Gülbahar Hatun (mother of Bayezid II) explained

Gülbahar Hatun
Valide-i macide
Meliketü'l-Melikât
Tâcü'l-mükerremât
Fahrü'l-muazzamat
Fatihetü'l-maeyâmin ve'l hayrat[1]
Succession:Valide Hatun of the Ottoman Empire
Reign:3 May 1481 – 1492
Reign-Type:Tenure
Predecessor:Mara Hatun
Successor:Hafsa Sultan (as Valide Sultan)
Birth Place:Greece or Albania
Death Date: 1492
Death Place:Constantinople, Ottoman Empire (present day Istanbul, Turkey)
Burial Place:Fatih Mosque, Istanbul
Spouse-Type:Consort of
Spouse:Mehmed II
Issue:Gevherhan Hatun
Bayezid II
Religion:Sunni Islam (converted)

Emine Gülbahar Mükrime Hatun (Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928);: گل بھار مکرمه خاتون; "benign", "spring rose" and "hospitable"; died 1492)[2] was a concubine of Sultan Mehmed II, and mother of Sultan Bayezid II.[3] [4] [5] [6]

Early life

The Ottoman inscription (vakfiye) describes her as Hātun binti Abdullah (Daughter of Abdullah), which means that she was a Christian slave converted to Islam. She was either of Greek[7] [8] [9] [10] or Albanian[11] [12] [13] origin. Venetian author, Iacopo de Promontorio-de Campis in his notes in 1475 wrote that Bayezid II was the son of an Albanian slave. He specifies Sultan Bayezid II as "firstborn of the Great Turk (i.e. Sultan Mehmed II) and the son of an Albanian slave (figlio diAlbanian sclaua)".[14] According to an Albanian legend, the mother of Sultan BayezidII may have been Mara Arianiti, one of the daughters of Gjergj Arianiti and Maria Muzaka, whowas captured when Sultan Mehmet II was in the vicinity of Elbasan.[15]

Consort

Gülbahar entered in Mehmed's harem in 1446, when he was still a prince and the governor of Amasya. She had two children, a son, Şehzade Bayezid (future Bayezid II) born in 1447 in Demotika, and a daughter, Gevherhan Hatun,[16] born in 1446, who married Ughurlu Muhammad, a son of Aq Qoyunlu Sultan Uzun Hasan in 1474.[17]

In 1451, after Mehmed's accession to the throne, she followed him to Edirne. According to Turkish tradition, all princes were expected to work as provincial governors as a part of their training. In 1455 or 1456, Bayezid was appointed the governor of Amasya, and Gülbahar accompanied him, where the two remained until 1481, except for in 1457, when she came to Constantinople, and attended her son's circumcision ceremony.[16]

Gülbahar was apparently quite concerned about the future of her son, and related to that, her own properties. In order to secure her properties, she endowed the incomes of certain villages and fields to the Enderun mosque in 1474. Among the endowed properties was the village of Ağılcık, which was turned back into a Timariot village in 1479 during the land reform.

In 1468, Mehmed gave the village of Bağluca to Gülbahar. After six years, in 1473, she sold the village to Taceddin Bey, son of Hamza Bali (died 1486), the book keeper of Bayezid's court. In 1478, the village's exemption was abolished and granted back to her probably as a result of the land reform. This order was reissued a year later at the request of Mevlana Şemseddin Ahmed according to which the village was not reverted to her, and she had likely become subject to a legal dispute.

Mother of the Sultan

Per custom, Gülbahar got the highest position in the imperial family after the sultan himself when her son, Bayezid ascended the throne in 1481 until her death in 1492. During her son's reign, she and the rest of the Imperial Family resided at the Old Palace (saray-ı atik) and were visited by the Sultan who on each visit used to pay his respect to his mother. In one case, Gülbahar complained of her son's rare visits and in a letter to her son wrote:

Gülbahar had a considerable influence over Bayezid, for she used to make evaluations about the situation of some statesmen. Bayezid also valued his mother's words. In a letter written to him, she advises him against Hersekzade Ahmed Pasha, but favours his tutor Ayas Pasha and Hizirbeyoğlu Mehmed Pasha.[16]

In 1485, Bayezid endowed a mosque, and a school in Tokat in the memory of Gülbahar Hatun.[18]

