Ayşe Sultan (daughter of Bayezid II) explained

Ayşe Sultan
Issue:Sultanzade Ahmed Bey
Sultanzade Mustafa Bey
Hanzade Ayşe Mihrihan Hanımsultan
Gevherşah Hanımsultan
Kamerşah Hanımsultan
Fatma Hanımsultan
Mihrihan Hanımsultan
House:Ottoman
House-Type:Dynasty
Father:Bayezid II
Mother:Nigar Hatun
Birth Date:1465
Birth Place:Amasya, Ottoman Empire
Death Place:Constantinople, Ottoman Empire (modern-day Istanbul, Turkey)
Burial Place:Vefa, Istanbul
Religion:Sunni Islam

Ayşe Sultan (Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928);: عائشه سلطان, "The Living One" or "womanly", 1465 - 1515) was an Ottoman princess, the daughter of Sultan Bayezid II and one of his concubine, Nigar Hatun.

Marriage

Ayşe Sultan was born in Amasya in 1465, to Bayezid II, then Şehzade and governator of the region. Her mother was the concubine Nigar Hatun, and therefore the blood sister of Şehzade Korkut and Fatma Sultan; but according to some she was instead the daughter of Bülbül Hatun, and sister of Şehzade Ahmed and Hundi Sultan.

Ayşe married Guveyi Sinan Pasha, probably when her father was still a prince and the governor of Amasya. During Bayezid's reign, he was appointed the beylerbeyi (governor) of Anatolia. Ayşe followed him during his career in Anatolia, Gelibolu, and Rumelia.

The two together had two sons and five daughters.

Ayşe Sultan had spent public money, while her husband, Sinan Pasha, was at war. In a letter written to her father, she complained of lack of money. However, she later had to justify herself in the eyes of her father.[1]

After she was widowed in 1504, she returned to the capital, and her father, and later her half-brother Sultan Selim I, granted her an allowance.

Charities

In her lifetime she built a mosque in Edirne, a mescid and a school in Gelibolu to which she bequeathed her property.[2] Sinan, her husband, received from her father villages in nahiye Üsküdar as a mülk. Consequently Sinan donated them to the mosque and kervansaray he constructed. The pasha established also a waqf at a zaviye in Gelibolu to which he bequeathed mülk villages purchased from Ayşe.[2]

Issue

By her husband, Ayşe Sultan had two sons and five daughters:

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Fatma. Türe. Birsen Talay. Keşoğlu. Women's Memory: The Problem of Sources. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. July 12, 2011. 63. 978-1-443-83265-6.
  2. Book: Inventory of Ottoman Turkish documents about Waqf preserved in the Oriental Department at the St. St. Cyril and Methodius National Library: Registers. Narodna biblioteka "Sv. sv. Kiril i Metodiĭ. 2003. 215, 242.
  3. Book: Majer, Hans Georg. Frauen, Bilder und Gelehrte: Studien zu Gesellschaft und Künsten im Osmanischen Reich, Volume 1. Simurg. 2002. 105. 978-9-757-17263-5.
  4. Uluçay 2011, p. 48-49.
  5. Book: Uluçay, M. Çağatay. BAYAZID II. IN ÂILESI. 120.