Valide sultan

{{Short description|"Queen Mother" in the Ottoman Empire}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2021}}

{{Infobox official post

| post = Valide Sultan

| body =
the Ottoman Empire

| insignia =

| insigniasize = 120px

| insigniacaption =

| image = BustOfAyseHafsaSultan ManisaTurkey.jpg

| imagesize =

| imagecaption = A bust of the first {{lang|tr|Valide Sultan}}, Hafsa Sultan in Manisa, Turkey

| style = Valide Sultan

| residence = {{plainlist|

| appointer =

| appointer_qualified =

| precursor =

| formation = 30 September 1520

| first = Hafsa Sultan

| last = Rahime Perestu Sultan

| abolished = 1 November 1922

| succession =

}}

Valide Sultan ({{langx|ota|والده سلطان}}, lit. "Sultana mother") was the title held by the mother of a ruling sultan of the Ottoman Empire. The Ottomans first formally used the title in the 16th century as an epithet of Hafsa Sultan (died 1534), mother of Sultan Suleyman I ({{reign | 1520 | 1566}}), superseding the previous epithets of Valide Hatun (lady mother), mehd-i ulya ("cradle of the great").

{{cite book

|title = The Ottoman Lady: A Social History from 1718 to 1918

|first = Fanny|last = Davis|year = 1986|isbn = 0-313-24811-7

|chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=DTIrK0et4LwC&pg=PA11

|chapter = The Valide

}}

or "the nacre of the pearl of the sultanate".Peirce, Leslie P., The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire, Oxford University Press, 1993, {{ISBN|0-19-508677-5}} (paperback)

Normally, the living mother of a reigning sultan held this title. Those mothers who died before their sons' accession to the throne never received the title of {{Lang|tr|valide sultan}}. In special cases sisters, grandmothers and stepmothers of a reigning sultan assumed the title and/or the functions {{Lang|tr|valide sultan}}.

Term

The word {{Lang|ota|valide}} ({{Lang|ota|والده}}) literally means 'mother' in Ottoman Turkish, from Arabic {{Lang|ar-latn|wālida}}. The Turkish pronunciation of the word {{Lang|tr|valide}} is {{IPA|tr|vaː.liˈde|}}.

Sultan ({{Lang|ar|سلطان}}, {{Transliteration|ar|sulṭān}}) is an Arabic word originally meaning 'authority' or 'dominion'. By the beginning of the 16th century, this title, carried by both men and women of the Ottoman dynasty, was replacing other titles by which prominent members of the imperial family had been known (notably hatun for women and bey for men). Consequently, the title {{Lang|tr|valide hatun}} (title for living mother of reigning Ottoman sultan before 16th century) also turned into {{Lang|tr|valide sultan}}. This usage underlines the Ottoman conception of sovereign power as family prerogative.

Western tradition knows the Ottoman ruler as sultan, but the Ottomans themselves used {{Lang|tr|padişah}} (emperor) or {{Lang|tr|hünkar}} to refer to their ruler. The emperor's formal title consisted of sultan together with khan (for example, Sultan Suleiman Khan). In formal address, the sultan's children were also entitled sultan, with imperial princes (şehzade) carrying the title before their given name, with imperial princesses carrying it after. For example, Şehzade Sultan Mehmed and Mihrimah Sultan were the son and daughter of Suleiman the Magnificent. Like imperial princesses, the living mother and main consort of reigning sultans also carried the title after their given names, for example, Hafsa Sultan, Suleiman's mother and first {{Lang|tr|valide sultan}}, and Hürrem Sultan, Suleiman's chief consort and first haseki sultan. The evolving usage of this title reflected power shifts among imperial women, especially between the Sultanate of Women, as the position of main consort eroded over the course of 17th century, the main consort lost the title sultan, which replaced by {{Lang|tr|kadïn}}, a title related to the earlier {{Lang|tr|khatun}}. Henceforth, the mother of the reigning sultan was the only person of non-imperial blood to carry the title sultan.{{Cite book|title = The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire|last = Peirce|first = Leslie P.|publisher = Oxford University Press, Inc.|year = 1993|isbn = 0-19-507673-7|location = New York}}

Role and position

File:De sultane-moeder.jpeg.]]