Death

Gülbahar Hatun died in 1492, and was buried in Fatih Mosque, Istanbul.[16] The tomb was damaged in the 1766 Istanbul earthquake, and was rebuilt in 1767–1768.[16]

Issue

By Mehmed II, Gülbahar Hatun had at least a daughter and a son:

In popular culture

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Necdet Sakaoğlu.

    tr:Necdet Sakaoğlu

    . Bu mülkün kadın sultanları: Vâlide sultanlar, hâtunlar, hasekiler, kadınefendiler, sultanefendiler. Oğlak publications. 2008. 110–112. 978-9-753-29623-6.
  2. Book: Halil. Edhem. İsmail. Hacıfettahoğlu. Trabzon'da Osmanlı kitâbeleri. Trabzon Belediyesi Kültür Yayınları. 2001. 81. 978-9-759-51583-6.
  3. Book: Peoples and settlement in Anatolia and the Caucasus: 800-1900. 9780860782223. Bryer. Anthony. 1988.
  4. Book: The Ottoman Historical Monumental Inscriptions in Edirne. 9004050620. Th Dijkema. F.. 1977.
  5. Book: Edmonds, Anna. Turkey's religious sites. Damko. 975-8227-00-9. 1997. 1997.
  6. Book: Babinger, Franz. Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time. 1992. Princeton University Press. 0-691-01078-1. 51.
  7. Book: Ostovich . Helen . The Mysterious and the Foreign in Early Modern England . Silcox . Mary V. . Roebuck . Graham . 2008 . Associated University Presse . 978-0-87413-954-9 . 60 . en . Mehmed's eldest son was Bayezid or Beyazid II, whose mother, Gülbahar, was probably a Greek concubine..
  8. Book: Lawler, Jennifer . Encyclopedia of Women in the Middle Ages . 2018-01-16 . McFarland . 978-1-4766-0111-3 . 72 . en . Gülbehar (15th century) Mother of Bayezid II, the famous Ottoman ruler. A slave girl of either Albanian or Greek heritage, she was a Christian and became the mistress of Mehmed II the Conqueror around 1450..
  9. Book: Lowry, Heath W.. The Nature of the Early Ottoman State. SUNY Press. 2003. 978-0-7914-8726-6. 153. en. Mother of Bayezid II was Gülbahar Hatun (a Pontic Greek from the village of Douvera in Trabzon).
  10. Book: Freely, John . Inside the Seraglio: Private Lives of the Sultans in Istanbul . 1999 . Viking Press . 978-0-670-87839-0 . 9 . en . Mehmet had become a father for the first time in January 1448, when his concubine Gülbahar gave birth to a son, the future Beyazit II. Little is known of Gülbahar's origins, but she was probably Greek, since the concubines in the imperial harem were almost always Christians....
  11. Book: Lyigun, Murat . War, Peace, and Prosperity in the Name of God: The Ottoman Role in Europe's Socioeconomic Evolution . University of Chicago Press . 2015 . London . 119 . 9780226388434 . Beyazit II... Gülbahar Hatun... Albanian....
  12. Book: Edmonds, Anna . Turkey's religious sites . Damko . 1997 . 975-8227-00-9 . 211 . An Albanian by birth, legend also has it that Gulbahar Hatun was a French princess kidnapped for the sultan's harem..
  13. Book: Babinger, Franz . Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time . . 1992 . 0-691-01078-1 . 51 . Gülbahar bint Abdullah, whom Turkish legend subsequently transformed into a "daughter of the king of France," was a Christian slave of Albanian origin..
  14. Book: Franz Babinger, Die Aufzeichnungen des Genuesen Iacopo de Promontorio - de Campis uber den Osmanenstaat um 1475. 3 February 1956. München: C. H. Beck. 56.
  15. Book: Shuteriqi, Dhimitër. Zana Prela. Aranitët: Historia- Gjenealogjia -Zotërimet. 2012. Toena. 66. 978-99943-1-729-5.
  16. Web site: GÜLBAHAR HATUN (ö. 898/1492): II. Bayezid'in annesi.. İslam Ansiklopedisi. 7 May 2020.
  17. Book: Tarih arastirmalari dergisi, Volumes 21-23. Ankara Üniversitesi Basımevi. 2003. 206.
  18. Book: Baltacı, Câhid. XV-XVI asırlar Osmanlı medreseleri: teşkilât : tarih, Volume 1. İrfan Matbaası. 1976. 134.
  19. Web site: Yasemin Eti | Actress . .