Osman II explained

Osman II
Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques
Ottoman Caliph
Amir al-Mu'minin
Succession:Sultan of the Ottoman Empire (Padishah)
Predecessor:Mustafa I
Successor:Mustafa I
Birth Date:3 November 1604
Birth Place:Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
Death Place:Yedikule Fortress, Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
Burial Place:Sultan Ahmed Mosque, Istanbul
Spouse:Ayşe Sultan
Meylişah Hatun
Fülane Hatun
Akile Hatun
Spouse-Type:Consorts
Full Name:Şah Osman bin Ahmed han[1]
Issue:Şehzade Ömer
Şehzade Mustafa
Zeynep Sultan
House:Ottoman
House-Type:Dynasty
Father:Ahmed I
Mother:Mahfiruz Hatun
Signature Type:Tughra
Religion:Sunni Islam
Signature:Tughra of Osman II.svg

Osman II (Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928);: عثمان ثانى ‘Osmān-i sānī; Turkish: II. Osman; 3 November 1604 – 20 May 1622), also known as Osman the Young (Turkish: Genç Osman), was the sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 26 February 1618 until his regicide on 20 May 1622.

Early life

Osman II was born at Topkapı Palace, Constantinople, the son of Sultan Ahmed I (1603 - 17) and one of his consorts Mahfiruz Hatun. According to later traditions, at a young age, his mother had paid a great deal of attention to Osman's education, as a result of which Osman II became a known poet and was believed to have mastered many languages, including Arabic, Persian, Greek, Latin, and Italian; although this has since been refuted.[2] Osman was born eleven months after his father Ahmed's transition to the throne. He was trained in the palace. According to foreign observers, he was one of the most cultured of Ottoman princes.

Osman's failure to capture the throne at the death of his father Ahmed might have been caused by the absence of a mother to lobby in his favour; his own mother was probably already dead or in exile.[3]

Reign

Osman II ascended the throne at the age of 14 as the result of a coup d'état against his uncle Mustafa I "the Mad" (1617–1618, 1622–1623). Despite his youth, Osman II soon sought to assert himself as a ruler, and after securing the empire's eastern border by signing a peace treaty (Treaty of Serav) with Safavid Persia, he personally led the Ottoman campaign against Poland and King Sigismund III during the Moldavian Magnate Wars. Forced to sign a humiliating peace treaty with the Poles after the Battle of Khotyn (Chocim) in September–October, 1621, Osman II returned home to Constantinople in shame, blaming the cowardice of the Janissaries and the insufficiency of his statesmen for his humiliation.

The basic and exceptional weakness from which Osman II suffered was the conspicuous absence of a female power basis in the harem. From 1620 until Osman's death, a governess (daye hatun, lit. wet-nurse) was appointed as a stand-in valide, and she could not counterbalance the contriving of Mustafa I's mother in the Old Palace. Although he did have a loyal chief black eunuch at his side, this could not compensate for the absence of what in the politics of that period was a winning combination, valide sultan–chief black eunuch, especially in the case of a young and very ambitious ruler.[4] According to Piterberg, Osman II did not have haseki sultan, opposite with Peirce who claim that Ayşe was Osman's haseki. But it is clear that Ayşe was politically insignificant and she couldn't be a valide support for Osman's reign.In the autumn of 1620, Özi Beylerbeyi İskender Pasha seized the secret letter sent by Transylvanian Prince Bethlen Gabor to Istanbul and sent it to Poland, and Osman also became a veteran of the people around him. He decided to embark on a Polish expedition. Continuing preparations for the Polish campaign, neither cold nor famine nor the English ambassador John Eyre could deter Osman. The ambassador of Sigismund III, the King of Poland, was brought into Istanbul despite the severe colds. The janissaries and army were not willing to go on a campaign, regardless of their conditions.