{{Lang|tr|Valide sultan}} was, in most cases, the most important position in the Ottoman Empire after the sultan himself. As the mother to the sultan, by Islamic tradition ("A mother's right is God's right"),{{cite web|url=http://www.beliefnet.com/Love-Family/Holidays/Mothers-Day/Can-Muslims-Celebrate-Mothers-Day.aspx?p=2# |title=Muslims can celebrate Mothers Day because honoring your mother comes right after worshipping God. |publisher=Beliefnet.com |date=17 February 2011 |access-date=15 May 2015}} the {{Lang|tr|valide sultan}} would often have a significant influence on the affairs of the empire. She had great power in the court and her own rooms (always adjacent to her son's) and state staff. The valide sultan had quarters within the New Palace, where the Sultan himself resided, beginning in the 16th century.

As the Valide sultan (Sultana mother), who had direct and intimate access to the Sultan's person, often influenced government decisions bypassing the Imperial Council and the Grand Vizier altogether or the grille-covered window from which the Sultan or Valide sultan could observe Council meetings. This left her at the heart of the political ongoings and machinations of the Ottoman Empire. {{Lang|tr|valide sultan}} also traditionally had access to considerable economic resources and often funded major architectural projects, such as the Atik Valide Mosque Complex in Istanbul. Many valide sultans undertook massive philanthropic endeavors and buildings, as this was seen as one of the main ways to demonstrate influence and wealth. Valide sultans were also conveniently one of the few people within the empire with the station and means to embark on these expensive projects. Nurbanu Sultan's daily stipend as valide sultan to her son, Murad III, was 2000 aspers, an extraordinary sum for the time, which revealed the highly influential position she held at court.

The valide sultan also maintained special privileges that other harem members could not participate in. A valide sultan was not subject to sole seclusion within the confines of the palace. She had mobility outside of the harem, sometimes through ceremonial visibility to the public or veiled meetings with government officials and diplomats. Additionally, the valide sultan spearheaded one of the most crucial elements of diplomacy within the Ottoman Empire’s court: marriages of royal princesses. The most powerful and influential valide sultans had multiple daughters, with whom they forged crucial alliances through by marriage.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=L6-VRgVzRcUC&q=nurbanu&pg=PA147|title=The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire|last=Peirce|first=Leslie P.|date=1993|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=9780195086775|language=en}} During the 17th century, in a period known as the Sultanate of Women, a series of incompetent or child sultans raised the role of the {{Lang|tr|valide sultan}} to new heights. Two Valide sultans acted as regents for their sons, assuming the vast power and influence the position entailed.

The most powerful and well-known of all {{Lang|tr|valide sultans}} in the history of the Ottoman Empire were Nurbanu Sultan, Safiye Sultan, Kösem Sultan, and Turhan Sultan.

Nurbanu Sultan became the first of the great valide sultans during the sixteenth century, as haseki as well as legal wife to Sultan Selim II. Nurbanu’s influential career as valide sultan established the precedent of valide sultan maintaining more power than her nearest harem rival, the haseki, or favorite concubine of the reigning sultan. The following influential valide sultans, Safiye Sultan, Kösem Sultan and Turhan Sultan, maintained this precedent and occupied positions of extreme power within the Ottoman imperial court. These positions helped them solidify their own power within the imperial court and ease diplomatic tensions on a broader, international scale.

