Suleiman the Magnificent: A Life From Beginning to End by Hourly History
Author:Hourly History [History, Hourly]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Hourly History
Published: 2017-09-12T00:00:00+00:00
Chapter Four
Court Life, Consorts, and Counsellors
âMy spring, my joy, my day, my beloved, my laughing rose.â
âMuhibbi (Suleiman)
Suleimanâs earliest campaigns demonstrated the Ottoman power and military strategies, causing Europe to fear him. But while Suleiman spent a significant portion of his first few years as sultan out on military campaigns, he also had a life back in Constantinople. This life centered around the splendid Topkapi Palace, originally built by Sultan Mehmed II, but which Suleiman greatly enlarged (and which is still visited by millions of tourists in Istanbul today). Here, under gold-detailed domed roofs and amid walls lavishly decorated with geometric and floral patterns, the Sultan met with officials and advisors. Whenever he had time, he also enjoyed trips outside the palace to practice hunting and falconry.
One significant part of Suleimanâs life in Constantinople was his mother, Hafsa. During Suleimanâs childhood, his father had often been absent due to military ventures; Suleiman had, therefore, spent a large amount of time with his mother. The two of them had a famously close relationship, which continued into Suleimanâs reign as emperor. Hafsa not only ruled the haremâthe womenâs quartersâof Suleimanâs palace, but may have been quite influential in many of the sultanâs decisions. Hafsa was widely known as Hafsa Sultan; the suffix became affixed after the name of the chief consort of the sultan, implying that the power of the sultan belonged to a family.
In addition to Hafsa, two other women figured prominently in Suleimanâs life in Constantinople. The first of these was a woman known alternately as Gülbahar, âSpring Rose,â or Mahidevran. Gülbahar was born in nearby Montenegro, but an Ottoman raiding party captured her and brought her to Constantinople, where she was given her new Turkish name. While some sultans, including Suleimanâs father, Selim I, consorted with women of their harems in a much more promiscuous manner, Suleiman preferred Gülbahar and stayed relatively true to her for a significant part of his life.
Sometime in the mid-1520s, however, a second woman caught Suleimanâs attention. She hailed from Russia and was an Orthodox Christian captured during an Ottoman raid in an area near modern-day Poland or Ukraine. While her original name is not known for certain, scholars have speculated that it may have been Anastasia or Aleksandra. Her Ottoman captors changed her name to Hürrem, meaning âSmiling Oneâ or âCheerful One.â Despite her name, Hürrem Sultan was known for her intelligence and will-power, not her looks. Her northern origins earned her another label by which she is primarily known today; the name Roxelana developed because of her Russian ethnicity. Roxelana eventually became Suleimanâs chief consort, bearing him three sons. Like Hafsa, she became a major influence in Suleimanâs life, and therefore in the whole of the Ottoman Empire.
While these three women held significant sway over Suleiman, another key figure who cannot be ignored is the man who became Suleimanâs grand vizier, Ibrahim. Ibrahim, too, came to Suleiman from outside the Ottoman Empire. Though Ibrahim was born in Greece, Ottoman pirates captured him in his youth and sold him as a slave.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Blood and Oil by Bradley Hope(1458)
Wandering in Strange Lands by Morgan Jerkins(1279)
Ambition and Desire: The Dangerous Life of Josephine Bonaparte by Kate Williams(1271)
Daniel Holmes: A Memoir From Malta's Prison: From a cage, on a rock, in a puddle... by Daniel Holmes(1247)
It Was All a Lie by Stuart Stevens;(1191)
Twelve Caesars by Mary Beard(1130)
The First Conspiracy by Brad Meltzer & Josh Mensch(1075)
What Really Happened: The Death of Hitler by Robert J. Hutchinson(1065)
London in the Twentieth Century by Jerry White(1039)
Time of the Magicians by Wolfram Eilenberger(1024)
Twilight of the Gods by Ian W. Toll(1019)
The Japanese by Christopher Harding(1015)
A Woman by Sibilla Aleramo(999)
Cleopatra by Alberto Angela(991)
Lenin: A Biography by Robert Service(977)
The Devil You Know by Charles M. Blow(929)
Reading for Life by Philip Davis(923)
1965--The Most Revolutionary Year in Music by Andrew Grant Jackson(866)
The Life of William Faulkner by Carl Rollyson(865)