Great winter of 1621

Following the murder of Şehzade Mehmed on 12 January 1621, a severe snow started in Istanbul. The people of Istanbul were drastically affected by the cold, which increased local violence on 24 January, more so than the palace murder. This is the biggest natural disaster that concerns the capital in Osman's four-year short reign. Bostanzade Yahya Efendi, one of those who lived through this cold, tells that the Golden Horn and the Bosphorus were covered with ice in the end of January-beginning of February: "Between Üsküdar and Beşiktaş, the men walk around and go to Üsküdar. They came from Istanbul on foot. And the year became a gala (famine).

It was snowing for 15 days, that the frosts were frozen from the severity of the cold, but that the river was open between Sarayburnu and Üsküdar. For this natural disaster, thirty thousand froze between Üsküdar and Istanbul from the cold," Haşimi Çelebi, "The road became Üsküdar, the Mediterranean froze a thousand thirty". As a result of the inconvenience of the Zahire ships, there was a complete famine in Istanbul, and 75 dirhams of bread jumped to one akche, and the oak of the meat to 15 akches.

Death

Seeking a counterweight to janissary influence, Osman II closed their coffee shops (the gathering points for conspiracies against the throne) and started planning to create a new and more loyal army consisting of Anatolian sekbans.[5] The result was a palace uprising by the janissaries, who promptly imprisoned the young sultan in Yedikule Fortress in Istanbul, where Osman II was strangled to death. After Osman's death, his ear was cut off and presented to Halime Sultan and Sultan Mustafa I to confirm his death and Mustafa would no longer need to fear his nephew. It was the first time in the Ottoman history that a sultan was executed by the janissaries.[6]

This disaster is one of the most discussed topics in Ottoman history. Hasanbegzade, Karaçelebizade, Solakzade, Peçevi, Müneccimbaşı and Naima dates, in the Fezleke of Katip Çelebi, detailed and some of them were narrated in a story style.

Family

Consorts

Osman II had at least four consorts:[7]

Sons

Osman II had at least two sons:[7]

Daughters

Osman II had at least a daughter:

In popular culture

In the 2015 Turkish television series , Osman II was portrayed by actor Taner Ölmez.[11]

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Suha Umur, (1980), Osmanlı padişah tuğraları, p. 199
  2. Tezcan. Baki. The 1622 Military Rebellion in Istanbul : A Historiographical Journey. International Journal of Turkish Studies. 2002. University of Wisconsin. 40. Stanford Shaw, the author of an Ottoman history that has been widely used as a textbook and reference work, claims, on the basis of information from an eighteenth-century French novel,84 that the sultan was "[t]rained in Latin, Greek, and Italian by his Greek mother, as well as Ottoman Turkish, Arabic, and Persian."85.
  3. TEZCAN . Baki . 2008-12-31 . The Debut of Kösem Sultan's Political Career . Turcica . 40 . 347–359 . 10.2143/turc.40.0.2037143 . 0082-6847.
  4. Book: Piterberg, Gabriel. An Ottoman Tragedy: History and Historiography at Play. limited. University of California Press. 2003. 0-520-23836-2. California. 18.
  5. Ozgen, Korkut. "The Family: The Sultans: Osman II." The Ottomans. 2002. http://www.theottomans.org.
  6. Book: Piterberg, Gabriel . An Ottoman Tragedy: History and Historiography at Play . limited . Berkeley . University of California Press . 2003 . 0-520-23836-2 . 28.
  7. Book: Tezcan, Baki . The second Ottoman Empire : political and social transformation in the early modern world . 2010 . Cambridge University Press . 978-0-521-51949-6 . New York . 458582838.
  8. Book: Peirce, Leslie P.. The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire. Oxford University Press. 1993. 106. 978-0-195-08677-5. registration.
  9. Gabriel Piterberg (2003). An Ottoman Tragedy: History and Historiography at Play. University of California Press. pp. 18–19. ISBN 978-0-520-93005-6
  10. Book: Tezcan, Baki. Searching For Osman: A Reassessment Of The Deposition Of Ottoman Sultan Osman II (1618-1622). 2001. 377 n. 93.
  11. News: Muhteşem Yüzyıl Kösem sezon finalinde bakın kimler ayrıldı!. 2017-11-06. tr.