Most harem women who were slaves were never formally married to the sultans. Nevertheless, their children were considered fully legitimate under Islamic law if recognized by the father.{{Cite book |editor-last=Montgomery-Massingberd |editor-first=Hugh |editor-link=Hugh Massingberd |title=Burke's Royal Families of the World |volume=II: Africa & the Middle East |year=1980 |publisher=Burke's Peerage |location=London |isbn=978-0-85011-029-6 |page=238 |chapter=The Imperial Family of Turkey}}

List of {{Lang|tr|Valide Sultans}}

The list does not include the complete list of mothers of the Ottoman sultans. Most who held the title of {{Lang|tr|valide sultan}} were the biological mothers of the reigning sultans. The mothers who died before their sons' accession to throne, never assumed the title of {{Lang|tr|valide sultan}}, like Hürrem Sultan, Muazzez Sultan, Mihrişah Kadın, Şermi Kadın, Tirimüjgan Kadın, Gülcemal Kadın and Gülistu Kadın. In special cases, there were grandmothers, stepmothers, adoptive mothers and sisters of the reigning sultans who assumed the role, and eventually the title, of {{Lang|tr|valide sultan}}, like Mihrimah Sultan, Kösem Sultan and Rahime Perestu Sultan.

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

!Appearance

!Name

!Maiden name

!Origin

!Became {{Lang|tr|valide}}

!Ceased to be {{Lang|tr|valide}}

!Death

!Sultan(s)

175x175px

|align=center|Hafsa Sultan
{{Lang|ota|حفصه سلطان}}

align="center" |align="center" | Christian slave of unknown originalign="center" | 30 September 1520
son's ascension
align=center colspan="2" |19 March 1534align=center| Suleiman the Magnificent (son)
|align=center|Nurbanu Sultan
{{Lang|ota|نور بانو سلطان}}
align="center" | Cecilia Venier-BaffoGodfrey Goodwin, The Private World of Ottoman Women, Saqi Book, {{ISBN|0-86356-745-2}}, {{ISBN|3-631-36808-9}}, 2001. page 128 or
RachelValeria Heuberger, Geneviève Humbert, Geneviève Humbert-Knitel, Elisabeth Vyslonzil (ed.), Cultures in Colors, page 68. {{ISBN|3-631-36808-9}}, 2001 or Kale Karatanou
align="center" | Venetian or Jew or Greekalign=center| 15 December 1574
son's ascension
align=center colspan="2" |7 December 1583align=center| Murad III (son)
|align=center|Safiye Sultan
{{Lang|ota|صفیه سلطان}}
align="center" |align="center" | Albanianalign="center" | 15 January 1595
son's ascension
align=center| 22 December 1603

son's death

| align="center" | after 1619

align=center| Mehmed III (son)
|align=center| Handan Sultan
{{Lang|ota|خندان سلطان}}
align="center" | unknownalign="center" | Bosnian{{Cite journal |last1=Börekçi |first1=Günhan |title=A Queen-Mother at Work: On Handan Sultan and Her Regency During the Early Reign of Ahmed I |url=https://dergipark.org.tr/en/download/article-file/1733853 |journal=The Journal of Southeastern European Studies |issue=34 |date=2020 |pages=45–92 |s2cid=236832964 |doi=10.26650/gaad.20213403|doi-access=free }}, pp. 45 and 53-54align="center" | 22 December 1603
son's ascension
align=center colspan="2" |9 November 1605align=center| Ahmed I (son)
rowspan="2" |

| rowspan="2" align="center" |Halime Sultan
{{Lang|ota|حلیمه سلطان}}

rowspan="2" align="center" | unknownrowspan="2" align="center" | Abkhazalign=center| 22 November 1617
son's ascension
{{small|(first tenure)}}

|align=center| 26 February 1618
son's deposition
{{small|(first tenure)}}

| rowspan="2" align="center" | After 1623

rowspan="2" align="center" | Mustafa I (son)
align="center" | 19 May 1622
son's reinstatement
{{small|(second tenure)}}

| align="center" | 10 September 1623
son's deposition
{{small|(second tenure)}}

184x184px

|align=center| Kösem Sultan
{{Lang|ota|ماه پیکر كوسم سلطان}}

align="center" | Anastasia (?)align=center| Greek. Born on Tinos, Republic of Venice (?)align=center| 10 September 1623
son's ascension
align=center |8 August 1648
son's deposition
align=center | 2 September 1651align=center|Murad IV (son)
Ibrahim (son)
181x181px

|align=center|Turhan Sultan

{{Lang|ota|ترخان خدیجه سلطان}}

| Russia{{Cite book|last=Sakaoğlu|first=Necdet|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/472256214|title=Famous Ottoman women|date=2007|publisher=Avea|isbn=978-975-7104-77-3|location=Istanbul|oclc=472256214}}align="center" | 8 August 1648
son's ascension
align=center colspan="2" |4 August 1683align=center| Mehmed IV (son)
|align=center|Saliha Dilaşub Sultan

