Farida of Egypt explained

Type:majesty
Consort:yes
Farida
Succession:Queen consort of Egypt
Reign:20 January 1938 – 17 November 1948
Issue:Princess Ferial
Princess Fawzia
Princess Fadia
Full Name:Safinaz Zulficar (birth name)
House:Alawiyya
(by marriage)
Father:Youssef Zulficar Pasha
Mother:Zeinab Zulficar
Birth Date:5 September 1921
Birth Place:Alexandria, Egypt
Death Place:Maadi, Cairo, Egypt
Date Of Burial:Al-Rifa'i Mosque, Cairo, Egypt
Occupation:Painter
Religion:Sunni Islam

Farida (born Safinaz Zulficar Arabic: صافيناز ذو الفقار; 5 September 1921 – 16 October 1988) was the Queen of Egypt for nearly eleven years as the first wife of King Farouk. She was the first queen of Egypt since Cleopatra to have left seclusion and played a public representational role, attending public functions and acting as honorary protector of charities, in accordance with the modern image the monarchy wished to represent at the time. The marriage was dissolved by divorce in 1948.

Early life and education

Queen Farida was born Safinaz Zulficar on 5 September 1921[1] to an Egyptian noble family in Janaklis, Alexandria. Her father, Youssef Zulficar Pasha, was a judge of Circassian origin;[2] he was also vice president of the Alexandria Mixed Court of Appeals.[3] Her mother, Zeinab Zulficar, was a lady-in-waiting of Queen Nazli Sabri. On her mother's side, Farida's uncle was the artist and lawyer Mahmoud Sa'id, and her grandfather was the former prime minister of Egypt Muhammad Said Pasha, who was also of Circassian origin.[4] Farida attended elementary and primary education at Notre Dame de Sion in Alexandria, a school run by French nuns.[5] [6]

Marriage and issues

Farida and King Farouk first met on a royal trip to London in 1937.[7] They were engaged in the summer of 1937.[7]

She married King Farouk on 20 January 1938 at Qubba Palace in Cairo, Egypt.[8] She was renamed Farida as her reginal name in accordance with the royal naming convention initiated by King Fuad I that members of the royal family should bear the same initials. She wore a wedding gown designed by The House of Worth in Paris.[9] She had three daughters:

After the birth of a third daughter, Farouk divorced her, on 19 November 1948.[7] King Farouk cared for the first two daughters, while Farida cared for the youngest one after the divorce.[10]

Queenship and public role

Queen Farida was born in a culture in which motherhood was the only priority of a woman. The birth of an heir to the throne was especially important. However, due to rising influence of the West, the role of the first lady and Queen rose to higher grounds.

A certain female emancipation at least in terms of visibility, had occurred in the Egyptian elite around the royal family, as it was regarded as a sign of modernity, suitable to use in the representation of the royal house to the Western world.[11] In contrast to her predecessor, Queen Farida was not to live in seclusion, but to be given a public role.

The marriage in itself was used in official publicity to show the modern image the monarchy wished to give, and the royal couple was officially described as a modern domestic couple in a monogamous companionate marriage, which at that time had come to be regarded as the ideal of the Egyptian elite.[11]

Also the rest of the women of the Royal family were freed from harem seclusion after Farouk's succession to the throne. During the wedding of King Farouk and Queen Farida, an official state royal wedding banquet was held, which the new Queen as well as the King's mother and sisters attended in mixed company and photos published in the press, and two days after the wedding, the King introduced the new Queen to the public by appearing with her on the royal balcony, something no queen had been allowed before.[12]

The position of first lady and Queen became an honorary position bearing with it public representational duties, such as attending charities, fundraisers, commemorations and receiving foreign dignitaries.

Queen Farida accepted the chair of the Red Crescent Society and was also honorary president of the Egyptian Feminist Union and the New Woman Alliance. She was also patron of the Egyptian Girl Guide Company which had an important role in community affairs.

During the last years of queenship, Farida progressively retired from public life during a time when her marriage deteriorated. King Farouk reportedly had numerous mistresses, did not show his queen consideration, excluded her from receptions and at one point instead attended a party of Princess Chevikar in the company of a mistress, placing her beside the Prime Minister Nuqrashi Pasha, who took offence.[13] The absence of a male heir also contributed to the divorce.

