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Mahfiruz Hatice Sultan

Mahfiruz Hatun
ماہ فروز خاتون
Born c. 1590
Died c. 1614
Topkapı Palace, Istanbul, Ottoman Empire
Burial Eyüp Cemetery, Istanbul
Spouse Ahmed I
Issue Osman II
Şehzade Bayezid
Şehzade Suleiman (possibly)
Full name
Turkish: Mahfiruz Hatun
English: Mahifiroz Khatun
Ottoman Turkish: ماہ فروز خاتون
Religion Sunni Islam
Full name
Turkish: Mahfiruz Hatun
English: Mahifiroz Khatun
Ottoman Turkish: ماہ فروز خاتون

Mahfiruz Hatun (c. 1590 – by 1610 or 1620) was a wife of Ottoman Sultan Ahmed I (r. 1603–17) and mother of Sultan Osman II (r. 1618–22).

According to historian Baki Tezcan, nothing is known about her except her probable name and period of death. Her Muslim name, Mahfiruz, means "favourite of the crescent". Such peculiar names were given to the women of the Imperial Harem.

She was the first of Ahmed I's three women and bore him Osman II. With the birth of Osman, the couple's first child, Ahmed became the youngest Ottoman sultan to become father, and Osman was the first Ottoman first-born prince to be born in the Imperial capital of Istanbul.

The date of her death is undetermined. There are evidence that strongly suggests that she died at latest by 1610. According to Leslie P. Peirce, she was alive when Osman was enthroned as sultan in 1618 after the deposition of incompetent Mustafa I; Peirce believes that she was not living in the palace during his son's reign nor did she act as valide sultan, as privy purse registers listed no valide sultan during Osman's reign. Also from the middle of 1620, Osman's governess, the daye hatun, began to receive an extraordinary large stipend, one thousand aspers a day rather than her usual two hundrend aspers, an indication that she was now the official stand-in for the Valide Sultan. Mahfiruz may have fallen out of favour, judging by her absence in the palace and burial in Eyüb rather than with her husband, and never have recovered her status as a royal consort. Venetian ambassador Contarini reported the beating of a woman who had irritated Kösem, ordered by the sultan, in 1612, which may be identified to Mahfiruz. She may have been a rival of Kösem, who made efforts to keep Mustafa safe from execution, and saw an obstacle in Mahfiruz. She was buried in the large sanctuary of Eyüp, Istanbul.

Her husband Ahmed I

Her son Osman II.


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