Gülşah Hatun

Gülşah Hatun
کل شاہ خاتون
Mader-ı Sultan Mustafa
Died c. 1487
Bursa, Ottoman Empire
Burial Muradiye Complex, Bursa
Spouse Mehmed the Conqueror
Issue Şehzade Mustafa
Full name
Turkish: Gülşah Hatun
English: Gulshah Khatun
Ottoman Turkish: کل شاہ خاتون
House House of Osman (by marriage)
Religion Sunni Islam

Gülşah Hatun (Ottoman Turkish: کل شاہ خاتون; died c. 1487, Bursa) was the Empress consort of Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror of the Ottoman Empire.

Early years

She married Mehmed in 1449, when he was still a prince and the governor of Manisa. Just before Sultan Murad II's death,[1][2] she gave birth to her only son, Şehzade Mustafa, who was to be his father's favourite.[3][2] According to Turkish tradition, all princes were expected to work as provincial governors as a part of their training. Mustafa was sent to govern Konya and later Kayseri, and Gülşah accompanied him.[4][5]

Mustafa's death

Mustafa died in June 1474 of natural causes.[6] It was said that Mustafa had approached Mahmud Pasha's wife and thus making him behind Mustafa's murder.[7][2] There are speculations that Gülşah Hatun may have been a party to illicit the relations between the prince and wife of Mahmud Pasha.[8] However, Giovanni Maria Angiolello, a Venetian traveler, author of an important historical report on the Aq Qoyunlu and early Safavid Persia, was in the service of Mustafa, and who with the rest of Mustafa’s household accompanied the prince’s cortege from his post his Kayseri to Bursa, where he was buried, denied any role for Mahmud Pasha in Mustafa's murder.[7][9][2]

Gülşah Hatun had not been informed of his death, and with the wagon with her dead son stopped outside the palace, she and the women of her train began to wail. Mustafa's only child, Princess Hani Nergisşah Hatun, shared her grandmother's grief, and the lamentations went on endlessly.[6] Mehmed sent word that she should remain in Bursa with those maidens whom she required. Mehmed also had a good provision made for her, where she might live there honourably. He ordered that Mustafa’s daughter and her mother and rest of the ladies together with all others belonging to the court of his decreased son should come to Istanbul. All the women were lodged in the palace where women of Mehmed's harem stayed, and after several days the maidens were married to courtiers.[9] When Nergisşah came of age she married her cousin Şehzade Ahmet, son of Sultan Bayezid II.[10][11]

last years

In 1479, Gülşah Hatun was granted the village of Sığırcalu in Dimetoka,[12] its revenues were converted into mülk so that Gülşah could turn it into an endowment for the eventual upkeep of her tomb in Bursa.[13] Gülşah Hatun died in 1487, and was buried in Bursa in the tomb she had built for herself near that of Mustafa.[9][3][5] The tomb of Gülşah Hatun has an entrance with elegant jogged voussoirs, and marble cenotaphs inside, new-made from old pieces.[14]

References

Bibliography

  • Franz Babinger (1992). Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-01078-6. 
  • M. Çağatay Uluçay (1985). Padişahların kadınları ve kızları. Türk Tarih Kurumu. 
  • Necdet Sakaoğlu (2008). Bu mülkün kadın sultanları: Vâlide sultanlar, hâtunlar, hasekiler, kadınefendiler, sultanefendiler. Oğlak Yayıncılık. ISBN 978-9-753-29623-6. 
  • Michael Greenhalgh (2009). Marble Past, Monumental Present: Building With Antiquities in the Mediaeval Mediterranean. BRILL. ISBN 978-9-004-17083-4. 
  • Elisavet A. Zachariadou (1996). The Via Egnatia under Ottoman rule (1380-1699): Halcyon Days in Crete II : a symposium held in Rethymnon 9-11 January 1994. Crete University Press. 

  • Leslie P. Peirce (1993). The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-195-08677-5. 
  • Théoharis Stavrides (2001). The Sultan of Vezirs: The Life and Times of the Ottoman Grand Vezir Mahmud Pasha Angelović (1453-1474). BRILL. ISBN 978-9-004-12106-5. 
  • Archivum Ottomanicum, Volume 8. Mouton. 1983. 
  • Mehmet Süreyya Bey (1969). Osmanlı devletinde kim kimdi, Volume 1. Küğ Yayını. ISBN 978-9-004-12106-5. 

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.