Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Ayşe Sultan (Haseki of Osman II)
Haseki Sultan of the Ottoman Empire From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Ayşe Sultan (Ottoman Turkish: عایشه سلطان, lit. 'life'; c. 1607[1] – c. 1640) was a consort of Sultan Osman II of the Ottoman Empire.[2][3][4]
Remove ads
Life
Summarize
Perspective
Her name appears in privy purse registers from 1619 on,[5] but nothing is known about her except her name.[4][2] Her origin is unconfirmed, but the consorts of the Ottoman sultans were by custom normally concubines of Christian origin, who came to the Ottoman Imperial harem via the Ottoman slave trade, and converted to Islam and given a slave name after their arrival.[6]
According to Peirce, Ayşe was Osman's haseki sultan. But according to Piterberg, Osman II did not have a haseki and Ayşe was just "a politically insignificant consort." Even though her status was debatable, it is clear that Ayşe could not become a prominent female figure like other haseki sultans, so much so that, during his reign, Osman II favored other concubines over her, for example Meylişah Hatun, who bore him his firstborn, Şehzade Ömer. Also, a governess (daye hatun, lit. wet-nurse) who was appointed as a stand-in valide, could not counterbalance the contriving of Mustafa I's mother in the Old Palace. This condition made the conspicuous absence of a female power basis in the harem during her spouse's reign, the basic and exceptional weakness from which Osman II suffered.[7]
After Osman's death in 1622 she stayed in the Old Palace.[2] Privy Purse records her presence lastly in 1640.[5]
Remove ads
References
Sources
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads