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Kösem

Mahpeyker Kösem Sultan
كوسم سلطان
Naib-i-Sultanat of the Ottoman Empire
(first regency)
Regency 10 September 1623 – 18 May 1632
Predecessor None
Monarch Murad IV
(second regency)
Regency 8 August 1648 – 2 September 1651
Successor Turhan Hatice Sultan
Monarch Mehmed IV
Valide Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
Tenure 10 September 1623 – 2 September 1651
Predecessor Halime Sultan
Successor Turhan Hatice Sultan
Haseki Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
(Imperial Consort)
Tenure 26 November 1605 – 22 November 1617
Predecessor Safiye Sultan
Successor Ayşe Sultan
Born Anastasia?
c. 1589
Tinos?
(currently the territory of Greece)
Died 2 September 1651 (aged 61–62)
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
Burial Sultan Ahmed Mosque, Istanbul
Spouse Sultan Ahmed I
Issue Sons:
Şehzade Mehmed(possibly)
Sultan Murad IV
Şehzade Kasim
Şehzade Suleiman(possibly)
Sultan Ibrahim
Daughters:
Ayşe Sultan
Fatma Sultan
Gevherhan Sultan
Hanzade Sultan
Burnaz Atike Sultan
Religion Sunni Islam
(raised Greek Orthodox)

Kösem Sultan (Turkish pronunciation: [cøˈsem sulˈtan]) (c. 1589 – 2 September 1651) – also known as Mahpeyker Sultan (Turkish pronunciation: [mahpejˈkeɾ sulˈtan]; Māh-peyker) – was one of the most powerful women in Ottoman history. Kösem achieved power and influenced the politics of the Ottoman Empire when she became Haseki Sultan as favourite consort and later legal wife of Ottoman Sultan Ahmed I (r. 1603–1617) and Valide Sultan as mother of Murad IV (r. 1623–1640) and Ibrahim (r. 1640–1648), and grandmother of Mehmed IV (r. 1648–1687). She was one of the prominent figures during the Sultanate of Women.

Kösem lived in the Ottoman Empire during the reign of six sultans, Ahmed I, Mustafa I, Osman II, Murad IV, Ibrahim, and Mehmed IV. After her death, she was known by the names "Valide-i Muazzama" (magnificent mother), "Vālide-i Maḳtūle" (murdered mother), and "Vālide-i Șehīde" (martyred mother).

Kösem was of Greek origin; she is generally said to be the daughter of a priest on the island of Tinos whose maiden name was Anastasia but these views do not seem reliable. She was bought as a slave by the Bosnian governor, and sent, at the age of fifteen, to the harem of Sultan Ahmed I. Upon her conversion to Islam, her name was changed to Mahpeyker (Moon-Shaped), and later by Sultan Ahmed I to Kösem (guide).


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