Esma Sultan (daughter of Ahmed III) explained

Esma Sultan
Issue:Third marriage
Zeynep Hanımsultan
House:Ottoman
House-Type:Dynasty
Father:Ahmed III
Mother:Hanife Kadın or Zeyneb Kadın
Birth Date:14 March 1726
Birth Place:Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
(present day Istanbul, Turkey)
Death Place:Kadırga Palace, Istanbul, Ottoman Empire
Burial Place:Muhsinzade Mehmed Pasha Mausoleum, Eyüp, Istanbul
Religion:Sunni Islam

Esma Sultan (Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928);: اسما سلطان; "supreme"; 14 March 1726 – 13 August 1788), also called Büyük Esma (Esma "the elder"), was an Ottoman princess, daughter of Sultan Ahmed III and one of his consort, Hanife Kadın or Zeyneb Kadın. She was the half-sister of Sultans Mustafa III and Abdul Hamid I.[1]

Life

Birth

Esma Sultan was born on 14 March 1726 in the Topkapı Palace. Her father was Sultan Ahmed. Her mother is uncertain: Hanife Kadın or Zeyneb Kadın, two of her father's consorts.[2] She was nicknamed Büyük Esma (Esma "the eldest") to distinguish her by her niece Küçük Esma (Esma "the younger"), daughter of Abdülhamid I.

When she was four, her father was dethronized and she was confined, with her half-sisters, her mother and her father's other consorts, in the Old Palace, until her marriage.

Marriages

In 1743, her cousin Sultan Mahmud I, arranged her marriage to Yakub Pasha. The marriage took place in February 1743 in the Kadırga Palace. Yakub Pasha died the same year. After his death, she married the governor of Adana, Yusuf Piri Mustafâ Pasha. After his death in 1751, she married Muhsinzade Mehmed Pasha, a vizier on 24 June 1758 in the Kadırga Palace. Her served as the Grand Vizier between 1765 and 1768, and later again between 1771 until his death in 1774. With him she had a daughter.

She is said to be curious about the west. She received the wife and mother-in-law of the Baron de Tott, the Hungarian nobleman who served as military adviser to the Turkish government for many years. She discussed with them the liberty of European women, and expressed the dissatisfaction that married her at a young age to an old man who treated her like a child. The pasha having died, she then married a younger man more to her liking, but the practice of sending the princesses husband to distant governorships kept them apart.[3]

Furthermore, Esma Sultan was very influential during the reigns of her half-brothers Mustafa III and specially Abdülhamid I, whom she was the favorite sister. It was she who reported to Abdülhamid that his Grand Vizier, Halil Hamid Pasha, was plotting to depose him in favor of Şehzade Selim.

Properties

Esma Sultan was among the wealthiest women in the Ottoman Empire, despite the rumor that she had a frugal personality.

Esma Sultan had her crown states turned into mâlikane contracts, which were divided among her protégés, and managed by agents and subcontractors. The name of one of her male associates appeared as contractor in his own right.[4]

Esma also complained that her late husband, Mehmed Pasha, had promised her the income from Vâsıf's prebend from Anatolia. She accused him of stealing the grant, confiscated it, and transferred it to her own client. Because she was so close to the Sultan, and because Vâsıf lacked influential patrons, he couldn't find anyone to intercede on his behalf, and was left without a job and income.[5]

Esma Sultan was allocated the mansion of Princess Hançerli Sultan in Eyüp Bahariye, which became famous with her own name. She also owned a waterfront palace in Ortaköy, and a farm in Terkos.

Charities

In 1779, Esma Sultan commissioned a fountain for the soul of her late husband, Mehmed Pasha, in her name near the namazgah in Kadırga Square. She also commissioned another fountain in her name in the same place in 1781.

Issue

By her third marriage, Esma Sultan had a daughter:

In addition, Esma educated the future Nakşidil Kadin, who would later become a consort of Abdülhamid I, and the mother and Valide Sultan of Mahmud II.

Death

Esma Sultan died on 13 August 1788 in the Kadırga Palace, and was buried in the mausoleum of Muhsinzade Mehmed Pasha in Eyüp.

In popular culture

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Sicil-i Osmani, Mehmet Süreyya Bey, Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, Istanbul, 1996.
  2. Book: Aktaş, Ali. ÇELEBİZÂDE ÂSIM TARİHİ: Transkripsiyonlu metin. 164–5. 2008.
  3. Book: Fanny Davis. The Ottoman Lady: A Social History from 1718 to 1918. 1986. 16, 147. Greenwood Publishing Group. 978-0-313-24811-5.
  4. Book: Salzmann, Ariel. Tocqueville in the Ottoman Empire: Rival Paths to the Modern State. BRILL. 2004. 106. 978-9-004-10887-5.
  5. Book: Menchinger, Ethan L.. The First of the Modern Ottomans. Cambridge University Press. August 10, 2017. 64. 978-1-107-19797-8.