{{Lang|ota|صالحه دل آشوب سلطان}}

|align=center| unknown

align="center" | unknownalign="center" | 8 November 1687
son's ascension
align=center colspan="2" |4 December 1689align=center| Suleiman II (son)
215x215px

|align=center| Gülnuş Sultan

{{Lang|ota|رابعه گلنوش سلطان}}

|align=center| Evmania Voria

align=center| Greekalign=center| 6 February 1695
son's ascension
align=center colspan="2" |6 November 1715align=center| Mustafa II (son)
Ahmed III (son)
209x209px

|align=center| Saliha Sultan

{{Lang|ota|صالحه سلطان}}

|align=center| unknown

align="center" | unknown,A. D. Alderson, The Structure of the Ottoman Dynasty, Oxford: Clarendon, 1956, p.83 Serbian or Greek{{Cite journal|last=Akyıldız|first=Ali|date=1 April 2016|title=Müsrif, Fakat Hayırsever: Pertevniyal Valide sultan|journal=Osmanlı Araştırmaları|volume=47|issue=47|pages=307–352|doi=10.18589/oa.583206|issn=0255-0636|doi-access=free}}{{Verify source|date=December 2024}}align="center" | 20 September 1730
son's ascension
align=center colspan="2" |21 September 1739align=center| Mahmud I (son)
|align=center| Şehsuvar Sultan

{{Lang|ota|شهسوار سلطان}}

|align=center| unknown

align="center" | Russian or Serbian{{Cite book|last=Kemal.|first=Meram, Ali|url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/23697956|title=Padişah anaları : resimli, belgesel tarih romanı|date=1977|publisher=Öz Yayınları|oclc=23697956}}align="center" | 13 December 1754
son's ascension
align=center colspan="2" |April 1756align=center| Osman III (son)
|align=center| Mihrişah Sultan

{{Lang|ota|مهر شاه سلطان}}

|align=center| Agnes{{Cite book|last=Osman.|first=Horata|url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/42858154|title=Esrâr Dede : hayatı, şiir dünyası ve dı̂vânı|date=1998|publisher=T.C. Kültür Bakanlığı|isbn=975-17-1954-2|oclc=42858154}}{{Verify source|date=December 2024}}{{Page needed|date=December 2024}}

align="center" | Daughter of Georgian Orthodox priest{{cite book|author=Y. İzzettin Barış|title=Osmanlı padişahlarının yaşamlarından kesitler, hastalıkları ve ölüm sebepleri|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=p4ppAAAAMAAJ|year=2002|publisher=Bilimsel Tıp Yayınevi|isbn=978-975-6986-17-2|page=184|quote=Selim'in annesi olan Mihrişah, Gürcistan'dan kaçırılan bir papazın kızıydı}}align=center| 7 April 1789
son's ascension
align=center colspan="2" |16 October 1805align=center| Selim III (son)
|align=center| Sineperver Sultan

{{Lang|ota|سینه پرور سلطان}}

|align=center|

align="center" | Bulgarian{{Cite book|author=Sakaoğlu, Necdet|url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/961810963|title=Bu mülkün kadın sultanları : valide sultanlar, hatunlar, hasekiler, kadinefendiler, sultanefendiler|year=2015|isbn=978-605-171-079-2|oclc=961810963}}{{Page needed|date=December 2024}}align="center" | 29 May 1807
son's ascension
align=center| 28 July 1808
son's deposition
align=center| 11 December 1828align=center| Mustafa IV (son)Yavuz Bahadıroğlu, Resimli Osmanlı Tarihi, Nesil Yayınları (Ottoman History with Illustrations, Nesil Publications), 15th Ed., 2009, page 387 & 395, {{ISBN|978-975-269-299-2}}
156x156px

|align=center| Nakşidil Sultan

{{Lang|ota|نقش دل سلطان}}

|align=center| unknown

align=center| Georgianalign=center| 28 July 1808
son's ascension
align=center colspan="2" |22 August 1817align=center| Mahmud II (son)
|align=center| Bezmiâlem Sultan

