Şehzade Bayezid | |
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An Ottoman miniature showing Suleiman the Magnificent with his son, Şehzade Bayezid
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Born | 19 September 1525 Constantinople, Ottoman Empire |
Died | September 25, 1561 (aged 35-36) Qazvin, Safavid Empire |
Burial | Melik-i Acem Türbe, Sivas |
Issue | Şehzade Orhan Şehzade Osman Şehzade Abdullah Şehzade Mahmud Şehzade Muradhan Mihrimah Sultan Hatice Sultan Ayşe Sultan Hanzade Sultan |
House | House of Osman |
Father | Suleiman the Magnificent |
Mother | Hürrem Sultan |
Religion | Islam |
Şehzade Bayezid (1525 – September 25, 1561) was an Ottoman prince (Turkish: şehzade) as son of Sultan Suleiman I (also known as the Suleiman the Lawgiver or the Suleiman the Magnificent), 10th Ottoman Sultan, and his legal wife Hürrem Sultan. He unsuccessfully revolted to win the throne of the Ottoman Empire. After the death of three of Suleiman's sons, only Bayezid and Selim were alive. By the course of the 1550s, when Suleiman was already in his 60s, a protracted competition for the throne between Bayezid and Selim was evident. Angered by Bayezid's disobedience stemming from around the same years, Bayezid had fallen in disfavour with his father as opposed to his brother Selim (who would eventually succeed as Selim II). After a staged rebellion, which was suppressed in 1559 by Selim (who was further aided by Suleiman and Sokollu Mehmet Pasha) he fled to the neighbouring Safavid Empire, where he was wholeheartedly and lavishly received by Tahmasp I. However, in 1561, upon continuous insistment of Suleiman throughout the entire period of his exile, and by the means of several large payments, Tahmasp allowed Bayezid to be executed by an Ottoman executioner.
Bayezid born in Constantinople (Istanbul), 1525 during the reign of his father, Suleiman the Magnificent. His mother was Hürrem, orthodox priest’s daughter, who was sultan’s concubine in that time. Bayezid had three elder full-brother, Mehmed (born 1521), Abdullah (born 1522), and Selim (born 28 May 1524), one elder full-sister Mihrimah (born 21 March 1522), and one younger full-brothers, Cihangir (born 9 December 1531). He also had half-siblings: Mustafa son of Mahidevran, Murad, Mahmud, and Raziye. In 1533 or 1534,breaking a two-century-old tradition,his father freed and legally wed his mother.