#prince Cihangir
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Zehra Hanzade Sultan (12 September 1923 – 19 March 1998) was an Ottoman princess, the daughter of Şehzade Ömer Faruk, the son of the last caliph, Abdulmejid II, and Şehsuvar Hanım. Her mother was Sabiha Sultan, daughter of Sultan Mehmed VI and Nazikeda Kadın.
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