The divorce was not popular in Egypt, since Farida was very popular, and King Farouk was publicly hissed at the Cairo Cinema because of it.[14] Doria Shafik viewed the royal divorce, and Farida's choice to leave an unhappy marriage, as a call to the Egyptian woman to find her freedom and liberate herself: "In exchange for her liberty, Farida gave up a throne, one of the supreme gestures in the history of the Egyptian woman".[13]

Later life

Farida stayed in Egypt until 1964,[7] living in Zamalek, a suburb on an island in the Nile.[15] Later she settled in Lebanon where she saw her children after nearly ten years. In March 1965, when King Farouk died in Rome, she and her three daughters visited his body at the morgue.[16] Then, she lived in Paris from 1968 to 1974 until she returned back to Egypt in 1974, during the presidency of Anwar Sadat. She remained unmarried after the divorce.[17] During the late 1960s, she began painting. An artist, she had personal exhibitions in Europe and the United States. One of her exhibitions was in Cairo in May 1980.[18]

Death

Farida was hospitalized in September 1988 due to several health problems, including leukemia, pneumonia and hepatitis. On 2 October, she was put in intensive care and then, she lapsed into a coma. She died of leukemia on 16 October 1988, aged 67, in Cairo.[19]

Honours

National honours

Foreign honours

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Consorts of Monogamous Egyptian Heads of State. Egy. 6 February 2013.
  2. News: 2001. British documents on foreign affairs: reports and papers from the Foreign Office confidential print. From 1945 through 1950. Africa, 1947. Africa, January 1947-December 1947, Part 4, Volume 3. University Publications of America. 187. Yousef Zulficar Pasha Father-in-law of His Majesty King Farouk I. Born the 6th June, 1886. He belongs to one of those Turkish families whose ancestors came to Egypt with Mohammed Ali the Great, and which, since then, have constituted the nearest approach to an aristocracy in this country..
  3. Book: Charles Brice, William. An Historical atlas of Islam. BRILL. 1981. 299. 90-04-06116-9.
  4. Book: Goldschmidt, Arthur. 2000. Biographical dictionary of modern Egypt. Lynne Rienner Publishers. 178. 1-55587-229-8. registration.
  5. Web site: Egypt's first ladies. Raafat. Samir. March 2005. 6 June 2009. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130907052644/http://egyptianeurope.org/history/01-02-09-04-02-06_firstladies.pdf. 7 September 2013. dmy-all.
  6. Philip Mansel . The Rise and Fall of Royal Alexandria: From Mohammed Ali to Farouk. The Court Historian. 17 . 2. 237. 10.1179/cou.2012.17.2.006. 2012. 159505002.
  7. News: Hassan. Maher. Queen Farida, King Farouk's first wife. 6 February 2013. Egypt Independent. 20 January 2010.
  8. News: Queen Farida hides beauty with veil. 6 February 2013. The Pittsburgh Press. 21 January 1938. United Press International. Cairo.
  9. News: Hargrove. Rosette. Dressed to the King's taste. 6 February 2013. The Telegraph Herald. 21 January 1938. Paris.
  10. News: Ex-queen Farida of Egypt. 6 February 2013. The Indian Express. 22 November 1948. Cairo.
  11. Book: Cuno, K.M. . Modernizing Marriage: Family, Ideology, and Law in Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Egypt . Syracuse University Press . Gender and Globalization . 2015 . 978-0-8156-5316-5 . 20.
  12. LIFE 14 feb 1938
  13. Shafik Egyptian Feminist: A Woman Apart
  14. Challenging Retrenchment: The United States, Great Britain and the Middle
  15. News: Former Queen pens message to Farouk. 6 February 2013. Reading Eagle. 20 January 1952.
  16. News: Cold, lonely end comes to Farouk. 6 February 2013. Lodi News Sentinel. 20 March 1965. United Press International. Rome.
  17. News: Queen Farida of Egypt Dies at 68. 17 October 1988. 6 June 2009. The New York Times.
  18. News: Balouny. Lisette. Queen Farida living in dignified exile. 6 February 2013. The Day. 31 May 1980. Associated Press. Cairo. 20.
  19. News: Ex-Queen Farida of Egypt; First Wife of King Farouk. 6 February 2013. Los Angeles Times. 17 October 1988.
  20. Web site: Picture. 2019-12-03.
  21. Web site: Picture. 2019-12-03.
  22. 40.media.tumblr.com, Farida Zulficar (right) at the Greek Royal Wedding
  23. Web site: Picture of the Wedding. 2019-12-03.
  24. News: Queen Farida of Egypt in Her Wedding Dress. Getty Images. 2018-02-28. en-GB.
  25. Web site: Picture of the wedding dress. 2019-12-03.
  26. Web site: Picture of the wedding couple. 2019-12-03.