Fatma Sultan (daughter of Murad V) explained

Fatma Sultan
Birth Date:19 June 1879
Birth Place:Çırağan Palace, Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
(now Istanbul, Turkey)
Death Place:Sofia, Bulgaria
Burial Place:Sofia, Bulgaria
House:Ottoman
House-Type:Dynasty
Father:Murad V
Mother:Resan Hanım
Religion:Sunni Islam

Fatma Sultan (Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928);: فاطمه سلطان; "one who abstain"; 19 June 1879 – 20 November 1932) was an Ottoman princess, the daughter of Sultan Murad V and Resan Hanım.

Early life

Fatma Sultan was born on 19 June 1879, during the third year of her family's confinement in Çırağan Palace. Her father was Murad V, son of Abdulmejid I and Şevkefza Kadın. She was named after Murad's favourite sister, Fatma Sultan, and after her maternal grandmother.[1] Her mother was Resan Hanım. She was the sixth child, and third daughter of her father and the eldest child of her mother. She had a sister, Aliye Sultan, one year younger than her. She was the first Murad's child born after his rise at the throne and deposition and the first born in the Çırağan Palace during his prisonery.

According to Filizten Hanım, she was calm, dignified, serious-minded, polite, and gentle, differenti by her elder half-sisters, Hatice Sultan and Fehime Sultan. She spent an important part of her time in playing the piano and reading books in French. Unlike her half-sisters, she chose not to leave the palace to marry before her father's death, because Abdülhamid II's condition was to never see her family again. After her father, Sultan Murad's death in 1904, her ordeal in the Çırağan Palace came to an end.

Marriage

In 1907, Abdul Hamid arranged Fatma's marriage to Karacehennemzade Refik Bey who was eight years her junior,[1] a diplomat and son of the governor and senator of Konya, Faik Bey, and grandson of Ibrahim Ağa. The marriage took place on 29 July 1907 in the Yıldız Palace. The couple was given Esma Sultan Mansion located in Ortaköy as their residence.

The marriage was happy and the two together had five children, Sultanzade Mehmed Bey, born on 1908 and died in 1911, twins Ayşe Hatice Hanımsultan and Sultanzade Mehmed Ali Bey born on 20 January 1909, Sultanzade Mehmed Murad Bey born in August 1910 and died in January 1911, and Sultanzade Celaleddin Bey born on 23 April 1916.

In 1908, her mother Resan Hanim left the Çırağan Palace, where she had stayed to keep company to Şayan Kadın, and came to live with her.

Fatma Sultan inherited her mother’s jewel when she died in 1910 but never wore them. She lived frugally and like an ordinary citizen of Istanbul, even going out herself for the shopping. She was particularly devoted to her husband.

At the exile of the imperial family in March 1924, every person had to leave Turkey in seven days. Fatma Sultan who had measles that time was allowed to reside in Istanbul, until she recovered. She and her family left Turkey in September 1924 making them the last imperial family members to leave Istanbul. They settled in Sofia, Bulgaria.

Death

Fatma Sultan died at the age of fifty three on 23 November 1932 in Sofia, Bulgaria, and was buried there. Her husband outlived her by twenty years and died in 1952.[1]

Honours

Issue

Name Birth Death Notes
Sultanzade Mehmed Bey 190822 November 1911Died in infancy
Ayşe Hatice Hanımsultan 20 January 190914 October 1968Unmarried, and without issue;
Sultanzade Mehmed Ali Bey 20 January 1909 1981Unmarried, and without issue; Buried in Yahya Efendi Cemetery[3]
Sultanzade Mehmed Murad Bey August 1910January 1911Died in infancy
Sultanzade Celaleddin Iris Bey 23 April 191618 November 1997Married and had a daughter, Resan Iris (b.15.11.1956), she had issue, a daughter, Serra Deveci (b.19.3.1979), and a son, Emirhan Deveci (b.23.3.1991); buried in New Mosque;

In literature and popular culture

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Adra, Jamil. Genealogy of the Imperial Ottoman Family 2005. 2005. 21.
  2. Book: Yılmaz Öztuna. Başlangıcından zamanımıza kadar büyük Türkiye tarihi: Türkiye'nin siyasî, medenî, kültür, teşkilât ve san'at tarihi. 1978. Ötüken Yayınevi. 165.
  3. Book: Ekinci, Ekrem Buğra . Sultan Abdülhamid'in Son Zevcesi . Timaş Tarih . Hatırat . 2017 . 978-605-08-2503-9 . 90.