Düzdidil Kadın
Düzdidil Kadın رزددل قادین | |||||||||
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Empress consort of the Ottoman Empire | |||||||||
Tenure | 1839 - 18 August 1845 | ||||||||
Born |
Ayşe Dişan c. 1825 North Caucasus | ||||||||
Died |
18 August 1845 19–20) Istanbul, Ottoman Empire | (aged||||||||
Burial | Cedid Havatin Türbe, Yeni Mosque, Istanbul | ||||||||
Spouse | Abdülmecid I | ||||||||
Issue |
Mevhibe Sultan Neyyire Sultan Cemile Sultan Samiye Sultan | ||||||||
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House |
House of Dişam (by birth) House of Osman (by marriage) | ||||||||
Father | Şıhım Bey Dişan | ||||||||
Mother | Princess Çaçba | ||||||||
Religion | Sunni Islam |
Düzdidil Kadın (Ottoman Turkish: دزددل قادین; c. 1825 - 18 August 1845) was the Empress consort of Sultan Abdülmecid I of the Ottoman Empire.
Life
Born as Ayşe Dişan, Düzdidil Kadın was an Ubykh. Her father was Şıhım Bey Dişan and her mother was an Abkhazian princess belonging to Shervashidze. At the age of six, Ayşe came to Istanbul along with her wet nurse Emine Hanım. Yahya Bey presented Ayşe and Emine Hanım in the royal harem. She was renamed Düzdidil and was given private education and lessons of piano in the harem department of the Topkapı Palace. She married Abdülmecid in 1839.[1] She had fallen victim to the epidemic of tuberculosis then raging in Istanbul. A luxuriously decorated prayer book was commissioned around 1844 for her. As was fitting for her position, the prayer book is lavishly ornate. It contains 33 surahs of the Qur'an, 80 prayers of request and praise, and 61 miniatures. The rococo style of the manuscript corresponds to contemporary Ottoman taste. An artist named Hüseyin created the emotive illustrations in the appendix, which feature views of the holy places in Mecca and Medina as well as the relics of the Prophet kept in the Topkapı Palace.[2]
She died on 18 August 1845 and was buried in the Mausoleum of the imperial ladies at the Yeni Mosque Istanbul. Cemile Sultan was only two years old when Düzdidil died. Cemile was adopted by another of Sultan Abdülmecid's wives, Empress Perestu Kadın, who was also the adoptive mother one of her half brothers, the last Ottoman Sultan, Abdul Hamid II.[3][4]
Issue
Düzdidil and Abdülmecid had four children:
- Princess Mevhibe Sultan (31 May 1840 – 9 February 1841, buried in Bahçekapı, Hamidiye Türbesi);
- Princess Neyyire Sultan (13 October 1841 - 18 December 1843);
- Princess Cemile Sultan (Old Beylerbeyi Palace, Bosphorus, 17 August 1843 – Erenköy, 26 February 1915);
- Princess Samiye Sultan (23 February 1845 – 18 April 1845, buried in New Mosque, Istanbul).
References
- ↑ Harun Açba (2007). Kadın efendiler: 1839-1924. Profil. ISBN 978-9-759-96109-1.
- ↑ Prayer Book of Düzdidil
- ↑ The Concubine, the Princess, and the Teacher: Voices from the Ottoman Harem. University of Texas Press. 2010. ISBN 978-0-292-78335-5.
- ↑ M. Çağatay Uluçay (2011). Padişahların kadınları ve kızları. Ötüken. pp. 248–49. ISBN 978-9-754-37840-5.