{{Lang|ota|بزم عالم سلطان}}

|align=center| unknown

align="center" | Georgian or Circassianalign="center" | 2 July 1839
son's ascension
align=center colspan="2" |2 May 1853align=center| Abdülmecid I (son)
200px

|align=center| Pertevniyal Sultan

{{Lang|ota|پرتو نهال سلطان}}

|align=center| Besime

align="center" | Kurd or Romanian or Circassianalign="center" | 25 June 1861
son's ascension
align=center| 30 May 1876
son's deposition
align=center| 5 February 1883align=center| Abdülaziz I (son)
| align="center" | Şevkefza Sultan
{{Lang|ota|شوق افزا سلطان}}
align="center" |align="center" | Circassian{{Cite book|last=Dolphin.|first=Alderson, Anthony|url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/643105131|title=The structure of the Ottoman dynasty|date=1982|publisher=Greenwood Press|isbn=0-313-22522-2|oclc=643105131}}align="center" | 30 May 1876
son's ascension
align=center| 31 August 1876
son's deposition
align=center| 17 September 1889align=center| Murad V (son)
| align="center" | Perestu Sultan
{{Lang|ota|رحيمه پرستو سلطان}}
align="center" | Rahime Hanimalign="center" | Ubykh

adoptive daughter of Esma Sultan

| align="center" | 31 August 1876
step-son's ascension

align=center colspan="2" |11 December 1904align="center" | Abdul Hamid II (adoptive son)Brookes, Douglass Scott, The Concubine, the Princess, and the Teacher, p.287. University of Texas Press, 2008. {{ISBN|0-292-71842-X}}{{cite web|url = http://www.kultur.gov.tr/EN/belge/2-1305/sultan-ii-abdulhamid-han.html|title = Sultan II. Abdülhamid Han|access-date = 6 February 2009|publisher = Republic of Turkey Ministry of Culture and Tourism|archive-date = 2 April 2012|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120402034709/http://www.kultur.gov.tr/EN/belge/2-1305/sultan-ii-abdulhamid-han.html|url-status = dead}}

{{Lang|tr|Büyük valide sultans}}

The title of Büyük Valide Sultan (Senior Valide Sultan) or Büyükanne Sultan (Grandmother Sultana) was created by Kösem Sultan and officially used only by her during the reign of her grandson Mehmed IV, thus limiting the power of Turhan Sultan who was deemed too young to fulfill the title of Valide Sultan.

The official and unofficial Büyük Valide Sultans that lived in the reign of their grandsons are:

class="wikitable"

!Appearance

!Name

!Maiden name

!Note

!Became {{Lang|tr|Büyük valide}}

!Ceased to be {{Lang|tr|Büyük valide}}

!Death

!Sultan(s)

168x168px

|align=center|Safiye Sultan
{{Lang|ota|صفیه سلطان}}

align="center" |Sofiaalign="center" | She was never called Büyük Valide Sultan officially, but she lived during the reign of her two grandsons (Ahmed and Mustafa) and the reign of her great-grandson (Osman)align="center" | (unofficial) 22 December 1603 – her deathcolspan="2" align="center" | After 1619align="center" | Ahmed I (grandson)
Mustafa I (grandson)
Osman II (great-grandson)
184x184px

|align=center| Kösem Sultan
{{Lang|ota|ماه پیکر كوسم سلطان}}

align="center" | Anastasiaalign=center| Following Mehmed IV's accession, she proclaimed herself as Büyük Valide Sultanalign="center" | 8 August 1648 – her deathcolspan="2" align="center" |2 September 1651align="center" | Mehmed IV (grandson)

See also

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book|author=Leslie P. Peirce|author-link=Leslie P. Peirce|title=The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=L6-VRgVzRcUC&pg=PA112|year=1993|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-508677-5}}